forked from cadey/xesite
190 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
190 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Site Update: Rewrite in Rust"
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date: 2020-07-16
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tags:
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- rust
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---
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# Site Update: Rewrite in Rust
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Hello there! You are reading this post thanks to a lot of effort, research and
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consultation that has resulted in a complete from-scratch rewrite of this
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website in [Rust](https://rust-lang.org). The original implementation in Go is
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available [here](https://github.com/Xe/site/releases/tag/v1.5.0) should anyone
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want to reference that for any reason.
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If you find any issues with the [RSS feed](/blog.rss), [Atom feed](/blog.atom)
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or [JSONFeed](/blog.json), please let me know as soon as possible so I can fix
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them.
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This website stands on the shoulder of giants. Here are just a few of those and
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how they add up into this whole package.
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## comrak
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All of my posts are written in
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[markdown](https://github.com/Xe/site/blob/master/blog/all-there-is-is-now-2019-05-25.markdown).
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[comrak](https://github.com/kivikakk/comrak) is a markdown parser written by a
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friend of mine that is as fast and as correct as possible. comrak does the job
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of turning all of that markdown (over 150 files at the time of writing this
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post) into the HTML that you are reading right now. It also supports a lot of
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common markdown extensions, which I use heavily in my posts.
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## warp
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[warp](https://github.com/seanmonstar/warp) is the web framework I use for Rust.
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It gives users a set of filters that add up into entire web applications. For an
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example, see this example from its readme:
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```rust
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use warp::Filter;
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#[tokio::main]
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async fn main() {
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// GET /hello/warp => 200 OK with body "Hello, warp!"
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let hello = warp::path!("hello" / String)
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.map(|name| format!("Hello, {}!", name));
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warp::serve(hello)
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.run(([127, 0, 0, 1], 3030))
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.await;
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}
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```
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This can then be built up into something like this:
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```rust
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let site = index
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.or(contact.or(feeds).or(resume.or(signalboost)).or(patrons))
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.or(blog_index.or(series.or(series_view).or(post_view)))
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.or(gallery_index.or(gallery_post_view))
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.or(talk_index.or(talk_post_view))
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.or(jsonfeed.or(atom).or(rss.or(sitemap)))
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.or(files.or(css).or(favicon).or(sw.or(robots)))
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.or(healthcheck.or(metrics_endpoint).or(go_vanity_jsonfeed))
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// ...
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```
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which is the actual routing setup for this website!
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## ructe
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In the previous version of this site, I used Go's
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[html/template](https://godoc.org/html/template). Rust does not have an
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equivalent of html/template in its standard library. After some research, I
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settled on [ructe](https://github.com/kaj/ructe) for the HTML templates. ructe
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works by preprocessing templates using a little domain-specific language that
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compiles down to Rust source code. This makes the templates become optimized
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with the rest of the program and enables my website to render most pages in less
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than 100 microseconds. Here is an example template (the one for
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[/patrons](/patrons)):
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```html
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@use patreon::Users;
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@use super::{header_html, footer_html};
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@(users: Users)
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@:header_html(Some("Patrons"), None)
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<h1>Patrons</h1>
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<p>These awesome people donate to me on <a href="https://patreon.com/cadey">Patreon</a>.
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If you would like to show up in this list, please donate to me on Patreon. This
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is refreshed every time the site is deployed.</p>
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<p>
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<ul>
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@for user in users {
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<li>@user.attributes.full_name</li>
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}
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</ul>
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</p>
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@:footer_html()
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```
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The templates compile down to Rust, which lets me include other parts of the
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program into the templates. Here I use that to take a list of users from the
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incredibly hacky Patreon API client I wrote for this website and iterate over
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it, making a list of every patron by name.
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## Build Process
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As a nice side effect of this rewrite, my website is now completely built using
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[Nix](https://nixos.org/). This allows the website to be built reproducibly, as
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well as a full development environment setup for free for anyone that checks out
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the repo and runs `nix-shell`. Check out
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[naersk](https://github.com/nmattia/naersk) for the secret sauce that enables my
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docker image build. See [this blogpost](/blog/drone-kubernetes-cd-2020-07-10)
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for more information about this build process (though my site uses GitHub
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Actions instead of Drone).
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## `jsonfeed` Go package
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I used to have a [JSONFeed](https://www.jsonfeed.org/) package publicly visible
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at the go import path `christine.website/jsonfeed`. As far as I know I'm the
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only person who ended up using it; but in case there are any private repos that
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I don't know about depending on it, I have made the jsonfeed package available
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at its old location as well as its source code
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[here](https://tulpa.dev/Xe/jsonfeed). You may have to update your `go.mod` file
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to import `christine.website/jsonfeed` instead of `christine.website`. If
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something ends up going wrong as a result of this, please [file a GitHub issue
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here](https://github.com/Xe/site/issues/new) and I can attempt to assist
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further.
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## `go_vanity` crate
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I have written a small go vanity import crate and exposed it in my Git repo. If
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you want to use it, add it to your `Cargo.toml` like this:
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```toml
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[dependencies]
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go_vanity = { git = "https://github.com/Xe/site", branch = "master" }
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```
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You can then use it from any warp application by calling `go_vanity::github` or
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`go_vanity::gitea` like this:
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```rust
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let go_vanity_jsonfeed = warp::path("jsonfeed")
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.and(warp::any().map(move || "christine.website/jsonfeed"))
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.and(warp::any().map(move || "https://tulpa.dev/Xe/jsonfeed"))
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.and_then(go_vanity::gitea);
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```
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I plan to add full documentation to this crate soon as well as release it
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properly on crates.io.
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## `patreon` crate
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I have also written a small [Patreon](https://www.patreon.com/) API client and
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made it available in my Git repo. If you want to use it, add it to your
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`Cargo.toml` like this:
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```toml
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[dependencies]
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patreon = { git = "https://github.com/Xe/site", branch = "master" }
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```
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This client is _incredibly limited_ and only supports the minimum parts of the
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Patreon API that are required for my website to function. Patreon has also
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apparently started to phase out support for its API anyways, so I don't know how
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long this will be useful.
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But this is there should you need it!
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## Dhall Kubernetes Manifest
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I also took the time to port the kubernetes manifest to
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[Dhall](https://dhall-lang.org/). This allows me to have a type-safe kubernetes
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manifest that will correctly have all of the secrets injected for me from the
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environment of the deploy script.
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---
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These are the biggest giants that my website now sits on. The code for this
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rewrite is still a bit messy. I'm working on making it better, but my goal is to
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have this website's code shine as an example of how to best write this kind of
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website in Rust. Check out the code [here](https://github.com/Xe/site).
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