starchild3001 8 hours ago

This is a fantastic write-up of a truly monumental effort. I have huge respect for the author's persistence. The line "Like gardening, but with more segfaults" really resonates. It’s this kind of deep-dive hobby project where you learn the most.

The experience with `c2rust` is particularly interesting. It reminds me of a similar shift I saw years ago with automatic code translators between other languages. They're incredible for getting a project off the ground and proving feasibility, just as the author found, but you often end up with code that's completely "un-idiomatic" for the target language. The decision to throw it all away and do a manual port, while surely gut-wrenching, was the right call. You just can't automatically translate the intent of the original C code into safe, idiomatic Rust.

The "Interesting Bugs" section gave me flashbacks. Bug #2, with the mismatched struct layout due to a missing `*`, is a classic FFI (Foreign Function Interface) nightmare. I once spent the better part of a week debugging a similar issue between C++ and C# where a single change in struct packing alignment was silently corrupting data downstream in very subtle ways. It's one of those bugs that makes you question your sanity. Finding that requires some serious debugging grit, so kudos to the author.

This project is a great case study in the real-world challenges of modernizing critical infrastructure code. The author mentions the next big goal is to convert the codebase from `unsafe` to safe Rust. I'm really curious about the strategy for that.

Refactoring away the raw pointers and complex control flow (like the `goto` patterns) into safe, idiomatic Rust without breaking everything seems like it would be even more challenging than the initial port. Will the approach be to introduce lifetimes and the borrow checker module-by-module? And what's the plan for the intrusive data structures? Replacing them with standard library collections like `BTreeMap` is the obvious choice, but I wonder if that will have performance implications that the original intrusive design was meant to avoid.

In any case, amazing work. Thanks for sharing the journey in such detail. I'll be following this project on GitHub for sure.

  • chickenzzzzu 5 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • whatever1 5 hours ago

      Please enter new payment information

    • starchild3001 5 hours ago

      I'm sorry chickenzzzzu, I'm afraid I can't do that.

    • starchild3001 4 hours ago

      I've seen things you people wouldn't believe

ethagnawl 17 hours ago

This announcement has my attention.

I've been working on a Rust-based tmux session manager called rmuxinator (i.e. tmuxinator clone) for a few years now. It (mostly) works and been slow going because ... life but I've recently picked it back up to fix some bugs. One of the last new features I'd added was the ability to use rmuxinator as a library in other Rust programs. I'd like to try forking tmux-rs, adding rmuxinator as a dependency and seeing if it would ... just work as a way to start sessions using per-project config files. I'm definitely not advocating for adding rmuxinator upstream but it would be very nice to have this sort of session templating baked into the "terminal multiplexer" itself.

The other interesting possibility I could foresee is doing things the other way around and having rmuxinator use tmux-rs as a library in order to setup and manage sessions instead of just dumping out shell commands -- which is fraught with edge cases. (Not sure if this is currently possible with tmux-rs, though.)

Once I wrap up the bugfixes I'm currently working on, I may fork this project and give one or both of the above a try.

Regardless, nice work by richardscollin!

mbreese 17 hours ago

> You might be asking: why did you rewrite tmux in Rust? And yeah, I don’t really have a good reason. It’s a hobby project. Like gardening, but with more segfaults.

I love this attitude. We don’t necessarily need a reason to build new things. Who knows what will come out of a hobby project. Thanks to the author for the great write up!

Also, my gardening is full of segfaults, coding a new project is definitely safer to my yard.

  • tombert 16 hours ago

    Completely agree. Not every project has to be out there to change the world.

    I recently rewrote `fzf` [1] in Rust. Did I have any particular reason to do so? No, not really, regular `fzf` is fine, but I thought it would be a fun excuse to learn how fuzzy search algorithms work and how to exploit the channels in Rust. It was fun. There's no question that regular fzf is better but that wasn't the point, the point was to play with stuff and learn.

    [1] https://github.com/Tombert/rs-fzf-clone

    • carlmr 13 hours ago

      Nice, I do think fzf is a really good candidate for something that could be better if written in Rust. The fzy[1] C-rewrite is really fast, but I couldn't get it to give me as useful results when searching bash history.

      [1] jhawthorn/fzy: :mag: A simple, fast fuzzy finder for the terminal https://share.google/TBp3pVaFngBTfaFyO

      • ricardobeat 36 minutes ago

        First time hearing anyone say fzf can be slow. I mostly use it for filtering relatively small lists (few K items), for example git reflogs, is speed an issue when searching the whole filesystem or something on these lines?

        And assuming speed is not an issue, why would Rust make it better?

      • tombert 12 hours ago

        Yeah, I think Rust makes some sense, and I do think I've done a few clever things like getting a linear-time "sort" by exploiting the fact that there's a discrete and finite number of "scores" [1], and avoiding copies by taking the indexed values and explicitly moving them into the source channel to avoid extra copies [2].

        Someone smarter than me who is more familiar with TUI programming could almost certainly augment and improve what I wrote; I worked on it for as long as it was interesting to me. I use it for my home-built program launcher thing Sway, though most people would probably get better results with real fzf.

        [1] https://github.com/Tombert/rs-fzf-clone/blob/main/src/helper... [2] https://github.com/Tombert/rs-fzf-clone/blob/main/src/proces...

  • planet36 16 hours ago

    "Gardening is the handiest excuse for being a philosopher." - Ray Bradbury, Dandelion Wine

  • sherburt3 9 hours ago

    I was about to post a snarky comment because I have a knee jerk reaction whenever someone implies a rust application is intrinsically better than C. Sometimes I forget people do things for fun.

  • godelski 13 hours ago

    Honestly, I often hate how people ask "why?", and don't understand how "for fun" is a legitimate answer. I get it for work or other things, but hobbies? We do lots of things for fun! Humans were born to play, just like every other animal. It's how we learn and explore the world around us.

    And frankly, to quote Knuth

      > In fact what I would like to see is thousands of computer scientists let loose to do whatever they want. That's what really advances the field.
    
    This is true for any field, or any project. We're creative creatures. We dream and explore. Major changes almost never come from doing things the way they've always been done. A lot of times "just because" gives you the freedom to try new things and challenge those paradigms. Weirdly, if you always have to justify everything you slow down progress.
    • Arisaka1 13 hours ago

      I still believe that my #1 think that stunted my growth as a junior SWE was overthinking my personal projects and languages to use for them, instead of just building whatever I felt it's interesting or intriguing to build.

      • godelski 12 hours ago

        It's always hard to tell. But have you considered you might be measuring the wrong way?

        To me it sounds like you learned a real important lesson one that some people never seem to learn.

        I think one of the most beneficial aspects of doing things "just because" is these other skills or information you get along the way. It is very easy to miss all of this progress if you're too focused on the progress of the more tangible things. But that doesn't make any of that not progress. So don't put yourself down for that, because I'm sure you learned a lot. The only reason you can look back and see a better way is because you made that progress and learned those lessons. These are things mentors can usually help you get through faster but not everyone has a mentor nor access to one. But don't undermine your own progress just because you didn't finish projects or because you did things differently than others

      • Quiark 4 hours ago

        you cultivated your interest in programming languages and techniques

        other people use the stupidest possible javascript to launch product and really focus on product and marketing

        yet other people stay as far away from computers as possible and focus on more human activities

        you just do what you're drawn to naturally

      • ku1ik 12 hours ago

        Same here!

    • hamandcheese 5 hours ago

      I suspect they do understand that "for fun" is a reasonable answer. The disconnect is probably that they don't see how your hobby could be fun.

    • serial_dev 11 hours ago

      Asking “why” can still be a legitimate question, and “for fun” can also be a legitimate answer.

