awesome-embedded-rust
rustc-perf
awesome-embedded-rust | rustc-perf | |
---|---|---|
37 | 26 | |
5,636 | 592 | |
2.3% | 0.0% | |
7.4 | 9.6 | |
11 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
awesome-embedded-rust
- Arduino e Rust
-
C++ is everywhere, but noone really talks about it. What are people's thoughts?
Are you saying that this book is a hallucination? And this? And all of this?
- Rust – Are We Game Yet?
-
Embedded Rust tutorials on the ESP32-C3
Feel free to PR them to the awesome embedded rust list, and the matrix rooms for embedded rust and esp32 (linked on that page) are super active, so feel free to plug this there too :)
-
Embedded multiplexer
If you haven't already, feel free to PR it to the awesome embedded rust list!
-
what in the gods name
list of curated rust microcontroller resources
-
What the HAL? The Quest for Finding a Suitable Embedded Rust HAL
embedded-hal trait-based HALs: There could be a better description than this. However, this category has the widest base of implementations with more options than can be mentioned here. A more comprehensive list can be found on the awesome embedded Rust repository.
- Most loved language
- [Question] What technologies and crates do you use when development with microcontrollers?
-
Using Rust for Embedded Development
For what it's worth, the ecosystem is definitely growing. See here: https://github.com/rust-embedded/awesome-embedded-rust, there are quite a few drivers for a pretty wide variety of sensors/periphs, and almost every large SoC line is supported.
rustc-perf
-
Adding runtime benchmarks to the Rust compiler benchmark suite
> what do people use to run benchmarks on CI?
Typically, you purchase/rent a server that does nothing but sequentially run queued benchmarks (and the size/performance of this server doesn't really matter, as long as the performance is consistent), then sends the report somewhere for hosting and processing. Of course, this could be triggered by something running in CI, and the CI job could wait for the results, if benchmarking is an important part of your workflow.
But CI and benchmarks really shouldn't be run on the same host.
> What does the rust project use?
It's not clear exactly where the Rust benchmark "perf-runner" is hosted, but here are the specifications of the machine at least: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-perf/blob/414230abc695bd7...
> What do other projects use?
Essentially what I described above, a dedicated machine that runs benchmarks. The Rust project seems to do it via GitHub comments (as I understand https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-perf/tree/master/collecto...), others have API servers that respond to HTTP requests done from CI/chat, others have remote GUIs that triggers the runs. I don't think there is a single solution that everyone/most are using.
- [rustc-perf] Runtime benchmarks got finally merged
-
Ask HN: Was programming more interesting when memory usage was a concern?
A lot of effort is spent to reduce the size of structs in the Rust compiler
https://nnethercote.github.io/2023/03/24/how-to-speed-up-the...
3% and 6% of improvement doesn't seem like much, but at the level of rustc those big wins
Performance of Rustc must be continously tracked (here https://perf.rust-lang.org/) because if you don't proactively fight against bloat, the tendency is that the code will become slower over time (due to new features etc)
-
Can Rust's compile time match its runtime performance?
hmm really really hard to answer :'), it's tradeoffs I think, no matter what you think Rust (cmiiw, I'm not qualified to say this) has (and probably in the future will adds more with guards on compiler metrics https://perf.rust-lang.org/) several phases that given the diffs to other language, might not available to any language compiler out there, if it's available I think rustc already did their best in here (some already being parallized etc etc, might be wrong since I can't refs any reference MRs, but it does exists though labels regarding this)
-
How to catch performance regressions in Rust
About a year ago I was looking for a tool like Rust perf for my application code. I did some research and found a lot of prior art. However, nothing checked all the boxes I was looking for, so I built Bencher!
- Rust – Are We Game Yet?
-
Next Rust Compiler
https://www.pingcap.com/blog/rust-compilation-model-calamity... is a good overview. In general it varies depending on the crate but we track the performance at https://perf.rust-lang.org/ - if you look at cargo, for example, over 60% of the time is spent in codegen through LLVM: https://perf.rust-lang.org/detailed-query.html?commit=222d1f...
- Data-driven performance optimization with Rust and Miri
-
Generic associated types to be stable in Rust 1.65
Something like https://perf.rust-lang.org/?
-
This Week in Rust #463
The performance full-report link is dead: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-perf/blob/master/triage/2022-10-04.md
What are some alternatives?
MicroPython - MicroPython - a lean and efficient Python implementation for microcontrollers and constrained systems
zig - General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
tock - A secure embedded operating system for microcontrollers
glTF-Sample-Models - glTF Sample Models
TIC-80 - TIC-80 is a fantasy computer for making, playing and sharing tiny games.
unreal-rust - Rust integration for Unreal Engine 5
stm32-hal - This library provides access to STM32 peripherals in Rust.
rusty-dos - A Rust skeleton for an MS-DOS program for IBM compatibles and the PC-98, including some PC-98-specific functionality
pico-blink-rs - World's first, but possibly worst, blinky for the pico in Rust
RustPython - A Python Interpreter written in Rust
AtomVM - Tiny Erlang VM
nanoserde - Serialisation library with zero dependencies