Open Source Rust Software Development Software - Page 3

Rust Software Development Software

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    MongoDB Atlas runs apps anywhere

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  • 1
    Click Kubernetes

    Click Kubernetes

    The "Command Line Interactive Controller for Kubernetes"

    Click is the Command Line Interactive Controller for Kubernetes. Its purpose is to manage a large number of Kubernetes clusters/objects quickly and efficiently. Click is a REPL. When running Click, there is a current active config which includes the current Kubernetes context, and optionally a namespace and Kubernetes object. Commands are then applied to the active config so it's not necessary to keep specifying what objects to target.
    Downloads: 8 This Week
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  • 2
    Eww

    Eww

    ElKowars wacky widgets

    Eww (ElKowar's Wacky Widgets, pronounced with sufficient amounts of disgust) is a widget system made in Rust, which lets you create your own widgets similarly to how you can in AwesomeWM. The key difference: It is independent of your window manager. Configured in yuck and themed using CSS, it is easy to customize and provides all the flexibility you need. Rather than with your system package manager, I strongly recommend installing it using rustup. Additionally, eww requires some dynamic libraries to be available on your system. The exact names of the packages that provide these may differ depending on your distribution.
    Downloads: 8 This Week
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  • 3
    RuVector

    RuVector

    Self-Learning, Vector Graph Neural Network, and Database built in Rust

    RuVector is part of the broader rUv ecosystem of AI engineering tools and focuses on enabling advanced vector-based processing and intelligent system development within agentic and AI-driven pipelines. The project fits into a larger vision of modular, composable AI infrastructure designed to support autonomous agents, data retrieval, and intelligent automation workflows. It emphasizes extensibility and interoperability with modern AI stacks, allowing developers to integrate vector operations into search, reasoning, or generative systems. The repository reflects a research-forward approach that blends practical utilities with experimental agentic concepts, encouraging exploration of emerging AI design patterns. It is intended for developers building sophisticated AI-powered applications who need flexible vector handling and integration capabilities.
    Downloads: 8 This Week
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  • 4
    mdBook

    mdBook

    Create books from markdown files

    mdBook is a command line tool and Rust crate to create books with Markdown. The output resembles tools like Gitbook, and is ideal for creating product or API documentation, tutorials, course materials or anything that requires a clean, easily navigable and customizable presentation. mdBook is written in Rust; its performance and simplicity made it ideal for use as a tool to publish directly to hosted websites such as GitHub Pages via automation. This guide, in fact, serves as both the mdBook documentation and a fine example of what mdBook produces. mdBook includes built in support for both preprocessing your Markdown and alternative renderers for producing formats other than HTML. These facilities also enable other functionality such as validation. Searching Rust's crates.io is a great way to discover more extensions.
    Downloads: 8 This Week
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  • ContractSafe: Contract Management Software Icon
    ContractSafe: Contract Management Software

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  • 5
    mprocs

    mprocs

    Run multiple commands in parallel

    mprocs runs multiple commands in parallel and shows output of each command separately. When you work on a project you very often need the same list of commands to be running. For example: webpack serve, just --watch, node src/server.js. With mprocs you can list these commands in mprocs.yaml and run all of them by running mprocs. Then you can switch between the outputs of running commands and interact with them.
    Downloads: 8 This Week
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  • 6
    GritQL

    GritQL

    GritQL is a query language for searching, linting, and modifying code

    GritQL is a query language designed to facilitate human-AI collaboration by providing an intuitive interface for querying and retrieving structured data. It acts as a bridge between AI models and databases, enabling natural language interaction with structured data sources.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 7
    LiteBox

