| Crates.io | ruint2 |
| lib.rs | ruint2 |
| version | 1.9.0 |
| created_at | 2023-06-13 02:33:13.627862+00 |
| updated_at | 2023-06-13 06:23:45.588663+00 |
| description | Unsigned integer type with cont-generic bit length |
| homepage | https://github.com/recmo/uint |
| repository | https://github.com/recmo/uint |
| max_upload_size | |
| id | 888617 |
| size | 454,711 |
uint crate using const-genericsImplements [Uint<BITS, LIMBS>], the ring of numbers modulo $2^{\mathsf{BITS}}$. It requires two
generic arguments: the number of bits and the number of 64-bit 'limbs' required to store those bits.
# use ruint2::Uint;
let answer: Uint<256, 4> = Uint::from(42);
You can compute LIMBS yourself using $\mathsf{LIMBS} = \left\lceil{\mathsf{BITS} / 64}\right\rceil$,
i.e.LIMBS equals BITS divided by $64$ rounded up. [Uint] will panic! if you try to
construct it with incorrect arguments. Ideally this would be a compile time error, but
that is blocked by Rust issue #60551.
A more convenient method on stable is to use the [uint!] macro, which constructs the right
[Uint] for you.
# use ruint2::{Uint, uint};
let answer = uint!(42_U256);
You can also use one of the pre-computed type [aliases]:
# use ruint2::Uint;
use ruint2::aliases::*;
let answer: U256 = Uint::from(42);
You can of course also create your own type alias if you need a funny size:
# use ruint2::Uint;
type U1337 = Uint<1337, 21>;
let answer: U1337 = Uint::from(42);
If you are on nightly, you can use [Uint<BITS>][nightly::Uint] which will
compute the number of limbs for you. Unfortunately this can not be made stable
without generic_const_exprs support (Rust issue #76560).
# #[cfg(has_generic_const_exprs)] {
use ruint2::nightly::Uint;
let answer: Uint<256> = Uint::<256>::from(42);
# }
Even on nightly, the ergonomics of Rust are limited. In the example above Rust
requires explicit type annotation for [Uint::from], where it did not require
it in the stable version. There are a few more subtle issues that make this
less ideal than it appears. It also looks like it may take some time before
these nightly features are stabilized.
use ruint2::Uint;
let a: Uint<256, 4> = Uint::from(0xf00f_u64);
let b: Uint<256, 4> = Uint::from(42_u64);
let c = a + b;
assert_eq!(c, Uint::from(0xf039_u64));
There is a convenient macro [uint!] to create constants for you. It allows
for arbitrary length constants using standard Rust integer syntax. The size of
the [Uint] or [Bits] is specified with a U or B suffix followed by the
number of bits. The standard Rust syntax of decimal, hexadecimal and even binary and octal is
supported using their prefixes 0x, 0b and 0o. Literals can have
underscores _ added for readability.
# use ruint2::uint;
let cow = uint!(0xc85ef7d79691fe79573b1a7064c19c1a9819ebdbd1faaab1a8ec92344438aaf4_U256);
In fact, this macro recurses down the parse tree, so you can apply it to entire source files:
# use ruint2::uint;
uint!{
let a = 42_U256;
let b = 0xf00f_1337_c0d3_U256;
let c = a + b;
assert_eq!(c, 263947537596669_U256);
}
Note that since B is a valid hexadecimal digit there can be ambiguity. To lessen the impact an underscore separator _B is required in this case.
There is support for a number of crates. These are enabled by setting the identically named feature flag.
unstable Enable sem-ver unstable features.rand: Implements sampling from the Standard distribution, i.e. rng.gen().arbitrary: Implements the Arbitrary trait, allowing [Uint]s to be generated for fuzz testing.quickcheck: Implements the Arbitrary trait, allowing [Uint]s to be generated for property based testing.proptest: Implements the Arbitrary trait, allowing [Uint]s to be generated for property based testing. Proptest is used for the uints own test suite.serde: Implements the Serialize and Deserialize traits for [Uint] and [Bits].Serialization uses big-endian hex in human readable formats and big-endian byte strings in machine readable formats. [Uint] uses ethereum Quantity format (0x-prefixed minimal string) when serializing in a human readable format.rlp: Implements the Encodable and Decodable traits for [Uint] to allow serialization to/from RLP.fastrlp: Implements the Encodable and Decodable traits for [Uint] to allow serialization to/from RLP.primitive-types: Implements the [From<_>] conversions between corresponding types.postgres: Implements the ToSql trait supporting many column types.num-bigint: Implements conversion to/from BigUint and BigInt.ark-ff: Implements conversion to/from BigInt and Fp types.sqlx: Implements database agnostic storage as byte array. Requires
sqlx to be used with the tokio-native-tls runtime, due to issue sqlx#1627.zeroize: Implements the Zeroize trait. This makes [Uint] and [Bits] compatible with the secrecy crate.valuable: Implements the Valuable trait.pyo3: Implements the ToPyObject, IntoPy and FromPyObject traits.parity-scale-codec: Implements the Encode, Decode, MaxEncodedLen and HasCompact traits.bn-rs: Implements conversion to/from the BN and BigNumber.Format, lint, build and test everything (I recommend creating a shell alias for this):
cargo fmt &&\
cargo clippy --all-features --all-targets &&\
cargo test --workspace --all-features --doc -- --nocapture &&\
cargo test --workspace --all-features --all-targets -- --nocapture &&\
cargo doc --workspace --all-features --no-deps
Run benchmarks with the provided .cargo/config.toml alias
cargo criterion
Check documentation coverage
RUSTDOCFLAGS="-Z unstable-options --show-coverage" cargo doc --workspace --all-features --no-deps
u64, etc types. See Rust's integer methods.no-std and wasm.