Faster, more compact implementation of Cow.
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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::Cowis 3 words wide: pointer, length, and capacity. It stores the ownership tag in capacity.beef::lean::Cowis 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);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.
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::Cowandbeef::lean::Coware faster thanstd::borrow::Cowat obtaining a reference&T. This makes sense since we avoid the enum tag branching.- The 3-word
beef::Cowis faster at creating borrowed variants, but slower at creating owned variants thanstd::borrow::Cow. - The 2-word
beef::lean::Cowis 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)
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.