      I treat projects differently if they want to launch a product, they want to replace an established open source tool, done for fun for themselves, or if it’s a hobby project.

      • goku12 3 hours ago

        'For fun' is a perfectly reasonable answer. But sometimes the answer to 'why' comes after you do it. I'm sure that everyone has learned something without realizing its utility until the end. Nobody is obligated to answer that question, unless you're pitching something.

      • godelski 8 hours ago

        The complaint isn't about being asked why, it is about "for fun" not being acceptable.

        Follow up questions are totally cool but the context is different, right?

        If it isn't acceptable then there's a negative tone and questions are focused on utility and usually them "trying to help you" find utility.

        If it is acceptable they ask you about your interests and what you're learning. Sometimes that can turn into utility but that's more natural.

        It's a lot about culture to be honest. Some people are just toxic and if things don't make sense in their heads then it doesn't make sense in any head.

    • charcircuit 11 hours ago

      There is more than 1 way to have fun. Some ways of having fun will produce more value to other people than others.

  • cultofmetatron 16 hours ago

    > Like gardening, but with more segfaults.

    interesting, I'm new to rust. what are you doing that necessitates using unsafe?

    • jeroenhd 15 hours ago

      A lot of things that C will let you do (even if you enter the realm of undefined behaviour) will simply not compile to C. As the author states, there are semantic differences between pointers and Rust's references.

      C pointers can have as many owners as you want, may be subjected to mathematical operations, and can be cast to any type without even an error message. The compiler will just assume you know what you're doing. If you enable enough compiler warnings, it might warn you, but C compilers don't generate a lot of those by default.

      Rust will let you only generate one mutable (exclusive) reference at a time. This means straight C to Rust ports simply don't compile.

      By switching to pointers, which work pretty much like their C equivalent, you can port the code much easier, but you do of course lose the benefits of Rust's safety mechanisms, because most pointer operations throw away all the safety guarantee that Rust provides.

      • zozbot234 11 hours ago

        > Rust will let you only generate one mutable (exclusive) reference at a time.

        Safe Rust includes many forms of shared mutability, including Cell<> which is perhaps the closest comparison to typical patterns in C code.

      • SoftTalker 15 hours ago

        So what is the advantage of an unsafe Rust implementation? Just to have done it?

        • petrzjunior 15 hours ago

          It is rewritten to a different language and many people find Rust easier to read, it has better type hint support for IDE etc. Also, you do not lose all the safety, there are still many rules enforced, such as safe linking, no undefined functions. Unsafe Rust means that all parts of code which do illegal pointer magic are explicitly marked with an "unsafe" keyword. You can now go one by one and fix them.

        • kevincox 12 hours ago

          Once the codebase is all Rust you can start introducing Rust idioms and patterns. Basically step 1 is to get it working in Rust then step 2 is to clean up the Rust to actually take advantage of the language.

        • cuu508 15 hours ago

          From the article: "The next goal is to convert the codebase to safe Rust."

        • sedatk 10 hours ago

          In addition to other points about making it progressively safe, unsafe Rust is still safer than C. https://bsky.app/profile/ssg.dev/post/3lkjogvm2c222

          • Nadya 6 hours ago

            Rust is like walking across a mine field with all the mines flagged for you. You can dig up the mine and remove the flags over time. Or at least know to avoid stepping carelessly around them.

            In C you only see the flags people know of or remembered to plant. There's an awful lot of mines left unflagged and sometimes you step on them.

            It's very obvious to me which would be more safe and I find myself questioning why it is isn't so obvious to others.

      • krater23 10 hours ago

        Hmm...I like when the compiler don't steps in my way and assumes that I know what I'm doing. Thats the reason why I don't like Rust. But when you like it, have fun!

        • anyfoo 10 hours ago

          "Hmm...I like when the assembler don't steps in my way and assumes that I know what I'm doing. Thats the reason why I don't like C, and prefer assembler. But when you like it, have fun!"

          • BigJono 5 hours ago

            C code is shorter than both assembly and Rust, it's not the same thing.

    • tshaddox 16 hours ago

      I suspect it's vastly easier to port C to unsafe Rust than to safe Rust.

  • upmind 17 hours ago

    I found out that quite funny, I wonder how many hours he spent on this. It seems extremely monotonous haha

    • ziml77 16 hours ago

      Sometimes that's exactly what one needs. As long as there's not forced schedule for the work and you can do it when you want and at the pace that you want, it can feel good.

    • phkahler 15 hours ago

      I think knitting looks monotonous, but I can see the appeal.

  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 11 hours ago

    "We don't necessarily need a reason to build new things."

    But tmux isn't new

    Is a reason necessarily needed to rewrite software in other languages

    • fragmede 11 hours ago

      GNU screen would like a word.

      • magarnicle 9 hours ago

        I really don't know how tmux got so much mindshare over screen. It just isn't obviously better in any way. Maybe screen is just poorly named?

        • usef- 7 hours ago

          I think a lot of it is that tmux had friendler, sane defaults and clearer command design (eg. status bar out of the box). And, I suspect, people not already knowing screen.

          The latter reason is why Helix is slow in doing similar to vim, I think, despite being far more consistently designed and saner defaults. Everyone knows vim exists.

          I've still never switched from screen, personally, though I'm only a light user.

          • quotemstr 6 hours ago

            > status bar out of the box

            Software packages win over other packages for the silliest reasons.

            • vaylian 2 hours ago

              Defaults matter. I've had my screenrc with a status line but I still ended up preferring tmux in the end, because not needing a config file was a small but pleasant advantage when working with different machines. I also didn't like ctrl+a as the leader combination, because it conflicts with "go to the beginning of the line" in bash. ctrl+b is a much nicer default.

        • telotortium 4 hours ago

          Screen couldn’t do vertical splits for the longest time. That started to be a bigger problem when screens got bigger and wider. I believe that’s why I started using tmux. Tmux also has more facilities for automation. Nowadays, screen is primarily in maintenance mode, and I’m used to tmux, so no reason to switch back.

          • unixhero 4 hours ago

            Tmux for a lot of things, including scripts

            Screen for when I need things ti behave and work a certain way

  • dsp_person 14 hours ago

    Looking forward to the tmux-c re-rewrite next

  • rauli_ 14 hours ago

    Not every code project needs to turn out to be world changing. Experiments like this sometimes produce excellent results.

  • 90s_dev 12 hours ago

    Intuition and logic are the two halfs of reason (logos). We sometimes have a reason that we can't put into words (logos) but we know intuitively.

  • nisegami 17 hours ago

    Maybe my understanding of one or more concepts involves is wrong, but that "more segfaults" bit confuses me. Shouldn't the rust compiler prevent code that can segfault from compiling? Unless there was a lot of unsafe blocks involved.

    Edit: apparently it did turn out to be a lot of unsafe code

    • Jtsummers 17 hours ago

      It's a transliteration. He's basically implemented a C program in Rust. He says in the conclusion the next goal is converting it to safe Rust.

    • ar_lan 15 hours ago

      In the second sentence he mentions:

      > the code base is now 100% (unsafe) Rust

      I didn't interpret that it's 100% unsafe, but I do expect that to mean there is probably a lot of unsafe blocks used. A good amount of the example code in the post alone is unsafe blocks as well.

    • miroljub 17 hours ago

      My understanding is that, even though tmux-rs is written in a safer language, it still can't beat the stability of an old battle-tested well-maintained project written by a group of highly competent developers.

      Every new project is bound to have bugs that need to be ironed out during the time.

      • a_humean 16 hours ago

        They wrote everything in unsafe rust where its very possible to segfault. This is not a normal C to Rust port. In a normal port you would never aim to have 100% unsafe rust code - rather you would hive off small parts of your application where you need unsafe so its highlighted and auditable. This is clearly an excerise for fun.

