Comment by abrookewood 6 months ago Yep, was wondering why you didn't go down that path in the first place. Seems way safer. 3 comments abrookewood Reply leansensei 6 months ago It's because the most familiar thing to me that uses a NIF was Exqlite, so that was my starting point.Using Rust and Rustler turned out to be way easier and it also now works across Elixir versions 1.14 to 1.18. abrookewood 6 months ago Great outcome :) overbring_labs 6 months ago Truly, way better than before: https://github.com/waseigo/disk_spaceAnd it now runs on everything, across more Elixir and Erlang/OTP versions than before!
leansensei 6 months ago It's because the most familiar thing to me that uses a NIF was Exqlite, so that was my starting point.Using Rust and Rustler turned out to be way easier and it also now works across Elixir versions 1.14 to 1.18. abrookewood 6 months ago Great outcome :) overbring_labs 6 months ago Truly, way better than before: https://github.com/waseigo/disk_spaceAnd it now runs on everything, across more Elixir and Erlang/OTP versions than before!
abrookewood 6 months ago Great outcome :) overbring_labs 6 months ago Truly, way better than before: https://github.com/waseigo/disk_spaceAnd it now runs on everything, across more Elixir and Erlang/OTP versions than before!
overbring_labs 6 months ago Truly, way better than before: https://github.com/waseigo/disk_spaceAnd it now runs on everything, across more Elixir and Erlang/OTP versions than before!
It's because the most familiar thing to me that uses a NIF was Exqlite, so that was my starting point.
Using Rust and Rustler turned out to be way easier and it also now works across Elixir versions 1.14 to 1.18.
Great outcome :)
Truly, way better than before: https://github.com/waseigo/disk_space
And it now runs on everything, across more Elixir and Erlang/OTP versions than before!