    LiteBox

    A security-focused library OS supporting kernel execution

    LiteBox is a security-focused “library OS” sandboxing project that aims to shrink the interface between an application and its host environment to reduce attack surface. Instead of relying solely on broad OS-level permissions, it focuses on isolating workloads by tightly controlling the boundary where code interacts with host services and system resources. The design emphasizes interoperability across different integration layers, describing a separation between “North” shims (how apps or runtimes plug in) and “South” platforms (where the sandbox runs), which helps the system adapt to multiple deployment contexts. A key aspect of the project is that it targets both kernel-mode and user-mode scenarios, enabling experimentation with different trust and performance tradeoffs. The repository positions LiteBox as a foundation for building hardened execution environments where untrusted or semi-trusted components can run with reduced privileges and a minimized host interface.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 8
    iced

    iced

    Blazing fast and correct x86/x64 disassembler, assembler, decoder, etc

    iced is a powerful and feature-rich disassembly and assembly library for x86 and x64 architectures, designed to provide accurate decoding, encoding, and formatting of machine instructions. It supports multiple programming languages, including C#, Rust, and Python, making it accessible to a wide range of developers. The library offers both disassembly and assembly capabilities, allowing users to convert between machine code and human-readable instructions in both directions. It includes advanced features such as instruction formatting, symbol resolution, and customizable output, enabling precise control over how code is represented. iced is optimized for performance and correctness, ensuring reliable results even in complex scenarios. It is commonly used in tools for debugging, reverse engineering, and binary analysis. Overall, iced provides a comprehensive solution for working with low-level machine code in modern software systems.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 9
    mlua

    mlua

    High level Lua 5.4/5.3/5.2/5.1 and Roblox Luau bindings to Rust

    mlua is binding to Lua programming language for Rust with a goal to provide safe (as far as it's possible), high-level, easy-to-use, practical, and flexible API. Started as rlua fork, mlua supports Lua 5.4, 5.3, 5.2, 5.1 (including LuaJIT) and Roblox Luau and allows to writing of native Lua modules in Rust as well as the use of Lua in a standalone mode. mlua tested on Windows/macOS/Linux including module mode in GitHub Actions on x86_64 platform and cross-compilation to aarch64 (other targets are also supported).
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • Ditto Edge Server is a lightweight standalone server for resource-constrained edge environments, based on the core Ditto Edge SDK. Icon
    Ditto Edge Server is a lightweight standalone server for resource-constrained edge environments, based on the core Ditto Edge SDK.

    With Ditto Edge Server, you can join devices as small as a Raspberry Pi to a local mesh network and synchronize data across edge environments.

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  • 10
    youki

    youki

    A container runtime written in Rust

    youki is an implementation of the OCI runtime-spec in Rust, similar to runc. Rust is one of the best languages to implement the oci-runtime spec. Many very nice container tools are currently written in Go. However, the container runtime requires the use of system calls, which requires a bit of special handling when implemented in Go. This is too tricky (e.g. namespaces(7), fork(2)); with Rust, it's not that tricky. And, unlike in C, Rust provides the benefit of memory safety. While Rust is not yet a major player in the container field, it has the potential to contribute a lot: something this project attempts to exemplify. youki has the potential to be faster and use less memory than runc, and therefore works in environments with tight memory usage requirements. Here is a simple benchmark of a container from creation to deletion.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
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  • 11
    CXX

    CXX

    Safe interop between Rust and C++

    CXX is a library that offers safe interop between Rust and C++. It provides a safe mechanism for calling C++ code from Rust and vice versa, one that is protected from the many possible things that can go wrong when bindgen or cbindgen is used to generate unsafe C-style bindings. The general idea of CXX is to define the signatures of both sides of the FFI boundary embedded together in one Rust module. CXX gets a complete picture from this of the boundary, and through it is able to perform static analyses against the types and function signatures, ensuring that both Rust's and C++'s invariants and requirements are upheld. CXX then emits the relevant extern "C" signatures on both sides through a pair of code generators. This is done together with any necessary static assertions needed for later in the build process to verify correctness. The result is an FFI bridge that operates at zero or negligible overhead, with no copying, serialization or memory allocation needed.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 12
    CubeCL

    CubeCL

    Multi-platform high-performance compute language extension for Rust

    CubeCL is a low-level compute language and compiler framework designed to simplify and optimize GPU programming for high-performance workloads, particularly in machine learning and numerical computing. It provides an abstraction layer that allows developers to write portable, hardware-efficient compute kernels without directly dealing with complex GPU APIs such as CUDA or OpenCL. CubeCL focuses on delivering predictable performance and composability by exposing explicit control over memory layouts, parallelism, and execution patterns while still maintaining a developer-friendly syntax. The framework is built to integrate tightly with modern ML stacks, enabling efficient tensor operations and custom kernel development that can outperform generic libraries in specialized workloads. By combining compiler optimizations with a domain-specific language, CubeCL allows developers to generate highly optimized code for different hardware backends while maintaining a single source of truth.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 13
    Pacaptr