        • nicoburns 13 hours ago

          I think it is a normal porting process, it's just only half-finished at this point. The conversion to safe Rust is yet to come.

      • antonvs 16 hours ago

        No, the issue is that doing a direct translation from a fundamentally unsafe language like C can't fix safety issues.

        You'd have to do a proper rewrite, in which case you could write safe code from the start.

        > Every new project is bound to have bugs that need to be ironed out during the time.

        Not on the level of the kind of critical security and reliability bugs that unsafe languages foster. That's why CISA and the FBI both strongly recommend memory-safe languages.

      • QuaternionsBhop 16 hours ago

        My understanding is that the author was referring to there being more segfaults in programming than in gardening.

        • nicce 16 hours ago

          Both can be true at the same time in that sentence

      • Ar-Curunir 16 hours ago

        It’s just because there are a lot of unsafes, and because the translation from C to Rust introduced semantic-mismatch bugs

  • badgersnake 13 hours ago

    > new things

    Or copies of old things apparently.

m3at 6 hours ago

Very much a side note, but:

> my feeling is that I’d still reach for it if my hands are really physically hurting, and I need to keep working. Usually once I reach the point where I’ve got blisters on my fingers I think it’s better to just take a break

I'm dumbfounded, and impressed in an unhealthy way. Do some of you regularly type so much that you develop blisters?

  • DJBunnies 6 hours ago

    Ever seen somebody type on a keyboard that learned on a typewriter?

tekawade 16 hours ago

I love this. I also want to dabble into loving things to rust!

Here I want to call out zellij. Zellij is rust based terminal multiplexer.

I am user not creator. I love everything rust and finding and migrating to rust based solutions where feasible.

  • goku12 3 hours ago

    Just curious. I'm a Rust developer. But I don't see myself discriminating between tools written in C, C++, Rust, Zig, etc. They all seem easy to install and use, as long as they're reasonably bugfree. Scripting languages are slightly different as they require me to maintain their respective interpreters and tools on my system. What difference do you see between applications written in Rust and those written in other compiled languages?

    • tkcranny an hour ago

      I agree the underlying technology doesn’t ultimately matter, but as user of a lot of fairly modern rust-based cli tools there definitely is something in the air worth mentioning.

      I suspect it’s a couple of things. A new generation of programmers are hitting the scene, wanting to do things in new ways. Not inherently good or bad, but the new tools sure usually are at least very _pretty_, and have a lot of affordances and usability improvements over the ancient tools that can never be changed for the sake of compatibility. Rust and Go make this nicer, and are the languages de jour with good cli ecosystems and performance characteristics around them.

      I genuinely do like most of my replacements. ripgrep for grep, eza for ls, zoxide for cd, fd for find, podman for docker, and a few more. Developer tooling is a rich and interesting space to be in, but there’s plenty of bandwagons I’m not getting on, like this or zellij for tmux, or jj for git.

    • shim__ an hour ago

      Build Systems for C(++) are a mess, no package manager often means git submodules. Whereas Rust is actually easy, just requiring an `cargo install`. Don't know about Zig though Zig hasn't really taken of just yet imo.

gmoque 15 hours ago

I love the attitude on this project and most of the comments are supportive. While rewriting a mature application to another language always sounds like a bad idea, there are so many learnings along the way. It's not about the end it's about the process.

Given the traction you got here and the advancements in AI, I'm sure this can become a very attractive hobby project for Rust beginners, there's probably a lot of easy bugs to fix. Fixing bugs, adding new features, and optimizing the code is all you need.

Here's an idea to get the ball rolling: Create a scratch buffer for Gemini CLI (or your favorite LLM) and enable it to interact with the various windows and panes of the tmux session.

Here's my use case, I use synchronized panes to send the commands into multiple servers, but some commands sometimes fail for various reasons. What if I can just ask the AI to send a series of commands and react based on the output and adjust along the way. It's like a dynamically generated custom shell script on the fly.

  • fasterik 9 hours ago

    I'm all for people doing whatever hobby project they want to do for learning and entertainment purposes. But I don't really understand the appeal of straight porting something from one language to another.

    For example, I'm a daily gvim user. If I were going to do a hobby project text editor, I would emphatically not make a clone of gvim, I'd make a text editor with exactly the features I want that behaves exactly how I want. If you're going to invest that much time in a project, why not do something creative and unique?

pizlonator 10 hours ago

I just ported tmux to Fil-C in less than an hour (that included porting libevent and gettings its test suite to pass).

Works great and it's totally memory safe

  • golem14 6 hours ago

    Would you mind porting graphviz to Fil-C ?

    It's probably foolish, but I have the idée fixe that there's really no solid alternative for graphviz and dot (yes, there are UI versions, and mermaid and whatnot, but nothing that works on really big graphs and has the same expressivity), and I suspect that soon all the people that wrote graphviz will die off or retire. I like to see a port to a newer language as well, so ongoing maintenance will bercome easier.

    Again, probably an idée fixe, and all is really well.

tialaramex 17 hours ago

Coincidentally I was just watching this, "Oxidise Your Command Line"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWMQ-g2QDsI

Some of that video is about stuff you have no use for if you're not a Rust developer, but, some of it is things that would be just as useful to anybody who is comfortable with, as it says, a command line interface.

someperson 15 hours ago

Surely improvements be made to c2rust to reduce the cited information loss with constant naming, to reduce the initial conversion burden?

  • kevincox 12 hours ago

    Yeah, this seems like a huge missing feature for C2Rust. IIUC the main idea is to serve as a base for then porting to idiomatic Rust. But if you lose all of the constants that is a huge productivity loss.

    • dataking 10 hours ago

      Indeed. We had experimental support for preserving (some) constants but it fell by the wayside. We're bringing it back in the coming months.

rthnbgrredf 17 hours ago

This seems like an excellent future use case for a fully automated process by a large language model that translates a non-trivial C codebase to Safe Rust in under an hour with high accuracy. However, as the author noted, even after some attempts with Cursor at the end of development, the tool wasn't able to accelerate the translation effectively (in mid-2025). So while the potential is promising, it appears we're still some way off.

xvilka 16 hours ago

Nice, hope it will become cleaner code in time. I tried zellij multiple times but despite years of development it still misses many things tmux provides. Inability to show/hide status bar[1] is the most annoying.

[1] https://github.com/zellij-org/zellij/issues/694

  • imbnwa 12 hours ago

    You can't rebind key maps to its session manager plugin, making it a no-go since I bind the same key that the plugin uses to select a directory or something. Thus, I can't create new sessions through it, have to do it from the command line.

teekert 17 hours ago

Nice, I like tmux, I use it daily, I live in it. I hope this version makes it easier to just scroll with the scroll wheel or ctrl-page-up/down, or ctrl tab through your panes, or just show the whole unconcatenated title in the bottom left ;)

Sorry I know this is not the place to complain, but it would be so nice!

  • antonvs 16 hours ago

    I use byobu which is basically an opinionated distribution of tmux. Scroll wheel works fine, as does Alt-PgUp/PgDn.

    Ctrl-Tab probably won't work because terminals tend not to recognize it as different from Tab. But you might be able to bind Alt-Tab or some other such combo to cycle through panes in the tmux config. It should just be a one-liner.

  • jayknight 16 hours ago

    For me scroll wheel just works. The other stuff wouldn't be hard to configure with `bind-key`. I use ctrl-space to cycle through panes in a window:

    bind-key -n C-Space select-pane -t +1

  • 0x457 16 hours ago

    You might like zellij more than tmux.

devy 6 hours ago

Wonder if anyone has tried these over flourishing AI code assist tools to supercharge the speed these porting projects? If so, what's the experience has been?

