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node-systemstat

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Commits

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3062863f667dc23688eda7094c86540264fe8cd4

Again

committed 2 years ago
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dad092fa04dc5f1f3f62d5879b66ad5191e19d0e

Add setup-node to publish step

committed 2 years ago
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4b1eb7f743d91178ddbc5e75f2cd82fbb88f9f3c

Release 0.1.1

committed 2 years ago
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f3e3e51ccb2f62a8fd28c01bd381277365b8dfc4

Mac -> dylib

committed 2 years ago
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3d84163f8ba2df53fced21dc3361be3a5a452652

Remove cache-to

committed 2 years ago
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010acdfc70c77c514c5564051f193675ec23c79b

Try cache-to

committed 2 years ago

README

The README file for this repository.

@mocsy/systemstat

@mocsy/systemstat: Node.js native module to get various host system stats like memory/cpu load.

This project was bootstrapped by create-neon.

Installing @mocsy/systemstat

Installing @mocsy/systemstat requires a supported version of Node and Rust.

You can install the project with npm. In the project directory, run:

$ npm install

This fully installs the project, including installing any dependencies and running the build.

Building @mocsy/systemstat

If you have already installed the project and only want to run the build, run:

$ npm run build

This command uses the cargo-cp-artifact utility to run the Rust build and copy the built library into ./index.node.

Exploring @mocsy/systemstat

After building @mocsy/systemstat, you can explore its exports at the Node REPL:

$ npm install
$ node
> require('.').hello()
"hello node"

Available Scripts

In the project directory, you can run:

npm install

Installs the project, including running npm run build.

npm build

Builds the Node addon (index.node) from source.

Additional cargo build arguments may be passed to npm build and npm build-* commands. For example, to enable a cargo feature:

npm run build -- --feature=beetle

npm build-debug

Alias for npm build.

npm build-release

Same as npm build but, builds the module with the release profile. Release builds will compile slower, but run faster.

npm test

Runs the unit tests by calling cargo test. You can learn more about adding tests to your Rust code from the Rust book.

Project Layout

The directory structure of this project is:

@mocsy/systemstat/
├── Cargo.toml
├── README.md
├── index.node
├── package.json
├── src/
|   └── lib.rs
└── target/

Cargo.toml

The Cargo manifest file, which informs the cargo command.

README.md

This file.

index.node

The Node addon—i.e., a binary Node module—generated by building the project. This is the main module for this package, as dictated by the "main" key in package.json.

Under the hood, a Node addon is a dynamically-linked shared object. The "build" script produces this file by copying it from within the target/ directory, which is where the Rust build produces the shared object.

package.json

The npm manifest file, which informs the npm command.

src/

The directory tree containing the Rust source code for the project.

src/lib.rs

The Rust library's main module.

target/

Binary artifacts generated by the Rust build.

Learn More

To learn more about Neon, see the Neon documentation.

To learn more about Rust, see the Rust documentation.

To learn more about Node, see the Node documentation.