Skip to content

Faster, more compact implementation of std::borrow::Cow

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

maciejhirsz/beef

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

54 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

beef

Travis shield Crates.io version shield Crates.io license shield

Faster, more compact implementation of Cow.

Changelog - Documentation - Cargo - Repository

use beef::Cow;

let borrowed: Cow<str> = Cow::borrowed("Hello");
let owned: Cow<str> = Cow::owned(String::from("World"));

assert_eq!(
    format!("{} {}!", borrowed, owned),
    "Hello World!",
);

There are two versions of Cow exposed by this crate:

  • beef::Cow is 3 words wide: pointer, length, and capacity. It stores the ownership tag in capacity.
  • beef::lean::Cow is 2 words wide, storing length, capacity, and the ownership tag all in one word.

Both versions are leaner than the std::borrow::Cow:

use std::mem::size_of;

const WORD: usize = size_of::<usize>();

assert_eq!(size_of::<std::borrow::Cow<str>>(), 4 * WORD);
assert_eq!(size_of::<beef::Cow<str>>(), 3 * WORD);
assert_eq!(size_of::<beef::lean::Cow<str>>(), 2 * WORD);

How does it work?

The standard library Cow is an enum with two variants:

pub enum Cow<'a, B> where
    B: 'a + ToOwned + ?Sized,
{
    Borrowed(&'a B),
    Owned(<B as ToOwned>::Owned),
}

For the most common pairs of values - &str and String, or &[u8] and Vec<u8> - this means that the entire enum is 4 words wide:

                                                 Padding
                                                    |
                                                    v
          +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
Borrowed: | Tag       | Pointer   | Length    | XXXXXXXXX |
          +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+

          +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
Owned:    | Tag       | Pointer   | Length    | Capacity  |
          +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+

Instead of being an enum with a tag, beef::Cow uses capacity to determine whether the value it's holding is owned (capacity is greater than 0), or borrowed (capacity is 0).

beef::lean::Cow goes even further and puts length and capacity on a single 64 word.

                 +-----------+-----------+-----------+
beef::Cow        | Pointer   | Length    | Capacity? |
                 +-----------+-----------+-----------+

                 +-----------+-----------+
beef::lean::Cow  | Pointer   | Cap | Len |
                 +-----------+-----------+

Any owned Vec or String that has 0 capacity is effectively treated as a borrowed value. Since having no capacity means there is no actual allocation behind the pointer, this is safe.

Benchmarks

cargo +nightly bench

Microbenchmarking obtaining a &str reference is rather flaky and you can have widely different results. In general the following seems to hold true:

  • beef::Cow and beef::lean::Cow are faster than std::borrow::Cow at obtaining a reference &T. This makes sense since we avoid the enum tag branching.
  • The 3-word beef::Cow is faster at creating borrowed variants, but slower at creating owned variants than std::borrow::Cow.
  • The 2-word beef::lean::Cow is faster at both.
running 9 tests
test beef_as_ref            ... bench:          57 ns/iter (+/- 15)
test beef_create            ... bench:         135 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test beef_create_mixed      ... bench:         659 ns/iter (+/- 52)
test lean_beef_as_ref       ... bench:          50 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test lean_beef_create       ... bench:          77 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test lean_beef_create_mixed ... bench:         594 ns/iter (+/- 52)
test std_as_ref             ... bench:          70 ns/iter (+/- 6)
test std_create             ... bench:         142 ns/iter (+/- 7)
test std_create_mixed       ... bench:         663 ns/iter (+/- 32)

License

This crate is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0). Choose whichever one works best for you.

See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details.

About

Faster, more compact implementation of std::borrow::Cow

Topics

Resources

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Sponsor this project

 

Packages

No packages published