  • chthonicdaemon 6 hours ago

    OP said they tried cursor and didn't experience a speedup over their vi macros.

osigurdson 6 hours ago

I don't understand mouse support in tmux. tmux works great, then when you need to enable mouse support, it takes over everything works horribly.

df0b9f169d54 17 hours ago

tmux has been used a lot of memory on my system, especially when scrolling buffer is large enough (I often have > 10k lines of things ).

I have often executed `pkill -9 tmux` and saved my day. I hope the rust version can help a bit here?

  • da-x 2 hours ago

    I am using tmux with a 200,000 line history and have no issues.

    Also, in 2017-2018 I contributed a few fixes for memory leaks related to buffer history, so make sure you are using a recent version.

  • 01HNNWZ0MV43FF 16 hours ago

    How much is a lot? Even 10,000 lines of text should be on the order of megabytes, right?

  • throwaway290 17 hours ago

    Tmux has configurable scrollback buffer size, maybe set-option -g history-limit something-smaller in your config?

seyz 13 hours ago

> I don’t really have a good reason. It’s a hobby project. Like gardening, but with more segfaults.

Love it. You definitively deserve your +350 points!

  • Jtsummers 12 hours ago

    It's not my project, I saw that line and read the rest and thought it was interesting so I submitted it.

jimrandomh 8 hours ago

The author doesn't claim it, but worth stating explicitly: tmux is a security-critical piece of software that doesn't get the attention it deserves.

submeta 17 hours ago

Tmux is a gamechanger for me. Being able to start a dozen different projects with one line (using tmuxinator): the server, tailing logfiles, activating venvs, running the docker container, all within one line of code: Awesome. Hadn’t worked with it for years, just started again two days ago as I migrated from iTerm to Ghostty. And am loving the setup. Plus nvim. Pure awesomeness.

Looking forward to check out tmux-rs.

  • kccqzy 15 hours ago

    Surprised to hear you migrated from iTerm. It actually has a tmux integration mode (using -CC) that's awesome. You then don't have to remember any tmux specific shortcuts. Switching window is just Cmd+` just like everywhere else.

    I entirely stopped using tmux when I couldn't use iTerm.

  • johnisgood 15 hours ago

    > Looking forward to check out tmux-rs.

    Have you checked out the website? This is a c2rust project. The Rust code is full of unsafe code and probably buggier than the C version, and let us not even mention readability and maintainability. Maybe there is a joke somewhere.

    • neuspadrin 15 hours ago

      Did you? Like 2 paragraphs in:

      > I threw away all of the C2Rust output and decided I would translate all of the files into Rust manually from C.

      The talk about starting with it, realizing it was too rough and changed approach. It's unsafe rust now but next goal at end was a safe version.

      • johnisgood 13 hours ago

        Yeah, time will tell. I am not going to hold my breath. You can, but you might find yourself dead (or not, actually).

        Have you read the conclusion, BTW?

sanity 13 hours ago

How do people feel about tmux vs zellij?

  • imbnwa 12 hours ago

    Zellij has interesting ideas, but it has a ways to go. You can arbitrarily rebind the base modes and their actions, but you're F'd if those conflict with a plugin's, which seem to all have hardcoded key binds.

aldousd666 14 hours ago

Great way to learn a new language!

a-dub 14 hours ago

the one thing i wish tmux supported was remote connections to several backend instances.

  • Carrok 12 hours ago

    Use tmuxinator to start multiple ssh/mosh connections.

philosophty 13 hours ago

"Despite the generated code working, it was basically unmaintainable and 3x larger than the original C."

Which makes C2Rust seem pretty useless?

"I’ve recently reached a big milestone: the code base is now 100% (unsafe) Rust. I’d like to share the process of porting the original codebase from ~67,000 lines of C code to ~81,000 lines of Rust (excluding comments and empty lines)."

And yet somehow a hand-ported (and still unsafe) rewrite of a C program in Rust is still almost 20% larger?

If I recall, the Go gc compiler was automatically converted from 80K lines of C to 80K lines of Go. A hand-ported version would have been much smaller.

  • kevincox 12 hours ago

    > Which makes C2Rust seem pretty useless?

    It does what took him 6 months in seconds. Of course it isn't perfect, failing to keep the name of constants being an obvious flaw. But presumably with a few improvements you could then spend some of that 6 months cleaning up the code and still save time. Sounds like C2Rust is almost there, but not quite yet.

    > And yet somehow a hand-ported (and still unsafe) rewrite of a C program in Rust is still almost 20% larger?

    Size is not a very useful metric. But the port is still half-done. He has got it working in Rust, so now he is ready to do the "hard" part of the port and actually rewrite the "basically C" code into idiomatic Rust. That is where you expect to get safety improvements and hopefully more readable code.

    • philosophty 11 hours ago

      "It does what took him 6 months in seconds."

      It generated unusuable garbage code in seconds, which is nothing like what he wrote by hand in six months.

      "Size is not a very useful metric."

      Size is a very useful metric. Counting tokens is more accurate estimate of "size" but lines of code is a good first approximation.

      The entire purpose of high level languages is to make it possible to do more with less code. Size isn't all that matters but it's very important.

      Rust code is not only more verbose than C it's also much more irregular and complex. That 20% increase in lines of code is probably more like 50% increase in code complexity, and this is without safety.

      Just compare tokens in the post's example:

        // cmd-kill-session.c
        RB_FOREACH(wl, winlinks, &s->windows) {
          wl->window->flags &= ~WINDOW_ALERTFLAGS;
          wl->flags &= ~WINLINK_ALERTFLAGS;
        }
      
        // cmd_kill_session.rs
        for wl in rb_foreach(&raw mut 
        (*s).windows).map(NonNull::as_ptr) {
            (*(*wl).window).flags &= !WINDOW_ALERTFLAGS;
            (*wl).flags &= !WINLINK_ALERTFLAGS;
        }
      • hamandcheese 5 hours ago

        C-flavored-rust is more verbose than C, sure, but that doesn't tell you much about idiomatic Rust.

qwertywert_ 16 hours ago

You weren't really lying when you said "100% (unsafe) Rust" eh..

cchance 14 hours ago

Next step slowly porting unsafe code to safe rust? lol

  • FullyFunctional 12 hours ago

    why is that funny? I’ve done exactly this (in a processional setting): c2rust to get something functional and then incrementally rewrote the code while producing unit tests (approval tests via insta are particularly handy). The end result was a codebase which was much easier to maintain, with much better tooling and tests.

uecker 17 hours ago

I like this post, one can learn a lot.

It seems automatically translating Rust to C is not a very good idea: "I threw away all of the C2Rust output and decided I would translate all of the files into Rust manually from C.". Neither seems doing it manually: "I introduced many bugs while translating the code. I’d like to share the process of discovering and fixing a couple." Or using AI: "That’s because when using cursor to translate the code it would still occasionally insert bugs, just like me. So, I spent as much time reviewing the generated code as it would have taken me to write it myself."

As a hobby project, all power to you. But otherwise, maybe better not rewrite working code....

  • antonvs 16 hours ago

    > But otherwise, maybe better not rewrite working code....

    Except that the eventual result allows for extension and improvements in a memory-safe language.

    • uecker 16 hours ago

      There seems to be some rather irrational obsession about this.

      • wat10000 15 hours ago

        It comes from the fact that nearly every useful program written in C has multiple security vulnerabilities just waiting to be found. In the unlikely event that you have a codebase that's free of them, you risk introducing one with any significant change.

        • JdeBP 14 hours ago

          Instead of just dogmatically asserting that any C program has security vulnerabilities, and changing C programs is also a security problem, you should look at what tmux's record actually is.

          tmux has existed for approaching 18 years, and M. Marriott is still actively improving it as of last week. One can actually look at its record over that time, and, if that record is poor, replace proof by unsupported generalized assertion with proof based upon actual evidence.

