bzip2-rs
flamegraph
bzip2-rs | flamegraph | |
---|---|---|
1 | 47 | |
92 | 4,287 | |
- | 2.1% | |
0.0 | 7.4 | |
about 1 month ago | 16 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
bzip2-rs
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Noob request: help optimize my text processing code
I would considering using https://crates.io/crates/bzip2 - and stream the file in directly. I would have a parsing stage to convert the data into:
flamegraph
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Rust Tooling: 8 tools that will increase your productivity
You can install cargo-flamegraph with cargo install flamegraph. There are some underlying requirements to be able to use cargo-flamegraph; you will want to take a look at the repo here to make sure you have the right dependencies.
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Need help making sense of these benchmark results
I tried to diagnose the issue with flamegraph, but unfortunately the flamegraph didn't show anything beyond the next call for some reason
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Why is my code so slow ? advent of code 2022, day 16 (basic graph stuff)
having some tools to identify slowness origins (flamegraph is one... but not sure it's the way to go)
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why is my code so slow ? advent of code 2023, day 16 (basic graph stuff)
I'm currently implementing a solution for the first part of the day 16. It work but it is really slow... I'd like to : - understand why - having some tools to identify slowness origins (flamegraph is one... but not sure it's the way to go) - eventually have some clue/solution/idea - have general feedback on what in my "coding style" is not appropriate for rust (I come from java/kotlin/ts even if I've already coded a bit in c/c++) : for example I love iterator & sequence but i feel they are not really suited to overuse in rust (mostly because of async & result).
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how expensive is an operation?
Use a profiler. Flamegraph is a good way to visualise profiler output. This lets you identify which functions are taking up a large amount of time - and hence helps you identify where to focus your optimisation efforts.
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Slow Rust Redis
You tried trying to see what takes the most time under load via flames? https://github.com/flamegraph-rs/flamegraph
- making a virtual machine in rust
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Need help with rust performance
Well, in cases like that the answer is straight forward, use a profiler like https://github.com/flamegraph-rs/flamegraph
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superdiff - a way to find similar code blocks in projects (comments appreciated)
I don't see any obvious problems with your algorithm. I've had luck using cargo-flamegraph to identify the slow parts of my code. That's going to show you which parts to focus on improving the performance of!
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Data-driven performance optimization with Rust and Miri
From the readme of cargo flamegraph:
What are some alternatives?
flate2-rs - DEFLATE, gzip, and zlib bindings for Rust
cargo-flamegraph - Easy flamegraphs for Rust projects and everything else, without Perl or pipes <3
zip-rs - Zip implementation in Rust
tracing - Application level tracing for Rust.
rust-brotli - Brotli compressor and decompressor written in rust that optionally avoids the stdlib
tensorflow_macos - TensorFlow for macOS 11.0+ accelerated using Apple's ML Compute framework.
rust-lzma - A Rust crate that provides a simple interface for LZMA compression and decompression.
hashbrown - Rust port of Google's SwissTable hash map
rust-snappy - Snappy bindings for Rust
heaptrack - A heap memory profiler for Linux
tar-rs - Tar file reading/writing for Rust
snmalloc-rs - rust bindings of snmalloc