straw/rust
Kayos 6cc789a8a0 vc=61: fix subs feed sort + date display
Cobb caught the regression on vc=60: subs feed only showed LTT +
WTYP because vc=56's RSS path emitted raw ISO timestamps in
upload_date_relative, but Kotlin's recencyScore() parser only
understands 'N units ago' format. Every item tied at MIN_VALUE,
sort order went to whichever channel resolved first in the
50-concurrent fan-out — LTT + WTYP just happened to win the race.

Fix in feed.rs: parse the RFC3339 published timestamp, compute
delta from now, format as 'N second/minute/hour/day/week/month/year
ago'. Matches recencyScore's regex exactly. RSS still gives ISO;
we convert at the Rust boundary.

Standalone RFC3339 parser (no chrono dep) — Howard Hinnant's
civil-to-days algo, 30 lines, handles negative years correctly.

Display ALSO benefits — UI was showing the raw ISO string
('2026-05-19T13:00:31+00:00') in the channel row. Now reads
'7 days ago' like every other YT client.
2026-05-26 12:24:33 -07:00
..
strawcore vc=61: fix subs feed sort + date display 2026-05-26 12:24:33 -07:00
Cargo.toml v0.1.0-V (vc=9): U-3 — streamInfo via rustypipe drives VideoDetail+Player 2026-05-24 08:52:43 -07:00
README.md v0.1.0-U (vc=8): Phase U-1 + U-2 — Rust core + rustypipe search 2026-05-24 08:36:50 -07:00

rust/ — strawcore: Rust YouTube core for Straw

Phase U- of the Straw build. Goal: replace the Java NewPipeExtractor dependency with a Rust core (rustypipe + tokio + reqwest), exposed to the Kotlin/Compose UI via UniFFI. Compose UI stays in Kotlin — only the YouTube/Innertube fetching layer moves to Rust.

Phases

Phase What
U-1 Toolchain + UniFFI smoke test (hello_from_rust) round-tripping through JNA. No real APIs yet.
U-2 rustypipe search. SearchViewModel calls the Rust core.
U-3 rustypipe streamInfo + streams. VideoDetailViewModel + PlayerViewModel use it.
U-4 rustypipe channel + tabs. ChannelViewModel + SubscriptionFeedViewModel.
U-5 Rip NewPipeExtractor Java dep. Measure APK + cold-fetch latency before/after.
U-6 (stretch) SponsorBlock + RYD HTTP through reqwest + tokio in the same lib.

Build chain

crafting-table
├── rustup stable (target add: aarch64-linux-android, armv7-linux-androideabi,
│                  x86_64-linux-android, i686-linux-android)
├── cargo-ndk      (cross-compile helper)
├── android-sdk    (ANDROID_HOME, sdkmanager, build-tools, platforms)
└── android-ndk    (ANDROID_NDK_HOME, r27c LTS at /caches/android-sdk/ndk/...)

Gradle (strawApp/build.gradle.kts)
├── cargoBuild         Exec task → cargo ndk -t <abi>... -o jniLibs/ build --release
├── uniffiBindgen      Exec task → cargo run --bin uniffi-bindgen ... --library libstrawcore.so
└── source-set wiring  generated Kotlin lands in strawApp/src/main/java/uniffi/strawcore/

Runtime (StrawApp.onCreate)
├── System.loadLibrary("strawcore")
└── uniffi.strawcore.initLogging()

Why UniFFI (and not raw JNI / JNA bindings)

  • Hand-written JNI: tedious, error-prone, every type change is two files (Kotlin + Rust) that must stay in sync.
  • Raw JNA: better, but you still hand-write the Kotlin side and worry about string ownership.
  • UniFFI: write Rust, annotate with #[uniffi::export], get a Kotlin shim generated. Strings, structs, enums, Result types, async functions all cross the boundary transparently. The runtime is JNA under the hood.

When in doubt

  • cargo check -p strawcore --target aarch64-linux-android — fast iteration.
  • cargo run --bin uniffi-bindgen -- generate ... — regenerate Kotlin bindings.
  • adb logcat -s strawcore — Rust log::info!() lands here.
  • aapt dump badging strawApp/build/outputs/apk/debug/strawApp-debug.apk — inspect what ABIs/native-libs the APK carries.