          * https://cvedetails.com/product/20683/Nicholas-Marriott-Tmux....

          • wat10000 12 hours ago

            That search misses this: https://www.cvedetails.com/cve/CVE-2020-27347/

            That is still quite a good record, but my statement stands. It is supported by decades of my experience working in C-derived languages. You don't have to accept my experience or believe my statement, of course, it's all the same to me.

            • hnlmorg 11 hours ago

              That's a little like closing the barn door after the horse has already bolted because if you're concerned about security, then running any untrusted software in your terminal multiplexer is already a bad idea, regardless of whether your multiplexer is written in a memory-safe language or not.

              ...and before someone moans that I'm a C-fanboy, I'm really not. I've been writing software exclusively in memory-safe languages for 10+ years now. But I'm also pragmatic about when arguments about a RiR (rewrite-in-rust) are sensible and when they're not. In tmux's specific case, arguing about security misses the point.

              • wat10000 10 hours ago

                You never run curl dumping to stdout? You never cat or less a file you downloaded? You never ssh to servers run by other people?

                • hnlmorg 39 minutes ago

                  Seeming as I'm getting downvoted, let me explain my point better -- and please hear me through because I'm genuinely making some balanced arguments here rather than just viewing things as "black and white":

                  If you care about security enough to be concerned about memory-safety bugs in tmux, then tmux is already a fail, regardless of whether it's written in Rust. I detailed some features in another comment about some of tmux's features that basically make it spyware for untrusted code. And that's got nothing to do with the language it is written in.

                  But assuming you only care about terminal output and trust the software you execute, then you still have a hundred other libraries written in C between and tmux and the internet: openssh, libcurl, openssl, glibc, and so on and so forth. I'd actually welcome seeing many other those rewritten in Rust (or another memory safe language). So rewriting tmux before them is a lot like closing the barn door after the horse has already bolted.

                  Thus if you're genuinely concerned about memory safety security vulnerabilities then the only safe way to work with untrusted output is in a VM.

                  As it happens, this is exactly how highly secure systems operate. Their developers work on VMs which are tightly locked down by the vendor and easy to destroy if they become compromised.

                  Literally the only way to solve the problem you describe is to assume the entire stack is already compromised and thus run it in a sandbox.

                  So does rewriting tmux in Rust improve security? Yes, technically you're right. But it makes almost zero practical benefit compared to everything else. Memory-safety in tmux is not your weak link here. Not even remotely.

                  Disclaimer: I've developed terminal emulators, shells and terminal multiplexers in memory safe languages. My latest project makes heavy use of tmux integrations (again, in a memory safe language) so I'm very familiar with tmux's quirks. I also have a background in DevSecOps. You could almost say this topic is my specialist subject ;) The Rust hype is a generally good thing but misplaced in this very specific discussion.

                • hnlmorg 3 hours ago

                  > You never run curl dumping to stdout?

                  Not against untrusted URLs, no.

                  > You never cat or less a file you downloaded?

                  I don’t download untrusted files.

                  > You never ssh to servers run by other people?

                  100% no.

                  ——-

                  Sounds like what you need more is a VM ;) executing anything untrusted in a secure environment is a dumb move.

        • ozgrakkurt 13 hours ago

          As someone using rust for over 7 years and recently switched to zig for personal projects, there is a lot of nuance. Yes rust is very reliable, it is really good even if you set memory safety aspect aside. But developing in rust is just so painful compared to using a simple language like c or zig and just enjoying the process.

          Also dev time is massively shorter and the time I gain is spent on adding more features and tests.

          Would recommend building low level projects in something like zig, if you care about build time and don’t want to use a dependency for everything.

          • wat10000 12 hours ago

            I like C and various parts of C++ and I'm still writing new code in those languages. But for any component that could be exposed to malicious data, security is a never-ending game of whack-a-mole. I'm not saying everyone must move away, just that when people do, this is a big reason why.

      • antonvs 16 hours ago

        Things can seem irrational when you don't understand them.

        Another comment in this thread hoped for "a brand new bulletproof tmux-resurrect". The reason there's a desire for such things is closely related to the limitations of non-trivial programs written in C.

        They're harder to extend without bugs, harder for new team members to understand, and so on.

        The "irrational obsession" has to do with advancing the state of the art beyond a primitive high-level assembler that was developed in the 1970s.

        • uecker 16 hours ago

          I understand them very well, I just do not think it trumps all other considerations. Also I do not believe that Rust is easier than C. It is also less fun, less portable, and has another annoying ecosytem costs.

          • antonvs 16 hours ago

            There's a lot of subjectivity here. The last serious C code I wrote was in the early 1990s, and I don't miss it at all, because I don't like spending time on low-level details unrelated to the problem domain I'm working on.

            I find Rust fun and easy for writing system-level code, and I have enormous appreciation for the degree of correctness-by-construction that it can provide. Generally, if it builds, it works, as long as you're making proper use of the type system - make illegal states unrepresentable, as the saying goes. That's very difficult to do with C.

            Rust isn't perfect. For most things, I'd rather be using Haskell, ML, or something on that level. But it's still on a completely different level from C, and rewriting the software ecosystem in it can only be an improvement.

            • davemp 13 hours ago

              C23 is very different than C89. C89 variable declarations are decidedly not fun.

              Embed, designated initialization, and constexpr are really nice adds.

          • sunshowers 13 hours ago

            Rust is far more portable in practice than C. Your average C program is written either for Unix or for Windows, while Rust has sufficient abstraction power to be able to write most business logic once.

            I maintain cargo-nextest, a widely-used test runner for Rust. It is possible to write nextest's runner loop in C, but it would be extraordinarily difficult — each test's state machine has dozens of states, there are several dynamic event sources as inputs, and the event loop relies heavily on epoll/kqueue/the equivalent Windows thing, as abstracted out by Tokio. So most test runners written in C don't even try to approach the quality, reliability, or portability of nextest.

            https://nexte.st/docs/design/architecture/runner-loop/

            • uecker 12 hours ago

              I think you have no idea how big the C ecosystem is. I am not sure what cargo-nextest is, but I have seen people solve the most challenging programs in C.

              • sunshowers 12 hours ago

                As I mentioned, cargo-nextest is a widely used test runner for Rust -- you're welcome to check out its website for its feature set.

                It is possible to do this in C, because it compiles to machine code in the end. But would be out of reach for all but the most talented of C teams working over many years, and the portability costs would be massive. As a result, I don't know of a test runner that comes anywhere close to the feature set and portability of nextest that's written in C.

                > I think you have no idea how big the C ecosystem is.

                I'm definitely aware that the C ecosystem is much larger than the Rust ecosystem.

                • uecker 12 hours ago

                  I also doesn't seem like anything most people would spend a lot of time on. I run my tests using "make" which somewhat poor but does the job. So from a programming side, what exactly do you think would be difficult to implement in C?

                  • sunshowers 11 hours ago

                    > I also doesn't seem like anything most people would spend a lot of time on.

                    That's because the conditions created by C make solving this problem very hard, not because the problem isn't worth solving.

                    It is still a hard problem with Rust, requiring heavy use of async state machines to manage a rather extraordinary level of complexity. But at least it is possible for essentially a solo dev like myself to do in a robust, largely bug-free manner.

                    > I run my tests using "make" which somewhat poor but does the job.

                    Right, "make" is indeed not quite a high-performance enterprise-grade test runner with parallel test execution, high-quality reporting, signal handling, dynamic status querying, timeouts, retries, flaky test detection, mutual exclusion between tests, a DSL that lets you specify sets of tests, flexible configuration, archiving tests to run on another computer, sharding test runs, JUnit support, wrapper scripts, setup scripts, and several other features. Make doesn't even properly support Windows, which is table stakes for a portable test runner.

