SBE
cereal
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SBE | cereal | |
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7 | 13 | |
3,017 | 3,968 | |
1.3% | 1.1% | |
8.5 | 1.3 | |
about 5 hours ago | 29 days ago | |
Java | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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.
SBE
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Possibly stupid question, is java the right language for low latency and high throughput web servers?
I was about to suggest Chronicle, but it looks like they have gone closed-source. The older version is still interesting to look through though. Aeron / Disruptor / SBE are good projects for inspiration as well.
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GitHub - realtimetech-solution/opack: Fast object or data serialize and deserialize library
Could you evaluate how it compares with SBE?
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I made an NBT-based data format, but a little more general purpose
SBE
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Parsing Protobuf at 2+GB/S: How I Learned to Love Tail Calls in C
Consider a valid protobuf message with such a field. If you can locate the field value bytes, you can write a new value to the same location without breaking the message. It's obviously possible to the same with the varint type too, as long as you don't change the number of bytes - not so practical, but useful for enum field which has a limited set of useful values (usually less than 128).
Pregenerating protobuf messages you want to send and then modifying the bytes in-place before sending is going to give you a nice performance boost over "normal" protobuf serialization. It can be useful if you need to be protobuf compatible, but it's obviously better to use something like SBE - https://github.com/real-logic/simple-binary-encoding
cereal
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Ser20, a C++20 fork of cereal
Where? Do you happen to have a pointer? Github has version 1.3.2 from February.
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Added reflection to C++ just to make my game work.
I'd stick with cereal for serialization
- Cereal Pack - a C++ schema serialization library
- Is there any good binary serializer & deserializer for C / C++?
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Pataro II: Pataro Harder
Today I'm back to working on Pataro, the roguelike built on libtcod that made up much of my Hacktoberfest efforts. I had been assigned to an issue requesting the addition of serialization and deserialization, but unfortunately ran out of time and wasn't able to finish the former or start the latter. I ran into issues with Cereal, and had a hard time figuring out the structure of the program and how to go about implementing serialization for all the relevant components. At the end of that attempt I mentioned that if I were to try again I'd start by testing out Cereal separately and getting a handle on that before trying to implement it in Pataro - so that's what I'm doing today.
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Hacktoberfest 5
I am once again working on Pataro today, and I've succeeded in clearing up some issues and creating new ones. I've been stuck on an issue where Visual Studio was raising errors in the portion of the code where I call the cereal archive on some types, but was able to clear up that issue by moving the save function definitions out of their respective headers and into the corresponding .cpp files. Examining this repo and its use of cereal again, I was able to get a bit clearer of an idea of how it's implemented, and I included just about every relevant cereal header I could find to try and avoid any issues like the previous one popping up again (with the intention of later removing whichever I can to avoid redundant inclusions).
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Hacktoberfest 4
On the Pataro front, I've started looking at other examples of people using cereal for their games. It seems to be a popular choice for roguelike games like this, so hopefully I can figure out both the syntax problems I'm facing, as well as logical ones like how the program should be structured to have all the necessary data properly serialized and deserialized.
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Hacktoberfest 3
Progress on one front but roadblocks on another. After my post yesterday outlining my plans to add serialization to Pataro I ran into some issues with calling the archive class in cereal wherein the call wouldn't go through due to an incorrect number of arguments. This happened with both vector and size_t data members, and I'm still investigating why.
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Binary serialization library for at least C++17?
This is the simplest serialization library I saw. You only need to add one method to your class and you can stream it to desired archive. It supports binary as well as json, XML and others. https://github.com/USCiLab/cereal
What are some alternatives?
Protobuf - Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
Boost.Serialization - Boost.org serialization module
FlatBuffers - FlatBuffers: Memory Efficient Serialization Library
Apache Avro - Apache Avro is a data serialization system.
MessagePack - MessagePack implementation for C and C++ / msgpack.org[C/C++]
Magic Enum C++ - Static reflection for enums (to string, from string, iteration) for modern C++, work with any enum type without any macro or boilerplate code
Bitsery - Your binary serialization library
json - JSON for Modern C++
cista - Cista is a simple, high-performance, zero-copy C++ serialization & reflection library.