libcurl-cxx-std-networking-integration
coz
libcurl-cxx-std-networking-integration | coz | |
---|---|---|
1 | 18 | |
4 | 3,923 | |
- | 2.9% | |
0.0 | 5.7 | |
over 3 years ago | 15 days ago | |
C++ | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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libcurl-cxx-std-networking-integration
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I hate ASIO and I can't be alone.
Shared pointers do have a use case. For example https://github.com/ned14/libcurl-cxx-std-networking-integration is a modern C++ example of integrating curl with ASIO, and there we use shared ptrs because either CURL or ASIO can arbitrarily hold onto resources, and you can't know which, so you just have to reference count and deal with the nested recursion of lifetime.
coz
- Coz: Causal Profiling
- Coz: Finding code that counts with causal profiling
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Why is SwitchToThread using so many resources?
But let's take the guesswork out of profilers. Use Coz. It's a causal profiler that performs experiments to determine what code would see the greatest performance improvement of the whole program if made faster. There's a video in the link; I think the best demonstration they had was a program that saw the greatest improvement by optimizing a function that ranked #30 by a sampling profiler.
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Performance analysing tools
Coz. It's in a Debian package so you don't have to build it. Watch the video embedded in the page I linked; I;m all about profiling, but the devil is if you're not a statistician, you don't know how to read profiler results.
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How much does Rust's bounds checking actually cost?
I think https://github.com/plasma-umass/coz solves most problems related to noise in benchmarks.
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Why would introducing a panic cause a 20% performance increase
Perhaps you're thinking of the coz profiler (https://github.com/plasma-umass/coz)?
- Coz: Finding Code That Counts with Causal Profiling
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Ask HN: Has anyone used Coz for casual profiling?
I was thinking of doing some kernel profiling, and stumbled upon this interesting repo: https://github.com/plasma-umass/coz
I'm pretty intrigued by the concept, and was wondering if anyone here tried out Coz.
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Best accurate way to measure/compare elapsed time in C++
https://github.com/plasma-umass/coz https://youtu.be/7g1Acy5eGbE
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Performance variation when moving functions between files
Could it be an issue of binary layout? Have a look at the coz profiler which has a rust port.
What are some alternatives?
zmqpp - 0mq 'highlevel' C++ bindings
Sampling Profiler for Python - Simple Python sampling profiler
cpp-httplib - A C++ header-only HTTP/HTTPS server and client library
php-spx - A simple & straight-to-the-point PHP profiling extension with its built-in web UI
uvw - Header-only, event based, tiny and easy to use libuv wrapper in modern C++ - now available as also shared/static library!
stabilizer - Stabilizer: Rigorous Performance Evaluation (llvm-12 fork)
nng - nanomsg-next-generation -- light-weight brokerless messaging
MTuner - MTuner is a C/C++ memory profiler and memory leak finder for Windows, PlayStation 4 and 3, Android and other platforms
stabilizer - Stabilizer: Rigorous Performance Evaluation