Open Source Rust Software Development Software - Page 4

Rust Software Development Software

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  • Zenflow- The AI Workflow Engine for Software Devs Icon
    Zenflow- The AI Workflow Engine for Software Devs

    Parallel agents. Multi-agent orchestration. Specs that turn into shipped code. Zenflow automates planning, coding, testing, and verification.

    Zenflow is the AI workflow engine built for real teams. Parallel agents plan, code, test, and verify in one workflow. With spec-driven development and deep context, Zenflow turns requirements into production-ready output so teams ship faster and stay in flow.
    Try free now
  • Auth0 for AI Agents now in GA Icon
    Auth0 for AI Agents now in GA

    Ready to implement AI with confidence (without sacrificing security)?

    Connect your AI agents to apps and data more securely, give users control over the actions AI agents can perform and the data they can access, and enable human confirmation for critical agent actions.
    Start building today
  • 1
    TensorZero

    TensorZero

    TensorZero is an open-source stack for industrial-grade LLM apps

    tensorzero is a lightweight C++ library designed for tensor operations and numerical computing. It offers a minimal and readable implementation of core tensor functionality, making it ideal for educational purposes, lightweight applications, or those wanting to understand how tensor libraries work under the hood. With no external dependencies, tensorzero is easy to integrate into C++ projects needing basic multi-dimensional array support.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 2
    cargo watch

    cargo watch

    Watches over your Cargo project's source

    Cargo Watch watches over your project's source for changes and runs Cargo commands when they occur. Create your own watching tool. From presenting different options, to customizing the filtering, to responding differently than running commands, to answering other events.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 3
    cargo-crev

    cargo-crev

    A cryptographically verifiable code review system for the cargo

    A cryptographically verifiable code review system for the cargo (Rust) package manager. cargo-crev is an implementation of Crev as a command-line tool integrated with cargo. This tool helps Rust users evaluate the quality and trustworthiness of their package dependencies. Crev is a language and ecosystem agnostic, distributed code review system. Use reviews produced by other users. Increase the trustworthiness of your own code. Build a web of trust of other reputable users to help verify the code you use. Static binaries are available from the releases page. Crev is a system for verifying the security and reliability of dependencies based on collaborative code reviews. Crev users review the source code of packages/libraries/crates and share their findings with others. Crev then uses Web of Trust to select trusted reviews and judge the reputation of projects' dependencies.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 4
    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: 1 This Week
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  • Desktop and Mobile Device Management Software Icon
    Desktop and Mobile Device Management Software

    It's a modern take on desktop management that can be scaled as per organizational needs.

    Desktop Central is a unified endpoint management (UEM) solution that helps in managing servers, laptops, desktops, smartphones, and tablets from a central location.
    Learn More
  • 5
    egui

    egui

    egui: an easy-to-use immediate mode GUI in Rust

    egui is a portable, Rust-native immediate mode GUI library that runs natively and in browsers (compiled to WebAssembly). It emphasizes ease of use, simplicity, and portability—ideal for lightweight applications, tools, and embedding into game engines or Rust applications.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 6
    fluent-rs

    fluent-rs

    Rust implementation of Project Fluent

    The fluent-rs workspace is a collection of Rust crates implementing Project Fluent, a localization system designed to unleash the entire expressive power of natural language translations. Project Fluent keeps simple things simple and makes complex things possible. The syntax used for describing translations is easy to read and understand. At the same time it allows, when necessary, to represent complex concepts from natural languages like gender, plurals, conjugations, and others.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 7
    glium

    glium

    Safe OpenGL wrapper for the Rust language

    Glium is a safe OpenGL wrapper for the Rust programming language, aiming to combine the low-level control of OpenGL with Rust's safety and concurrency features. It provides an idiomatic Rust API for OpenGL functions, ensuring that graphics programming is both safe and efficient. Glium abstracts many of the unsafe aspects of OpenGL, reducing the likelihood of runtime errors and crashes.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 8
    glutin

    glutin

    A low-level library for OpenGL context creation

    Glutin is a low-level library written in Rust that provides an interface for creating OpenGL contexts and handling windowing, events, and input. It serves as a foundational component for developing cross-platform graphical applications in Rust, offering developers the flexibility to build upon its abstractions for custom rendering solutions.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 9
    hyperfine