    Pacaptr

    Pacman-like syntax wrapper for many package managers

    pacaptr is a command-line tool that acts as a pacman-like syntax wrapper for various package managers. It allows users to use familiar pacman commands across different operating systems and package management systems by translating them into the appropriate commands for the underlying package manager. This tool simplifies package management for users transitioning between systems.​
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 14
    Peroxide

    Peroxide

    Rust numeric library with high performance and friendly syntax

    Rust numeric library contains linear algebra, numerical analysis, statistics and machine learning tools with R, MATLAB, Python-like macros. Peroxide uses a 1D data structure to represent matrices, making it straightforward to integrate with BLAS (Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms). This means that Peroxide can guarantee excellent performance for linear algebraic computations by leveraging the optimized routines provided by BLAS. For users familiar with numerical computing libraries like NumPy, MATLAB, or R, Rust's syntax might seem unfamiliar at first. This can make it more challenging to learn and use Rust libraries that heavily rely on Rust's unique features and syntax.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 15
    Quip Node Manager

    Quip Node Manager

    A simple GUI client to manage a Quip Network node

    Quip Node Manager is a graphical interface tool designed to simplify the management and operation of nodes within the Quip Network ecosystem. It provides a user-friendly way to start, stop, monitor, and configure blockchain nodes without requiring deep command-line knowledge. The application is built in Rust and is intended to abstract the complexity of node lifecycle management, making decentralized infrastructure more accessible to developers and operators. It integrates with Quip protocol implementations, allowing users to interact with their nodes and observe network behavior in real time. The tool likely includes features for configuration management, logging, and system diagnostics to support stable operation. Its design aligns with the broader goal of making advanced blockchain and distributed systems easier to deploy and maintain. Overall, quip-node-manager acts as a control panel for managing decentralized nodes efficiently.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 16
    Rbatis

    Rbatis

    Rust High Performance compile-time ORM(RBSON based)

    A highly Performant, Safe, Dynamic SQL(Compile-time) ORM framework written in Rust, inspired by Mybatis and MybatisPlus. Zero cost Dynamic SQL, implemented using (proc-macro,compile-time, Cow (Reduce unnecessary cloning)) techniques, don't need ONGL engine(mybatis) Free deserialization, Auto Deserialize to any struct(Option,Map,Vec...) High performance, Based on Future, with async_std/tokio, single threaded benchmark can easily achieve 200,000 QPS. logical deletes, pagination, py-like SQL and basic Mybatis functionalities. Supports logging, customizable logging based on log crate. 100% Safe Rust with #![forbid(unsafe_code)] enabled. rbatis/example (import into Clion!). abs_admin project an complete background user management system( Vue.js+rbatis+actix-web).
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 17
    SWC

    SWC

    Rust-based platform for the Web

    SWC is an extensible Rust-based platform for the next generation of fast developer tools. It's used by tools like Next.js, Parcel, and Deno, as well as companies like Vercel, ByteDance, Tencent, Shopify, and more. SWC can be used for both compilation and bundling. For compilation, it takes JavaScript / TypeScript files using modern JavaScript features and outputs valid code that is supported by all major browsers. SWC is 20x faster than Babel on a single thread and 70x faster on four cores. SWC can be downloaded and used as a pre-built binary, or built from the source. SWC (stands for Speedy Web Compiler) is a super-fast TypeScript / JavaScript compiler written in Rust. It's a library for Rust and JavaScript at the same time. If you are using SWC from Rust, see rustdoc and for most users, your entry point for using the library will be parser. If you are using SWC from JavaScript, please refer to the docs on the website.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 18
    Slint

