Product Promotion
0x5a.live
for different kinds of informations and explorations.
GitHub - neon-bindings/neon: Rust bindings for writing safe and fast native Node.js modules.
Rust bindings for writing safe and fast native Node.js modules. - neon-bindings/neon
Visit SiteGitHub - neon-bindings/neon: Rust bindings for writing safe and fast native Node.js modules.
Rust bindings for writing safe and fast native Node.js modules. - neon-bindings/neon
Powered by 0x5a.live ๐
Rust bindings for writing safe and fast Node.js native addons.
Getting started
Once you have the platform dependencies installed, getting started is as simple as:
$ npm init neon my-project
Then see the Hello World guide for writing your first Hello World in Neon!
Docs
See our Neon fundamentals docs and our API docs.
Neon 1.0.0 Migration Guide
The latest version of Neon, 1.0.0, includes several breaking changes in order to fix unsoundness, improve consistency, and add features.
Read the new migration guide to learn how to port your Neon projects to 1.0.0!
Platform Support
Operating Systems
Linux | macOS | Windows |
---|---|---|
โ | โ | โ |
Node.js
Neon actively supports all current and maintenance releases of Node. If you're using a different version of Node and believe it should be supported, let us know.
Older Node version support (minimum v10) may require lower Node-API versions. See the Node version support matrix for more details.
Bun (experimental)
Bun is an alternate JavaScript runtime that targets Node compatibility. In many cases Neon modules will work in bun; however, at the time of this writing, some Node-API functions are not implemented.
Rust
Neon supports Rust stable version 1.65 and higher. We test on the latest stable, beta, and nightly versions of Rust.
A Taste...
fn make_an_array(mut cx: FunctionContext) -> JsResult<JsArray> {
// Create some values:
let n = cx.number(9000);
let s = cx.string("hello");
let b = cx.boolean(true);
// Create a new array:
let array = cx.empty_array();
// Push the values into the array:
array.set(&mut cx, 0, n)?;
array.set(&mut cx, 1, s)?;
array.set(&mut cx, 2, b)?;
// Return the array:
Ok(array)
}
#[neon::main]
fn main(mut cx: ModuleContext) -> NeonResult<()> {
cx.export_function("make_an_array", make_an_array)?;
Ok(())
}
For more examples, see our examples repo and integration tests.
Get Involved
The Neon community is just getting started and there's tons of fun to be had. Come play! :)
The Neon Community Slack is open to all; use this invite link to receive an invitation.
Testing Neon
The Neon project is both an NPM workspace and a Cargo workspace. The full suite of tests may be executed by installing and testing the NPM workspace.
npm install
npm test
Individual JavaScript packages may be tested with an npm
workspace command:
npm --workspace=create-neon test
Individual Rust crates may be tested with a cargo
workspace command:
cargo test -p neon-build
License
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
NodeJS Resources
are all listed below.
Made with โค๏ธ
to provide different kinds of informations and resources.