    hyperfine

    A command-line benchmarking tool

    A command-line benchmarking tool. Statistical analysis across multiple runs. Support for arbitrary shell commands. Constant feedback about the benchmark progress and current estimates. Warmup runs can be executed before the actual benchmark. Cache-clearing commands can be set up before each timing run. Statistical outlier detection to detect interference from other programs and caching effects. Export results to various formats: CSV, JSON, Markdown, AsciiDoc. Parameterized benchmarks (e.g. vary the number of threads). Cross-platform. Hyperfine will automatically determine the number of runs to perform for each command. By default, it will perform at least 10 benchmarking runs and measure for at least 3 seconds. For programs that perform a lot of disk I/O, the benchmarking results can be heavily influenced by disk caches and whether they are cold or warm. If you want to run the benchmark on a warm cache, you can use the -w/--warmup option.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • Total Network Visibility for Network Engineers and IT Managers Icon
    Total Network Visibility for Network Engineers and IT Managers

    Network monitoring and troubleshooting is hard. TotalView makes it easy.

    This means every device on your network, and every interface on every device is automatically analyzed for performance, errors, QoS, and configuration.
    Learn More
  • 10
    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: 1 This Week
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  • 11
    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: 1 This Week
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  • 12
    nil

    nil

    NIx Language server, an incremental analysis assistent

    NIx Language server, an incremental analysis assistant for writing in Nix. This repo is also packaged via Nix flakes. The language server package is available in the default flake output github:oxalica/nil#, under bin/nil. To install, run nix profile install github:oxalica/nil. Alternatively, you can use this repository as a flake input, and add its output to your own flake-managed system-wide and/or home configurations. We are officially supported by nvim-lspconfig, see upstream docs, also the example config for testing.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 13
    rust-analyzer

    rust-analyzer

    A Rust compiler front-end for IDEs

    rust-analyzer is a modular compiler frontend for the Rust language. It is a part of a larger rls-2.0 effort to create excellent IDE support for Rust. If you want to contribute to rust-analyzer or are just curious about how things work under the hood, check the ./docs/dev folder. If you want to use rust-analyzer's language server with your editor of choice, check the manual folder. It also contains some tips & tricks to help you be more productive when using rust-analyzer. rust-analyzer is an implementation of Language Server Protocol for the Rust programming language. It provides features like completion and goto definition for many code editors, including VS Code, Emacs and Vim. For VS Code, install rust-analyzer extension from the marketplace. Prebuilt language server binaries for Windows, Linux and Mac are available on the releases page.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 14
    rust_cmd_lib

    rust_cmd_lib

    Common rust command-line macros and utilities

    rust_cmd_lib is a Rust library designed to make it easier to write shell-script–style tasks in Rust, blending the power and safety of Rust with the expressiveness of shell pipelines. It provides macros and utilities that let you spawn external processes, redirect input/output, and pipe commands together, all without invoking a shell. You can write something like run_cmd!(ls -l | grep foo > out.txt) in a more declarative style, rather than manually wiring up file descriptors, handles, and child processes. The library also supports features like variable substitution, scoped environment settings, and defining custom commands (functions) that behave like built-ins. It hides much of the boilerplate of std::process::Command when you're doing simple task automations, but still allows full flexibility when needed. Because it avoids launching a shell, it reduces some classes of security and quoting errors, while improving readability of scripting logic inside a Rust binary.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 15
    rustdesk-server-demo

    rustdesk-server-demo

    A working demo of RustDesk server implementation

    rustdesk-server-demo is a companion repository that demonstrates how to deploy the RustDesk backend quickly, often via containerized or scripted setups. It is intended as a practical starting point for testing and small-scale pilots before moving to a hardened production configuration. The demo showcases the interplay between the rendezvous and relay components so users can validate connectivity paths end-to-end. Clear defaults minimize the amount of configuration required, making first-time evaluations straightforward. Because it mirrors the structure of a typical deployment, it helps administrators understand networking requirements, ports, and service boundaries. It’s a helpful on-ramp for teams who want to confirm RustDesk fits their environment before investing in a full rollout.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 16
    ryde

    ryde

    ryde is a single person, single file web framework for rust

    ryde is a single-person, single-file web framework for rust.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 17
    warp

    warp

    A super-easy, composable, web server framework for warp speeds

    The fundamental building block of warp is the Filter, they can be combined and composed to express rich requirements on requests. A Filter in warp is essentially a function that can operate on some input, either something from a request, or something from a previous Filter, and returns some output, which could be some app-specific type you wish to pass around, or can be some reply to send back as an HTTP response. That might sound simple, but the exciting part is the combinators that exist on the Filter trait. These allow composing smaller Filters into larger ones, allowing you to modularize, and reuse any part of your web server. As awesome as the Filter system is, if warp didn’t provide common web server features, it’d still be annoying to work with. Thus, warp provides a bunch of built-in Filters, allowing you to compose the functionality you need to describe each route or resource or sub-whatever.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 18
    HydraDragonAntivirus