                    You're welcome to peruse the design documents:

                    https://nexte.st/docs/design/architecture/runner-loop/ (already linked above)

                    https://nexte.st/docs/design/architecture/signal-handling/

                    https://nexte.st/docs/design/architecture/input-handling/

            • krater23 10 hours ago

              Looks like you think only in windows and linux. Ok, but how much of your rust runs on freeRTOS or bare metal and on how many processor families? C? Runs on all of them. 6502? No Problem? 8051? Clearly! CRC16C? Yes. Eco32? yup. i386? Is developed to run C. Arm64, Arm? They too. They run Minix in their internal controlling hardware. Written in C...

              Rust is not portable at all compared with C code.

              • sunshowers 10 hours ago

                Nextest works on a variety of platforms and architectures -- a lot more than x86_64 Windows and Linux. Porting to new platforms tends to be quite straightforward as long as someone's made Tokio work on that platform. (This is the power of abstraction! Turning MxN portability problems into M+N ones.)

                C definitely has a place, but "Rust is not portable at all compared with C code" is simply not correct. A lot more Rust code works across Windows and Unix than C code does. Rust's portability story is different from C's, much better in many ways but worse in others. In practice I do think Rust ends up being more portable than C in most practical scenarios -- for example, look at how things like `eza` work on Windows, the number one developer platform worldwide.

          • nicce 16 hours ago

            > It is also less fun

            Statistically it is the most fun language there is, based on Stackoverflow. Portability is just a matter of time like with any language.

            • IcePic 2 hours ago

              No, that is likely not true. There are platforms today for which C-based tmux runs but Rust never will. It's not that we are simply waiting for the backport of Rust to magically appear for them, it's quite a certainty that it will basically never appear.

            • krater23 10 hours ago

              It's fun when you don't use it for work. And the most people don't use it for work but just rewrite any tool they can find.

            • uecker 13 hours ago

              Lol, if you believe such surveys.

        • yjftsjthsd-h 9 hours ago

          > Another comment in this thread hoped for "a brand new bulletproof tmux-resurrect". The reason there's a desire for such things is closely related to the limitations of non-trivial programs written in C.

          I don't follow; tmux-resurrect isn't written in C and is mostly useful to keep sessions across reboots.

        • spauldo 8 hours ago

          Wow, that's the most condescending opening to a comment I've seen in a while.

        • chillingeffect 16 hours ago

          > developed in the 1970s.

          It was born in the 1970s and was standardized in the 80s and 90s. It continues to develop. Numerous data types have been added, along with unicode and threads. The C23 standard was released last year.

          • antonvs 16 hours ago

            You can say something similar about COBOL and FORTRAN. C's fundamental flaws aren't being fixed, because that would require a new language.

            There comes a point at which it becomes necessary to move on.

            • donkeybeer 15 hours ago

              What's wrong with FORTRAN?

              • antonvs 13 hours ago

                The same kinds of things that are wrong with all languages originally designed more than 50 years ago (75 years in Fortran's case) and that have accreted features since then. You end up with long-term fads like class-based object orientation embedded in the language, and that inhibits them evolving towards more principled designs. C++ is in a similar situation.

                All of these languages are Turing complete. So ultimately, if you're happy writing code in some language and don't want to change, that's your choice. But the reason Fortran or C or C++ isn't many people's first choice for new projects are closely related to the reasons I've mentioned. There will always be people who want to stick to what they know, but it's not only science that advances one funeral at a time.

              • pklausler 14 hours ago

                It’s hard to actually define what Fortran means. There’s features in the standard that are not portable, and many portable features that are not standard. It’s kind of a mess, and getting worse.

                • spauldo 8 hours ago

                  FORTRAN means what it's always meant. The standard is a guide for the implementor. The user needs to code to the implementation.

                  It's a different way of thinking about languages than most people usually do, but it's been true for FORTRAN since the 1950s and is true to some extent of every language with multiple implementations today.

                  • pklausler 4 hours ago

                    You support my point while also missing it.

                    • spauldo 2 hours ago

                      No, I'm disagreeing with you that it's getting worse, as well as that it's all that bad in the first place.

            • Spivak 15 hours ago

              What in your mind are the fundamental issues of C? Because memory safety clearly isn't one of them as brand new systems languages are being written without it (Zig).

              • antonvs 12 hours ago

                Memory safety is certainly a pretty fundamental problem with C. Zig actually addresses some of those issues, even if it's not fully "memory safe" by definition. Besides, the fact that new systems languages are being written without memory safety doesn't make it a good idea. People write all sorts of languages for all sorts of reasons.

                C's lack of memory safety covers a broad range of concerns, including manual memory management, unrestricted pointers, null pointers (Tony Hoare's "billion dollar mistake"), buffer overflows, use-after-free, integer promotions, and so on.

                Its weak type system is another fundamental limitation, closely related to its limited support for abstraction. The weakness of the standard library reflects this. The weak type system means that the static guarantees it provides are minimal. There were excuses for all this in 1975, there aren't any more.

                Undefined behavior is more of an issue in C than in most languages. Again, not something you ideally want in a systems language.

                Language-level concurrency support is virtually nonexistent.

                Use of textual preprocessing, with limited semantic integration, as a language feature. Aside from the effects on the meaning of source code, it also makes building C programs more complex.

                And again, the reason C23 hasn't addressed any of this significantly is because of fundamental limitations in the nature of the language. You can't "fix" these things without developing a new language.

                • uecker 11 hours ago

                  I think this narrative of the unfixable fundamental flaws in C is a lot of nonsense. There are certainly a lot of dangerous aspects, but most are rather easily avoided. Rust has an advantage, with temporal memory safety. I do not think C++, Zig, or Go have a fundamental advantage. There is certainly a lot of bad C code out, but instead of changing language, you could also just write modern C code.

                  • antonvs 9 hours ago

                    > There are certainly a lot of dangerous aspects, but most are rather easily avoided.

                    This is an almost childish claim. If they're so easily avoided, how do you explain the enormously long list of CVEs for C and C++ programs?

                    > I do not think C++, Zig, or Go have a fundamental advantage.

                    We agree on that. They objectively do not. They're all an attempt to continue the C legacy. Go specifically is particularly ridiculous, having been designed quite recently by people from the 1970s who steadfastly refused to learn any lessons from the last 50 years of programming language development.

                    To be clear: I'm from the 1970s as well. I learned FORTRAN in 1977. But unlike the designers of Go, I didn't allow my understanding of programming language design to stagnate in the 1970s. I learned things. I studied things. I discovered things.

                    Do you believe that C is the ultimate in system programming language design? If you agree that it's not, then what are we arguing about exactly?

              • steveklabnik 15 hours ago

                Absolutely zero shade to Zig, because it is still pre-1.0, but if you look at which new systems languages have gained wide adoption recently, instead of languages that are just created, you end up with Rust. And the stated reason industry is adopting it is memory safety.

                • rc00 7 hours ago

                  What adoption? Blog posts? Echo chambers? Rust peaked. The hype pushers don't want to believe it but that is the reality. Absolutely zero shade to Rust.

              • cwood-sdf 13 hours ago

                zig is trying its best to also be memory safe (at runtime, if you want it) whereas c is stuck in the past (you can add on sanitizers, but they arent built into the language)

    • hnlmorg 12 hours ago

      tmux doesn’t really gain anything from memory safety because:

      1. anything running in tmux already has execution rights and typically for the same user as tmux anyway.

      2. Anyone who wanted to exploit tmux could just run ‘tmux -C’ and automatically get access to literally every interaction within tmux.

