lewissbaker / cppcoro

A library of C++ coroutine abstractions for the coroutines TS
MIT License
3.36k stars 462 forks source link

Does anyone still maintain this library under their own branch? #208

Open nqf opened 2 years ago

nqf commented 2 years ago

The library seems to have been abandoned

duckdoom5 commented 2 years ago

So far the only one I found is this one: https://github.com/andreasbuhr/cppcoro

But that seems to also be no longer maintained

andreasbuhr commented 2 years ago

Yes, I am sorry. Would be great if someone picked it up.

nqf commented 2 years ago

So far the only one I found is this one: https://github.com/andreasbuhr/cppcoro

But that seems to also be no longer maintained

It's a pity that this library has been abandoned

goto40 commented 2 years ago

Yes, I am sorry. Would be great if someone picked it up.

Is there an alternative to this lib somewhere at the moment?

AliKaf commented 2 years ago

Indeed a pitty. Today I found this https://github.com/David-Haim/concurrencpp Maybe that's you (and me) might build on...

goto40 commented 2 years ago

You may also have a look at https://github.com/facebookexperimental/libunifex

AliKaf commented 2 years ago

Thanks! Do you have experience with this library? Can I use it as a coroutine library without changing my paradigm to sender/receiver (at least for a first shot)?

goto40 commented 2 years ago

Thanks! Do you have experience with this library? Can I use it as a coroutine library without changing my paradigm to sender/receiver (at least for a first shot)?

I just discovered it... No experience

ladnir commented 2 years ago

I'm also working on this https://github.com/ladnir/macoro A subset of this library along with c++14 support.

devillove084 commented 1 year ago

https://github.com/alibaba/async_simple @nqf @duckdoom5 @andreasbuhr

Thalhammer commented 1 year ago

Not quite a 100% replacement, but a project with a very similar objective is asyncpp. It also comes with extensions for interfacing with curl, grpc and io_uring.

The core library is header only and tested on Windows, Linux and MacOS to ensure it supports as many compilers/environments as possible. It is used in a number of internal projects, so I will almost certainly support it for a long time going forward. It is allocator ready and comes with some extra helpers (like a reference counting type, pointer tagging, etc).

Its not as feature complete as cppcoro or some of the earlier mentioned libraries, but it is complete enough (at least for me) and I am open to any improvements/addition someone wants to add.

Disclamer: I wrote it, so my view might be biased.

Pinging people that might care: @nqf @duckdoom5 @andreasbuhr @devillove084