3.3 KiB
Roadmap
This file contains a listing of my current ideas/plans for this project. This could change at any minute, but it serves as a quick overview of my plans for the project.
Ivago
Summary
- Base project structure
- RESTful wrapper around Ivago's API for showing the pickup calendar
Description
Version 1.0 won't be a very big one, but it's important nonetheless. It contains a base project, on which I can build all the other modules. The only real feature it'll have is a wrapper around the Ivago API.
Ivago is one of the companies in Belgium that comes pick up the trash. On their site, you can view a calendar for your street displaying when they'll come pick up which kinds of trash. The sad part is that this site is very much not a RESTful API, relying on cookies to know which street & city you entered.
In one of my Web Development classes, I was given the assignment to convert this API into a RESTful one. I ended up fully wrapping it up using Python, so my goal is to port said code to Rust so we can then query my API for the same information their website would give. This allows us to remain anonymous while still collecting the same data. Furthermore, having the data available in computer-readable format opens up ways to write a custom frontend for the API (which I will be doing sometime in the near future).
The Curse of the Forge
Summary
- Curseforge site scraper
- Easy lookup of download links for modpacks & their mods
- Caching of Ivago API
Description
Let's start off by saying I'm an avid Minecraft players. I still play at least once a week, even after almost 8 years of playing. I also love doing stuff on servers, so combining this two is quite easy: I host lots of Minecraft servers. These servers often run modpacks, to spice up the game. This is where the motvation for this version comes in.
The Curseforge website hosts a lot of modpacks, but sadly, they're not exactly in a computer-friendly format. Furthermore, the "server files" zips you often see included with a modpack just contain a yaml file, containing definitions for mods that only their launcher can use. I'm stubborn however, and refuse to use their launcher, as it doesn't work with my Docker-based setup scripts, and I just like doing things myself. Therefore, I want to do the following things:
- Periodically scrape their site for all modpacks
- Store all the information I'll ever need in a database
- Provide endpoints that can return a list of mods to download & the config directory
I could then possibly integrate my API into my own scripts, allowing me to spin up a modded Minecraft server from the command line, without having to ever touch their websites or services (besides downloading the mods of course).
As a bonus, I want to cache the Ivago API's calendars, considering I'll be setting up a database for this version anyways.
Kissanime
I like watching anime from time to time, and I've always used Kissanime for this. However, their sites can be quite slow, and riddled with ads. That's why I'd like to create a high-speed wrapper that extracts all the needed info from their sites, removing the need for the user to ever actually visit their site. The API can just act as a fast search index, complete with indexing of the links to the videos and everything.