      3. The software itself is already damn stable. I've never had it crash.

      If you’re worried about someone exploiting your terminal then tmux is a terrible option, irrespective of whether it’s with written in C or Rust. And I say this as someone who absolutely loves tmux and uses it every day.

      [edit]

      And if you're worried about non-security related bugs affecting UX, then a rewrite in any language, regardless of the language, is a worse solution if your application has already been battle-tested for close to two decades. You're much better off creating something entirely new instead of porting code from one language to another because at least then you have new ideas instead of the same application but with new bugs in different places.

      I don't say this because of some bias that Rust fanboys will assume I have. I love memory safe languages and think Rust is a great option for new projects. The point I'm making here is that a rewrite doesn't gain much for tmux SPECIFICALLY because tmux is already extremely stable.

      • remram 11 hours ago

        You forget that tmux is a terminal emulator. Trusted programs can have untrusted/attacker-controlled terminal output. If the program running inside tmux (e.g. cat, curl -s, weechat) can output malformed unicode or escape commands that trigger crashes or code execution, it is actually a huge problem.

        • hnlmorg 3 hours ago

          > You forget that tmux is a terminal emulator.

          No I don’t forget that.

          > can output malformed unicode or escape commands that trigger crashes or code execution, it is actually a huge problem.

          I agree.

          And to go back to an earlier point, when was the last time you experienced tmux crash? Because I’ve been using it 15 years and yet to see that happen to me.

          I get the need to protect against theoretical attacks, but what you’re advocating is throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

      • legobmw99 12 hours ago

        There are reasons to be worried about additional safety beyond just security. My first thought when reading the article was it would be a huge bummer if a bug in tmux brought down a long-running or particularly stateful session. Of course, I’ve never encountered such a thing in my own usage, but if you could make it less likely that alone seems like a value add

        • hnlmorg 12 hours ago

          If tmux was a new project then I'd agree with you. But, like yourself, I've using tmux for probably close to 15 years now and never had it crash once.

          In fact the author of this project has admitted that they've introduced bugs with their rewrite. I know it's a hobby project so I'm not being critical of their work. But if we're only interested in reducing bugs then rewriting an existing project isn't the right way to go. Something like Zellij makes more sense because it's offering something new in addition to being written in Rust.

      • antonvs 12 hours ago

        Any program gains from memory safety. Memory safety is not just about security. It's about eliminating an entire class of bugs - buffer overflows, null pointer errors, use-after-free, the list goes on. They just so happen to be the kind of bugs that also tend to have serious security consequences.

        I honestly don't get this relentless defense of 1970s-style programming. Do you think C is the pinnacle of programming language design? No? Then what's your point, exactly?

        • hnlmorg 12 hours ago

          > Any program gains from memory safety. Memory safety is not just about security. It's about eliminating an entire class of bugs - buffer overflows, null pointer errors, use-after-free, the list goes on. They just so happen to be the kind of bugs that also tend to have serious security consequences.

          Have you actually ever encountered such a bug in tmux though? Because I've been using it for around 15 years and can honestly say I haven't.

          Yet this rewrite has introduced bugs. I know it's a hobby project so I'm not being critical. But if you're just trying to reduce bugs then rewriting code battle tested code in another language, regardless of that language, isn't the right way to go.

          > I honestly don't get this relentless defense of 1970s-style programming. Do you think C is the pinnacle of programming language design? No? Then what's your point, exactly?

          Where was I defending 1970s style programming? I wasn't even defending C. In fact the last project I've worked on based in either C or C++ was 10 years ago. Believe me, I'm a fan of memory safe languages ;)

          My point was very clear and very specific to tmux. You're just trying to read between the lines and create a whole new argument where there was none.

  • greenavocado 11 hours ago
    • tacker2000 11 hours ago

      Wow, so this MS dev is trying out Copilot on the dotnet repo and doesnt even configure it correctly beforehand?

      Or was that comment just a cop-out because Copilot’s results were complete nonsense?

johnisgood 15 hours ago

> the code base is now 100% (unsafe) Rust. I’d like to share the process of porting the original codebase from ~67,000 lines of C code to ~81,000 lines of Rust

Sounds to me that this was a C -> Rust transpiler. :D

Edit: I was right, they used c2rust.

And then there is "// generated Rust code".

As for the code snippets on https://richardscollin.github.io/tmux-rs/, I can read the C version better than the generated Rust code.

  // cmd-kill-session.c
  RB_FOREACH(wl, winlinks, &s->windows) {
    wl->window->flags &= ~WINDOW_ALERTFLAGS;
    wl->flags &= ~WINLINK_ALERTFLAGS;
  }

  // cmd_kill_session.rs
  for wl in rb_foreach(&raw mut (*s).windows).map(NonNull::as_ptr) {
      (*(*wl).window).flags &= !WINDOW_ALERTFLAGS;
      (*wl).flags &= !WINLINK_ALERTFLAGS;
  }
Please let me know which one is more readable to you.
  • jonpalmisc 15 hours ago

    I don't think anyone is suggesting that the generated Rust is nicer than the original C.

    It is auto-generated with the purpose of maintaining the exact same semantics as the C code, with no regard to safety, best practices, etc.—of course it is messier than actual, handwritten Rust.

    As c2rust says in its documentation [1], it's meant to be the first step in an otherwise manual and incremental port of a codebase from C to Rust, and the author recognizes this in their closing remarks:

    > The next goal is to convert the codebase to safe Rust.

    [1] https://github.com/immunant/c2rust/raw/master/docs/c2rust-ov...

    • johnisgood 13 hours ago

      What a wonderful image... and it ends there.

  • Jaxan 14 hours ago

    You should read one paragraph further. They did use c2rust but found it really bad and threw that out of the window. Then did it manually. So in the end it is not c2rust.

    • johnisgood 13 hours ago

      Yeah, looking forward to it.

      Have you read the conclusion, by the way?

      It is probably going to end up being vaporware.

  • _danielle_ 15 hours ago

    I mean what else would you expect when C is ported directly to Rust? Rust programs typically aren't written anything like C programs are.

    • johnisgood 13 hours ago

      No shit sherlock.

      • _danielle_ 12 hours ago

        Then why make the original comment? :')

a-a-ron_b 9 hours ago

> Usually once I reach the point where I’ve got blisters on my fingers I think it’s better to just take a break.

What a legend.

denysvitali 17 hours ago

I like the initiative, but all this effort for ... unsafe Rust? I know it's a hot topic, and I hope the end goal is to have a memory-safe (and faster) tmux. I just hope the author doesn't stop here :)

Edit: As pointed out below, I'm stupid, it's stated in the article and I didn't read that part

  • riskable 17 hours ago

    It's the first step in a two-step process:

        1. Rewrite in (unsafe) Rust.
        2. Update the code over time, moving towards safe Rust.
    
    It's the old, "get it working then fix it" process. In business that's normally a bad idea because you end up wasting more time than if you'd just done things correctly from the start but for a hobby project it's fine. Because then you're more likely to learn something and possibly—ultimately—end up with a better end product.

    To a business, time your developers spend learning things (the hard way) is wasted.

    To a hobbyist, taking the time to learn things is time well-spent.

    • Jtsummers 17 hours ago

      In business it can also be a good idea, because if you're waiting for it to be done correctly you may never have a delivered product even if you have a working (but not 100% ideal) product. A compromise is to get a subset of your target capabilities working correctly and the rest unimplemented and deliver that before continuing on.

  • verbatim 17 hours ago

    At the end of the article he states that the next step is to work toward safe Rust.

    • johnisgood 15 hours ago

      I highly doubt it is going to happen. Should have started from scratch, in Rust.

