waku-rust-bindings/waku-sys
richΛrd 1e43cbbd73
chore: bump go-waku and drop legacy filter support (#89)
2024-02-19 14:06:52 -04:00
..
src Hide waku-sys binding warnings (#4) 2022-09-29 16:22:06 +02:00
vendor@46c46989de chore: bump go-waku and drop legacy filter support (#89) 2024-02-19 14:06:52 -04:00
Cargo.toml chore: bump go-waku and drop legacy filter support (#89) 2024-02-19 14:06:52 -04:00
LICENSE-APACHEv2 Publish build (#22) 2022-11-28 17:57:20 +01:00
LICENSE-MIT Publish build (#22) 2022-11-28 17:57:20 +01:00
README.md Prepare for beta4 2023-02-15 11:42:38 +01:00
build.rs refactor: use callbacks to interact with go-waku bindings and remove JsonResponse (#74) 2023-11-02 13:59:41 -04:00

README.md

Waku rust bindgen bindings

github crates.io docs.rs build status

Rust layer on top of go-waku c ffi bindings.

Usage

These are autogenerated, if you are looking for a proper Rust API version check on waku-bindings

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
waku-sys = "0.1.0"

About Waku

Waku is the communication layer for Web3. Decentralized communication that scales.

Private. Secure. Runs anywhere.

What is Waku?

Waku is a suite of privacy-preserving, peer-to-peer messaging protocols.

Waku removes centralized third parties from messaging, enabling private, secure, censorship-free communication with no single point of failure.

Waku provides privacy-preserving capabilities, such as sender anonymity,metadata protection and unlinkability to personally identifiable information.

Waku is designed for generalized messaging, enabling human-to-human, machine-to-machine or hybrid communication.

Waku runs everywhere: desktop, server, including resource-restricted devices, such as mobile devices and browsers. How does it work?

The first version of Waku had its origins in the Whisper protocol, with optimizations for scalability and usability. Waku v2 is a complete rewrite. Its relay protocol implements pub/sub over libp2p, and also introduces additional capabilities:

  1. Retrieving historical messages for mostly-offline devices.
  2. Adaptive nodes, allowing for heterogeneous nodes to contribute.
  3. Bandwidth preservation for light nodes.

This makes it ideal for running a p2p protocol on mobile, or in other similarly resource-restricted environments.

Read the Waku docs