Hi! I'm Amos, better known as @fasterthanlime.

I make articles and videos about how computers work. My content is long-form, didactic and exploratory — and often an excuse to teach Rust!

I also co-host Self-Directed Research with James.

You can read more about me, if you insist.

Recent articles View all

Catching up with async Rust

In December 2023, a minor miracle happened: async fn in traits shipped.

As of Rust 1.39, we already had free-standing async functions:

pub async fn read_hosts() -> eyre::Result<Vec<u8>> {
    // etc.
}

...and async functions in impl blocks:

impl HostReader {
    pub async fn read_hosts(&self) -> eyre::Result<Vec<u8> 
        
    

Highlighted code in slides

I have obsessed about this long enough, I think it's only fair I (and you!) get some content out of it.

When I started writing this article, I was working on my P99 CONF slides. Those slides happen to include some bits of code. And because I'm a perfectionist, I would like this code to be syntax highlighted, like this:

let addr: SocketAddr = config?
 ln = addr?
 configbase_url

ktls now under the rustls org

What's a ktls

I started work on ktls and ktls-sys, a pair of crates exposing Kernel TLS offload to Rust, about two years ago.

kTLS lets the kernel (and, in turn, any network interface that supports it) take care of encryption, framing, etc., for the entire duration of a TLS connection... as soon as you have a TLS connection.

For the handshake itself (hellos, change cipher, encrypted extensions, certificate verification, etc.), you still have to use a userland TLS implementation.

State of the fasterthanlime 2024

It's time for some personal and professional news!

TL;DR: I started a podcast with James, I'm stable on antidepressants, I'm giving a P99 CONF about my Rust/io_uring/HTTP work, I'm trying on "they/them" as pronouns, I'm open-sourcing merde_json, rubicon and others, I got a divorce in 2023, I found a new business model.

Face cams: the missing guide

I try to avoid doing "meta" / "behind the scenes" stuff, because I usually feel like it has to be "earned". How many YouTube channels are channels about making YouTube videos? Too many.

Regardless, because I've had the opportunity to make my own mistakes now for a few years (I started doing the video thing in earnest in 2019), and because I've recently made a few leaps in quality-of-life re: shooting and editing video, I thought I'd publish a few notes, if only for reference for my future self.

Just paying Figma $15/month because nothing else fucking works

My family wasn't poor by any stretch of the imagination, but I was raised to avoid spending money whenever possible.

I was also taught "it's a poor craftsman that blames their tools", which apparently means "take responsibility for your fuckups", but, to young-me, definitely sounded more like "you don't deserve nice things".

Cracking Electron apps open

I use the draw.io desktop app to make diagrams for my website. I run it on an actual desktop, like Windows or macOS, but the asset pipeline that converts .drawio files, to .pdf, to .svg, and then to .svg again (but smaller) runs on Linux.

So I have a Rust program somewhere that opens headless chromium, and loads just the HTML/JS/CSS part of draw.io I need to render my diagrams, and then use Chromium's "print to PDF" functionality to save a PDF.

The RustConf Keynote Fiasco, explained

Disclaimer:

At some point in this article, I discuss The Rust Foundation. I have received a $5000 grant from them in 2023 for making educational articles and videos about Rust.

I have NOT signed any non-disclosure, non-disparagement, or any other sort of agreement that would prevent me from saying exactly how I feel about their track record.

Disclaimer:

Latest series View all

Building a Rust service with Nix

I often give bits and pieces of advice on how to build Rust stuff the comfy way. But it can be hard to see how everything comes together, especially when it comes to, say, deploying a web service in production.

So, let's start from the very beginning (setting up a Linux VM), and march together towards the objective: a production-grade Rust web service, built with Nix.

Advent of Code 2022

Let's use the Advent of Code 2022, a series of programming challenges of increasing difficulty, to learn more about the Rust programming language.

Updating fasterthanli.me for 2022

In 2020, I switched from a static site generator to something homemade.

And, as tradition commands, I did a whole write-up about it.

Since writing articles and making videos is now my full-time occupation, I took some time to upgrade futile, my server software, to the latest and greatest the Rust ecosystem has to offer.

Don't shell out!

In this series, I change a critical component of this website's asset pipeline from "just calling a bunch of external tools" to statically linking with everything I need to process assets. It involves autoconf, CMake, Meson, CI, pkg-config, and some code crimes.

Ever wonder who's behind all this content?