    • denysvitali 17 hours ago

      Thank you! I skimmed through the article and didn't find this. Should have used CTRL+F :)

  • busterarm 17 hours ago

    It's not exactly a stupid thought. My immediate reaction was: 1) 25% more LOC, 2) in unsafe Rust, 3) for a tool that already has great maintainence.

    The only reason this is at the top of HN is because of where Rust is on the Gartner Hype Cycle right now.

    It's neat, but I wouldn't say useful.

deadbabe 16 hours ago

[flagged]

  • jacobr1 16 hours ago

    It is intended as a incremental step to now write revise the unsafe rust into more idiomatic and safe rust. I haven't done rust port yet, but when translating other projects between languages I've also found it useful to first do a 1:1 port to ensure you have a system that works as intended, then refactor from there to clean things up.

lolive 16 hours ago

[flagged]

alexvitkov 17 hours ago

I'll take a rust tmux if it runs on Windows. I'm currently kind of stuck on Windows and I didn't realize how much tmux means to me until Bill took it away :(

  • joe_guy 17 hours ago

    tmux runs fine in WSL1/2

    • nickjj 16 hours ago

      Yep I've been doing this since WSL 1 was available, it's rock solid.

      My dotfiles at https://github.com/nickjj/dotfiles have an install script to automatically get everything (including tmux w/ plugins) set up on Debian, Ubuntu, Arch Linux or macOS. This includes native Linux and WSL 2 support.

    • alexvitkov 16 hours ago

      WSL is not Windows. Unless you can work entirely in WSL (and if I could I'd just use Linux) having to juggle fake filesystems, incompatible symlinks, two PATHs, three shells is a bit much.

  • throwaway290 17 hours ago

    Why are you stuck on Windows?

    • diggan 17 hours ago

      Some programs only run on Windows, this isn't a new problem. Personally, the only reason I have a Windows installation on my desktop is because Ableton doesn't run (well) via Wine, so not a lot of options really.

      • vunderba 13 hours ago

        This. DAW support in Linux has always been kind of rough. It's slowly getting better though with stuff like Bitwig and Reaper.

    • mystifyingpoi 14 hours ago

      Most people in big companies are stuck with Windows. But WSL2 is really amazing, even if a workaround in idea.

echelon 17 hours ago

I wonder if the tmux maintainers would be interested in switching to this?

Transitioning more software from C to Rust is a great idea.

  • yjftsjthsd-h 15 hours ago

    My understanding is that tmux is primarily an OpenBSD project, and rust isn't a good fit for them (for reasons that summarize to portability problems), so it is extremely unlikely. Also, this is a hobby project that currently is all unsafe, so there's not even any particular point. (EDIT: Of course, as it gets rewritten the latter point is likely to diminish)

    • zozbot234 11 hours ago

      > rust isn't a good fit for them (for reasons that summarize to portability problems)

      These problems are largely solved now that there's a working transpiler from Rust to C - https://github.com/FractalFir/rustc_codegen_clr

      • yjftsjthsd-h 10 hours ago

        > This project is still early in its developement. Bugs, crashes and miscompilations are expected. DO NOT USE IT FOR ANYTHING SERIOUS.

        > rustc_codegen_clr is only tested on Linux x86_64, with the CoreCLR runtime (more commonly known as simply the .NET runtime), on .NET 8. It should work on other platforms, but it is not guaranteed.

        I guess it could eventually be an option, but today it looks more like a neat tech demo.

  • zppln 16 hours ago

    Seems like a bit entitled to expect being able to go around rewriting stuff and then have the old maintainers maintain it.

    • echelon 12 hours ago

      > to expect

      I wonder, I don't expect.

      This would require first for the Rust implementation to grow beyond a POC with code translation. In its current state I doubt it could entice any of the original authors or maintainers. But if it became capable and hardened and picked up velocity, then it would pose some major questions for having two similar pieces of software.

  • joshka 16 hours ago

    Taking a look at the source earlier, I'd guess probably not.

    If you're going to move a project to rust, you'd want to actually make it look like rust. Currently it looks like C written in rust. That doesn't make anyone happy really.

    (Obv. not a slight on the maintainer here, it's a personal project with a specific approach)

  • uecker 16 hours ago

    It is a horrible idea.

  • johnisgood 15 hours ago

    Is this a joke? Have you seen the generated Rust code? This is not an actual rewrite.

    • aniforprez 14 hours ago

      Seems like you didn't read the article at all. The author talks about writing it themselves after finding the automatically generated code not up to snuff.

      • johnisgood 13 hours ago

        I did, but I am not having high hopes. Have you read the conclusion?

blibble 12 hours ago

what is it with these re-implementations by different authors pinching the name of the original project?

you want to re-implement a well known project, fine

call it something else

  • hnlmorg 12 hours ago

    That ship sailed right at the birth of open source. Just look at the number of different reimplementations of coreutils.

  • encom 11 hours ago

    No I like the idea of appending "-rs", because it makes it much easier to filter out.

lolive 16 hours ago

D.mn!

I was hoping for the announcement of a brand new bulletproof tmux-resurrect.

But no, it is (just) tmux-(recodedIn)rust.

z3ratul163071 15 hours ago

rewriting old code in new language is the killer application for AI. should have used that instead of transpiler.

dangoodmanUT 12 hours ago

I love this, but the examples they show of their snippets are really, really not rust idiomatic.

Like they’ve basically thrown away all the rust patterns and just wrote a c program in rust (eg all the raw pointers)

londons_explore 15 hours ago

LLM's are really good at translating one programming language into another.

In fact, I sometimes port code to another language and back just as a way to do code cleanup (or at least give ideas for things that could be cleaned up)

I wonder why OP didn't start from that as a starting point?

  • Etheryte 15 hours ago

    This is discussed in the article? They tried cursor, but the bug rate was no better than their manual effort, so at least in this context, it did not work out.

  • lab14 15 hours ago

    Because he didn't want to? He mentioned that for him, this is like a "gardening" project, so why take away the joy of programming just to become an AI operator?

alberth 13 hours ago

Slightly OT: it didn’t dawn on me until recently that terminal multiplier (like tmux) is a terminal itself.

And as a result, you could be running the greatest / fastest / most feature rich desktop terminal … but if your multiplier doesn’t support something - it hinders your fancy desktop terminal.

Short 3 min video explained by Ghostty creator

https://youtu.be/o-qtso47ECk

parhamn 16 hours ago

Interesting, this article and the comments make no mention of LLMs for the initial translation. Really surprising given that would be the first thing I'd reach for for a translation/porting task (though verification could get tricky).

Now I really wonder how a good model like Sonnet 4 would have performed.

  • smj-edison 16 hours ago

    Check the bottom :)

    > I did start trying out Cursor towards the end of the development process. I ended up stopping using it though because I felt like it didn’t actually increase my speed. It only saved me from finger pain. That’s because when using cursor to translate the code it would still occasionally insert bugs, just like me. So, I spent as much time reviewing the generated code as it would have taken me to write it myself. The only thing it saved was my hands. Doing this large amount of refactoring is really hard on your fingers.

  • keybored 15 hours ago

    The people demand the AI angle.

  • TechDebtDevin 16 hours ago

    It wouldnt have gotten 2% finishd. It wouldn't have compiled. Its a waste of time to even consider.

    • parhamn 16 hours ago

      > It wouldnt have gotten 2% finishd

      What do you mean by this? I'd assume the process would be very very incremental. One function + accompany tests at a time, verify and continue and keep moving up the tree.

      It's an interesting problem because I imagine in the future lots of things will be ported like this.

      • TechDebtDevin 15 hours ago

        You've been duped my friend.

        -edit Good luck reading 100k lines of Claude generated Rust that you know nothing about lol. LLMS are not the tool for this.

  • dkdcio 16 hours ago

    [flagged]