criterion.rs
workers-rs
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criterion.rs | workers-rs | |
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30 | 16 | |
4,153 | 2,273 | |
- | 6.3% | |
6.5 | 9.0 | |
13 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Rust | 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.
criterion.rs
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How to benchmark in Rust with libtest bench
The three popular options for benchmarking in Rust are: libtest bench, Criterion, and Iai.
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Divan: Fast and Simple Benchmarking for Rust
Holy crap. I was just writing a blog to complain about the state of Rust benchmarking and I think this might address most of my points. The biggest one is the ability to have benchmarks collocated within the library like tests which is the biggest annoyance.
It’s also nice to see that it can report multiple counters in parallel. I put up a similar feature[1] for criterion recently but I fear the project isn’t being maintained anymore…
Haven’t looked deeply into divan yet but the other requirements I have for criterion’s power is to run tests with statistical guarantees on the results, terminate quickly when statistical significance is reached (—quick), provide a comparison of the delta from a previous benchmark, and to run async code. Wonder how this stacks up.
[1] https://github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs/pull/722
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how expensive is an operation?
criterion for benchmarks,
- Autometrics 0.4: Spot commits that introduce errors or slow down your application
- Performance-related question
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How can I further optimize this file parser? (std, serde, diesel)
For an extra optimization, you might look into techniques like branchless code, turning array of structs into struct of arrays for better cache utilization/lowering branch mispredictions. There is many talks on YouTube how to actually measure and improve performance of native code. And for rust there is a criterion.rs for benchmarking.
- making a virtual machine in rust
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How much does Rust's bounds checking cost?
https://github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs is good for tests like that. It will give you much more than a single number and handle things like outliers. This makes identifying noisy tests simpler.
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Tips in using criterion to properly benchmark a database?
I have tried many ways but I think is not possible. I put it on https://github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs/issues/631.
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Rust 1.64 Became 10-20% Faster On Windows
Criterion is still the gold standard.
Pros for Criterion over the stdlib: https://github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs#features
Downsides of Criterion: https://bheisler.github.io/criterion.rs/book/user_guide/know...
workers-rs
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Python Cloudflare Workers
- The speed of the Python interpreter running in WebAssembly
Today, Python cold starts are slower than cold starts for a JavaScript Worker of equivalent size. A basic "Hello World" Worker written in JavaScript has a near zero cold start time, while a Python Worker has a cold start under 1 second.
That's because we still need to load Pyodide into your Worker on-demand when a request comes in. The blog post describes what we're working on to reduce this — making Pyodide already available upfront.
Once a Python Worker has gone through a cold start though, the differences are more on the margins — maybe a handful milliseconds, depending on what happens during the request.
- There is a slight cost (think — microseconds not milliseconds) to crossing the "bridge" between JavaScript and WebAssembly — for example, by performing I/O or async operations. This difference tends to be minimal — generally something measured in microseconds not milliseconds. People with performance sensitive Workers already write them in Rust https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-rs, which also relies on bridging between JavaScript and WebAssembly.
- The Python interpreter that Pyodide provides, that runs in WebAssembly, isn't as fast as the years and years of optimization that have gone into making JavaScript fast in V8. But it's still relatively early days for Pyodide, compared to the JS engine in V8 — there are parts of its code where we think there are big perf gains to be had. We're looking forward to upstreaming performance improvements, and there are WebAssembly proposals that help here too.
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Cloudflare Workers Introduces Connect() API to Create TCP Sockets
Not yet, but we're working on that https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-rs/pull/324
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How much Rust work is actually going on at Cloudflare?
I'm also in the Workers org but I have had a bit of interaction with Rust. There's some Rust in the Workers runtime using lol-html for HTMLRewriter as well as some tooling and there's the full blown workers-rs framework that I work on, but that's about it for the Rust I work on regularly.
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std.rs is seeking a new owner
I'm an engineer at Cloudflare working on Workers (and a maintainer of workers-rs) and I'd love to help whoever ends up maintaining this get that PR rewriting it in Rust across the line.
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Workerd : le moteur d’exécution JavaScript / Wasm qui alimente les Workers de Cloudflare …
GitHub - cloudflare/workers-rs: Write Cloudflare Workers in 100% Rust via WebAssembly
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Turbopack - The successor to Webpack
I never said it was, but thankfully nowadays there are plenty of other tools that are fast enough to keep the dev cycle quick. Personally esbuild is my go-to when I need a bundler but I've grown really fond of SWC native api, we used to use it at work for our wasm build tool for our workers-rs framework.
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Announcing support for WASI on Cloudflare Workers
There's actually a rust framework for Workers https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-rs
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What's your experience with FaaS and Rust?
I'm a maintainer of the of the Cloudflare workers-rs project to allow you to write serverless functions in Rust running as WASM in our V8-based runtime. There's certainly some rough spots (doesn't have complete parity with our default JS runtime apis), but if you're concerned with cold start times and you don't need a full containerized environment I think it's a solid choice.
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Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here! (25/2022)!
Most likely, it should, we just haven't had the time to fully implement it or add a library to wrap the FFI. Please let us know you need a feature by opening an issue.
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Warp or Rocket.rs or Actix Web?
I may be biased, as the original project author, but I’d recommend using Cloudflare Workers https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-rs - totally free their with very generous limits.
What are some alternatives?
hyperfine - A command-line benchmarking tool
realworld-axum-sqlx - A Rust implementation of the Realworld demo app spec using Axum and SQLx.
sqlglot - Python SQL Parser and Transpiler
worker-kv - Rust bindings to Cloudflare Worker KV Stores
glassbench - A micro-benchmark framework to use with cargo bench
boringtun - Userspace WireGuard® Implementation in Rust
sccache - Sccache is a ccache-like tool. It is used as a compiler wrapper and avoids compilation when possible. Sccache has the capability to utilize caching in remote storage environments, including various cloud storage options, or alternatively, in local storage.
workers-wasi
tracing - Application level tracing for Rust.
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
tungstenite-rs - Lightweight stream-based WebSocket implementation for Rust.
ssr-workers - Rust based Cloudflare Worker with SSR