    Slint

    Slint is an open-source declarative GUI toolkit

    Slint is a declarative GUI toolkit written in Rust (with bindings for C++, JavaScript, and Python) for building modern, native user interfaces across desktop, embedded, and mobile platforms. It uses a domain-specific UI markup that compiles to efficient native code.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 19
    cross

    cross

    Zero setup cross compilation and cross testing of Rust crates

    This project is developed and maintained by the cross-rs team. It was previously maintained by the Rust Embedded Working Group Tools team. You have four options to configure cross. cross will provide all the ingredients needed for cross-compilation without touching your system installation. cross provides an environment, cross-toolchain, and cross-compiled libraries, that produce the most portable binaries. “cross-testing”, cross can test crates for architectures other than i686 and x86_64.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 20
    devenv

    devenv

    Fast, declarative, reproducible, and composable developer environments

    Fast, declarative, reproducible, and composable developer environments using Nix. Declaratively define your development environment by toggling basic options.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • 21
    Anyhow

    Anyhow

    Flexible concrete Error type built on std::error::Error

    This is a Rust library (crate) that provides a flexible, concrete error type built atop the standard std::error::Error trait. Its primary goal is to make error handling in applications easy: instead of defining lots of custom error types, you can use anyhow::Error (or the alias anyhow::Result<T>) for fallible functions. The crate supports attaching context to errors, so you can convert a low-level error (like “file not found”) into one with richer diagnostics (“Failed to read instructions from path X”) using .context() or .with_context(). It supports downcasting (so you can inspect the underlying error type), and for recent versions of Rust, it will capture backtraces by default when the underlying error type doesn’t already. It also supports no_std mode (in limited form) by disabling default features. The README distinguishes it from library-oriented error crates (like thiserror): use anyhow when you just care about application-level error handling, not fine-grained types.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 22
    Dioxus

    Dioxus

    Friendly React-like GUI library for desktop, web, mobile, and more

    Build reliable user interfaces that run anywhere. Introducing Dioxus, a React-like library for building fast, portable, and beautiful user interfaces with Rust. Runs on the web, desktop, mobile, and more. Easily describe the layout of your application with HTML or RSX syntax. Build encapsulated components that manage their own state, then compose them to make complex UIs. Components and hooks can be reused to render on the web, desktop, mobile, server, and more! 1st class support for asynchronous tasks, suspense for datafetching, and pausable coroutines. Eliminate a whole class of bugs at compile time with static typing for every library. Fearlessly refactor even the largest of apps with powerful compile-time guarantees. No more uncaught exceptions. Components can easily abort rendering without crashing the entire app. Comprehensive doc comments provide MDN hints and guides right under your fingertips.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 23
    Futures-RS

    Futures-RS

    Zero-cost asynchronous programming in Rust

    futures-rs is a library providing the foundations for asynchronous programming in Rust. It includes key trait definitions like Stream, as well as utilities like join!, select!, and various futures combinator methods which enable expressive asynchronous control flow. Futures-rs works without the standard library, such as in bare metal environments. However, it has a significantly reduced API surface.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 24
    Graph Node

    Graph Node

    Graph Node indexes data from blockchains such as Ethereum

    The Graph is an indexing protocol for querying networks like Ethereum and IPFS. Anyone can build and publish open APIs, called subgraphs, making data easily accessible. Subgraphs can be composed into a global graph of all the world's public information. This data can be transformed, organized, and shared across applications for anyone to query with just a few keystrokes. Before The Graph, teams had to develop and operate proprietary indexing servers. This required significant engineering and hardware resources and broke the important security properties required for decentralization. All data is stored and processed on open networks with verifiable integrity. The Graph makes querying this data fast, reliable, and secure. Entrepreneurs are creating next level apps to scale human coordination on the internet. It's a new frontier and we're just getting started.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 25
    Kata Containers

    Kata Containers

    Build a standard implementation of lightweight Virtual Machines (VMs)

    Kata Containers is an open source container runtime, building lightweight virtual machines that seamlessly plug into the container ecosystem. Kata Containers is an open source community working to build a secure container runtime with lightweight virtual machines that feel and perform like containers, but provide stronger workload isolation using hardware virtualization technology as a second layer of defense. Since launching in December 2017, the community successfully merged the best parts of Intel Clear Containers with Hyper.sh RunV and scaled to include support for major architectures including AMD64, ARM, IBM p-series, and IBM z-series in addition to x86_64. Kata Containers also supports multiple hypervisors including QEMU, Cloud-Hypervisor, and Firecracker, and integrates with the containerd project among others.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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