On Sat, 2011-12-03 at 16:55 -0500, Matt Sergeant wrote:
Guy Hulbert wrote:
https://github.com/baudehlo/Haraka
Had a look. I recognize bits. Do you have any feeling for how easy
it
is to code versus perl
Once you get used to the idiosyncrasies of Javascript, just as easy
Some of you may be interested in this...
I decided I wanted to hack on node.js to see what all the fuss is about.
So to do that I have basically ported Qpsmtpd to Node.js (and given it a
decent name while doing so!).
It's still early days - there are no plugins to speak of yet (i.e. no
On Sat, 2011-12-03 at 13:14 -0500, Matt Sergeant wrote:
Some of you may be interested in this...
I decided I wanted to hack on node.js to see what all the fuss is about.
I saw a good video introduction a while back ... got busy and forgot
about it. Some of the fuss was that it should be good
On Mar 12, 2011, at 12:48 PM, Guy Hulbert wrote:
So to do that I have basically ported Qpsmtpd to Node.js (and given it a
decent name while doing so!).
It's still early days - there are no plugins to speak of yet (i.e. no
queue plugins at all yet), but you might be interested in just
Guy Hulbert wrote:
https://github.com/baudehlo/Haraka
Had a look. I recognize bits. Do you have any feeling for how easy it
is to code versus perl
Once you get used to the idiosyncrasies of Javascript, just as easy
really. Took me a while to understand the object model, but
a perl six in javascript exists, or existed until its author found a new
distraction -- called sprixel -- that could be used to leverage CPAN into
node.js through some kind of intermediate perl-in-js layer