    HydraDragonAntivirus

    Dynamic and static analysis with Sandboxie for Windows, including EDR

    Dynamic and static analysis with Sandboxie for Windows, including EDR, ClamAV, YARA-X, custom machine learning AI, behavioral analysis, NLP-based detection, website signatures, Ghidra, Suricata, Sigma, and much more than you can imagine
    Downloads: 9 This Week
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  • 19
    Steam Game Idler
    Farm Steam trading cards, manage achievements, and idle games automatically — an all-in-one alternative to ArchiSteamFarm, Steam Achievement Manager, and Idle Master https://steamgameidler.com
    Downloads: 8 This Week
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  • 20
    CloudI: A Cloud at the lowest level
    CloudI is an open-source private cloud computing framework for efficient, secure, and internal data processing. CloudI provides scaling for previously unscalable source code with efficient fault-tolerant execution of ATS, C/C++, Erlang/Elixir, Go, Haskell, Java, JavaScript/node.js, OCaml, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, or Rust services. The bare essentials for efficient fault-tolerant processing on a cloud!
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 21
    PixelPlayer

    PixelPlayer

    A desktop application that brings back the golden age of Flash games

    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 22
    Actix Web

    Actix Web

    Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework

    Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework for Rust. Forget about strongly typed objects, from request to response, everything has types. Actix provides a lot of features out of the box. HTTP/2, logging, etc. Easily create your own libraries that any Actix application can use. Getting started with Actix is easy. An Actix app comes with a URL routing system that lets you match on URLs and invoke individual handlers.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 23
    Alabaster Theme

    Alabaster Theme

    A light theme for Visual Studio Code

    Alabaster is a light Visual Studio Code theme that intentionally minimizes syntax highlighting to keep code calm and readable. Instead of coloring every token category, it highlights just a small set of classes like strings, statically known constants, comments, and global definitions. Standard language keywords are deliberately left uncolored under the philosophy that they are obvious and draw unnecessary attention. This restraint produces a clean, low-noise editor surface that emphasizes what changes most during editing: names, literals, and commentary. The repository documents the rationale in detail and has inspired ports to other editors, showing its appeal to developers who prefer quiet aesthetics. Community discussions in the issue tracker revolve around targeted tweaks rather than expanding the palette, consistent with the theme’s minimalist vision.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 24
    Ansible Examples

    Ansible Examples

    A few starter examples of ansible playbooks, to show features

    This repository collects practical, real-world examples of using Ansible to automate infrastructure, deployments, and configurations. Each directory demonstrates a specific use case—ranging from setting up web servers, load balancers, and databases to orchestrating multi-tier applications in cloud environments. The examples highlight common Ansible practices such as organizing inventories, writing reusable playbooks, using roles, and handling variables and templates. They’re designed to be adapted directly into your own infrastructure or to serve as reference blueprints when learning how to structure automation projects. Whether you’re managing a handful of servers or deploying at scale, this repo provides starting points that illustrate how Ansible can streamline repetitive operational tasks.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 25
    Argh

    Argh

    Rust derive-based argument parsing optimized for code size

    argh is a tiny, pragmatic command-line argument parsing library that favors simple, readable code over elaborate configuration. It’s designed for the case where you just want to declare a few flags, accept some positional arguments, and print helpful usage text without wiring up a heavy framework. The API is intentionally compact so you can parse arguments inline near main() and map them straight into native types. It supports short and long options, boolean switches, and key–value flags while keeping error messages and help output understandable for end users. Subcommands can be modeled without much boilerplate, letting you structure larger CLIs while keeping each command self-contained. The overall feel is “get out of your way”: minimal setup, zero magic, and a straightforward path from argv to validated inputs.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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