Artifact erlang-luerl_1:1.2.3-1_amd64

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deb_fields:
  Architecture: amd64
  Depends: erlang-base (>= 1:25.3.2.12+dfsg), erlang-abi (= 17.0)
  Description: |-
    implementation of Lua in Erlang
     An experimental implementation of Lua 5.2 written solely in pure Erlang
     .
     When to use Luerl:
     .
     Fast Language Switch: Luerl should allow you to switch between Erlang and Lua
     incredibly fast, introducing a way to use very small bits of logic programmed
     in Lua, inside an Erlang application, with good performance.
     .
     Multicore: Luerl provides a way to transparently utilize multicores. The
     underlying Erlang VM takes care of the distribution.
     .
     Microprocesses: It should give you a Lua environment that allows you to
     effortlessly run tens of thousands of Lua processes in parallel, leveraging
     the famed microprocesses implementation of the Erlang VM. The empty Luerl
     State footprint will be yet smaller than the C Lua State footprint.
     .
     Forking Up: Because of the immutable nature of the Luerl VM, it becomes a
     natural operation to use the same Lua State as a starting point for multiple
     parallel calculations.
     .
     However, Luerl will generally run slower than a reasonable native Lua
     implementation. This is mainly due the emulation of mutable data on top of an
     immutable world. There is really no way around this. An alternative would be
     to implement a special Lua memory outside of the normal Erlang, but this would
     defeat the purpose of Luerl. It would instead be then more logical to connect
     to a native Lua.
     .
     Some valid use cases for Luerl are:
      * Lua code will be run only occasionally and it wouldn't be worth managing
        an extra language implementation in the application;
      * the Lua code chunks are small so the slower speed is weighed up by Luerl's
        faster interface;
      * the Lua code calculates and reads variables more than changing them;
      * the same Lua State is repeatedly used to 'fork up' as a basis for
        massively many parallel calculations, based on the same state;
      * it is easy to run multiple instances of Luerl which could better utilise
        multicores.
  Homepage: https://github.com/rvirding/luerl
  Installed-Size: '1224'
  Maintainer: Ejabberd Packaging Team <ejabberd@packages.debian.org>
  Multi-Arch: allowed
  Package: erlang-luerl
  Priority: optional
  Section: libs
  Version: 1:1.2.3-1
srcpkg_name: erlang-luerl
srcpkg_version: 1:1.2.3-1

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built-using Source package erlang-luerl_1:1.2.3-1

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