Jazz is a language that makes programming embedded, web, apps etc easier using a simple scripting language with the tools you need built-in by the Rust and Lua communities. (It's currently being renamed from Torchbear.)
As you wish to solve more use cases with your programs, you can access Torchbear's functions, which are described below and viewable in the bindings' documentation (generated using our code map app).
- Actix actor-model concurrency framework (see RFC 613 for more info)
- Actix Lua safe Lua scripting environment for Actix
- rlua* Lua 5.3.5 (also with tools for traceback error messages, logs, and performance profiling)
- Actix Web HTTP/1.x and HTTP/2.0 web servers and clients
- Standard filesystem operations plus recursive copying
- Standard directory cross-platform config, cache, and data paths
- Standard process environment inspection and manipulation
- Standard environment terminating to abort and exit the current process
- Standard memory querying, aligning, initializing, and manipulating
- Chrono time/date generation and verification
- Libsodium* cryptographic signing and verifying, and encrypting and decrypting
- Blake2 cryptographic hash function
- Checksumdir deterministic directory hashing
- libm* mathematical functions, like exponential, power, trigonometric, hyperbolic, floating-point manipulation, classification
- NanoID secure, URL-friendly, unique string ID generator
- UUID-rs UUID generation and verification
- ulid Universally Unique Lexicographically Sortable Identifier
- Case conversions to CamelCase, snake_case, kebab-case, SHOUTY_SNAKE_CASE, mixedCase, and Title Case
- regex matching and replacing
- MIME type guessing
- SCL safe serializing/deserializing
- YAML serializing and deserializing using serde
- JSON serializing and deserializing using serde
- Tantivy searching, indexing, schema building, and document adding, updating, and deleting
- Tera template rendering similar to Jinja lang
- Comrak Markdown to HTML outputting
- Tantivy searching, indexing, schema building, and document adding, updating, and deleting
- Select-rs HTML scraping
- Diff generating diffs using strings and text files
- Patch applies diffs to strings and text files
- Split Diff breaks individual diffs into multiple diffs, per file
- List Diff lists files affected by a diff
- Interdiff**
- Git* cloning, pulling, repo creation, staging, committing, and log access (builtin, no
git
dependency)
Note* (asterisk) means safely wraps a C library
Note** (two asterisks) means help wanted
- Torchbear Libs · libraries for logging, terminal coloring, event triggering, functional programming, graph data processing, argument parsing (todo), and file patching (todo)
- Torchbear Libs Dev · a library for inspecting tables
- ContentDB · a document-oriented, file-based database
- Lighttouch · a simple, event-driven, rule-based, dynamically-loaded, functional, parameter-populated, configurable, version-controlled application framework
Jazz comes as a single executable (eg. as a binary .exe
file) which makes it easy to install and easy to run apps. It also comes with a package manager, called Machu Picchu, which helps you to download more apps.
To install Jazz on Android or Windows, run this command using your terminal (what's a terminal?):
curl https://git.io/fpcV6 -sSfL | bash
MacOS and Linux users will need admin permissions to run:
curl https://git.io/fpcV6 -sSfL | sudo bash
The installer automatically gets the latest version (which is also available on Torchbear's GitHub releases page) and puts it in a convenient file location for you. To do this, it downloads the latest zip file for your operating system and hardware architecture, then it unzips the executable to a place where it will run as a command. You can do that manually or differently, as you like.
If you haven't heard of a terminal before, here's a 1 min intro to what is a terminal window. This works on Android, Windows, MacOS, and Linux devices very similarly, but you might need one other tool first:
-
Android: install Termux.
-
Windows: install Cmder Full (within your user directory, eg not in Program Files).
-
MacOS: mostly ready out-of-the-box.
-
Linux: mostly ready out-of-the box.
-
iOS: work in progress, see Torchbear iOS build (iPhone and iPad)
-
Redox: work in progress, see Torchbear Redox release
To update, run torchup
.
To uninstall, run torchup --uninstall
.
- put this in
init.lua
:
#!/usr/bin/env speakeasy
print("hello from Torchbear")
-
make it executable with
chmod +x init.lua
-
then run it with
./init.lua
Note: Machu Picchu also works as a dependency manager, making deploying and developing component-oriented software easy. Check how other projects use it until more documentation is available. Also can start finding some useful library scripts for your programs in our Lunar Transit account.
You can compile from source by installing Cargo (Rust's package manager) and installing torchbear
using Cargo:
cargo install torchbear
Compiling from this repository also works similarly:
git clone https://github.com/foundpatterns/torchbear
cd torchbear
cargo build --release
Note: You will also need a C compiler, eg on Debian-based Linux distros sudo apt install build-essential
. Compilation will probably take several minutes depending on your machine and your network speed. The binary will end up in ./target/release/torchbear
.
- Found Patterns Studio App Store (installed by default)
- yours?
Torchbear extends Rust's growing library ecosystem. Developers and users alike are welcomed to participate in Torchbear's issue queue for small changes and high impact contributions. Everyone is invited.
Even moderately experienced Rust developers can work on adding bindings or adding other functions. There are many examples to learn from in the bindings directory. Through this process, you'll learn a Rust library's API inside and out, and you'll put another tool into the hands of a thriving userbase.
Experienced Rust developers' reviews would be greatly appreciated, eg those familiar with low-level library idioms and especially those well-versed in Actix. Much of the power functionality built-in to Torchbear comes from libraries like Actix, Actix-Web, Actix-Lua, rlua, and many more well-picked ones which need thorough review and careful analysis to make a good programming environment.
Users who who want to add a 'review' or 'story' about your use cases, simply add this "issue label" (type/review) or (type/story). Everyone is welcomed to do so, and this will help users and developers understand Torchbear from eachother's points of view. Developers who want to post other feedback and analysis will receive a hearty thank you.
Eveyone interested in learning and solving problems with programming and open-source tools in general is welcomed to come to Found Patterns Studio's Discord Server to meet fellow engineers and to work together on team-driven projects, like Torchbear. If you haven't heard of Discord before, you could start with these videos, Discord For Dummies: Basic Use and Set up Instructions for Discord App and How To Setup And Use Discord - Basic Overview Of Features and Tools. We use it to help eachother use and build Torchbear and many other projects. It's a safe and friendly place to get things done.
As an open source project, continued development depends on support from people like you. To see current and past supporters, visit our supporters.md file.
To add your support to this project, as it is currently lead, and to join that list, visit Mitchell's contact and support channel for more info.
To sponsor this project and put your logo here, visit Mitchell's GitHub sponsors page.
This project is currently in early development for a future exhibit in Found Patterns Museum, called User Handed Programming. If you would like to help us realize it, make a donation to Found Patterns Museum.