Crates.io | ruint2 |
lib.rs | ruint2 |
version | 1.9.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2023-06-13 02:33:13.627862 |
updated_at | 2023-06-13 06:23:45.588663 |
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 uint
s 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
.