Crates.io | arraystring |
lib.rs | arraystring |
version | 0.3.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2018-12-15 21:51:55.321874 |
updated_at | 2019-01-21 15:03:03.333772 |
description | Fixed capacity stack based generic string |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/paulocsanz/arraystring |
max_upload_size | |
id | 102084 |
size | 160,048 |
Fixed capacity stack based generic string
Since rust doesn't have constant generics yet typenum
is used to allow for generic arrays (U1 to U255)
Can't outgrow initial capacity (defined at compile time), always occupies capacity
+ 1
bytes of memory
Doesn't allocate memory on the heap and never panics in release (all panic branches are stripped at compile time - except Index
/IndexMut
traits, since they are supposed to)
Data is generally bounded, you don't want a phone number with 30 characters, nor a username with 100. You probably don't even support it in your database.
Why pay the cost of heap allocations of strings with unlimited capacity if you have limited boundaries?
Stack based strings are generally faster to create, clone and append to than heap based strings (custom allocators and thread-locals may help with heap based ones).
But that becomes less true as you increase the array size, CacheString
occuppies a full cache line, 255 bytes is the maximum we accept - MaxString
(bigger will just wrap) and it's probably already slower than heap based strings of that size (like in std::string::String
)
There are other stack based strings out there, they generally can have "unlimited" capacity (heap allocate), but the stack based size is defined by the library implementor, we go through a different route by implementing a string based in a generic array.
Array based strings always occupies the full space in memory, so they may use more memory (in the stack) than dynamic strings.
default: std
std
enabled by default, enables std
compatibility - impl Error
trait for errors (remove it to be #[no_std]
compatible)
serde-traits
enables serde traits integration (Serialize
/Deserialize
)
Opperates like String
, but truncates it if it's bigger than capacity
diesel-traits
enables diesel traits integration (Insertable
/Queryable
)
Opperates like String
, but truncates it if it's bigger than capacity
logs
enables internal logging
You will probably only need this if you are debugging this library
use arraystring::{Error, ArrayString, typenum::U5, typenum::U20};
type Username = ArrayString<U20>;
type Role = ArrayString<U5>;
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct User {
pub username: Username,
pub role: Role,
}
fn main() -> Result<(), Error> {
let user = User {
username: Username::try_from_str("user")?,
role: Role::try_from_str("admin")?
};
println!("{:?}", user);
Ok(())
}
These benchmarks ran while I streamed video and used my computer (with non-disclosed specs) as usual, so don't take the actual times too seriously, just focus on the comparison
small-string (23 bytes) clone 4.837 ns
small-string (23 bytes) try_from_str 14.777 ns
small-string (23 bytes) from_str_truncate 11.360 ns
small-string (23 bytes) from_str_unchecked 11.291 ns
small-string (23 bytes) try_push_str 1.162 ns
small-string (23 bytes) push_str 3.490 ns
small-string (23 bytes) push_str_unchecked 1.098 ns
-------------------------------------------------------------
cache-string (63 bytes) clone 10.170 ns
cache-string (63 bytes) try_from_str 25.579 ns
cache-string (63 bytes) from_str_truncate 16.977 ns
cache-string (63 bytes) from_str_unchecked 17.201 ns
cache-string (63 bytes) try_push_str 1.160 ns
cache-string (63 bytes) push_str 3.486 ns
cache-string (63 bytes) push_str_unchecked 1.115 ns
-------------------------------------------------------------
max-string (255 bytes) clone 147.410 ns
max-string (255 bytes) try_from_str 157.340 ns
max-string (255 bytes) from_str_truncate 158.000 ns
max-string (255 bytes) from_str_unchecked 158.420 ns
max-string (255 bytes) try_push_str 1.167 ns
max-string (255 bytes) push_str 4.337 ns
max-string (255 bytes) push_str_unchecked 1.103 ns
-------------------------------------------------------------
string (19 bytes) clone 33.295 ns
string (19 bytes) from 32.512 ns
string (19 bytes) push str 28.128 ns
-------------------------------------------------------------
inlinable-string (30 bytes) clone 16.751 ns
inlinable-string (30 bytes) from_str 29.310 ns
inlinable-string (30 bytes) push_str 2.865 ns
-------------------------------------------------------------
smallstring crate (20 bytes) clone 60.988 ns
smallstring crate (20 bytes) from_str 50.233 ns
MIT and Apache-2.0