A Rust library for random number generation.
Rand provides utilities to generate random numbers, to convert them to useful types and distributions, and some randomness-related algorithms.
The core random number generation traits of Rand live in the rand_core crate but are also exposed here; RNG implementations should prefer to use rand_core while most other users should depend on rand.
Documentation:
Add this to your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies] rand = "0.6"
To get started using Rand, see The Book.
The Rand lib is not yet stable, however we are careful to limit breaking changes and warn via deprecation wherever possible. Patch versions never introduce breaking changes. The following minor versions are supported:
seq module, moving most PRNGs to external crates, and many small changes.RngCore and rand_core, and deprecating Rand and the previous distribution traits).A detailed changelog is available.
When upgrading to the next minor series (especially 0.4 → 0.5), we recommend reading the Upgrade Guide.
Since version 0.5, Rand requires Rustc version 1.22 or greater. Rand 0.4 and 0.3 (since approx. June 2017) require Rustc version 1.15 or greater. Subsets of the Rand code may work with older Rust versions, but this is not supported.
Travis CI always has a build with a pinned version of Rustc matching the oldest supported Rust release. The current policy is that this can be updated in any Rand release if required, but the change must be noted in the changelog.
To avoid bumping the required version unnecessarily, we use a build.rs script to auto-detect the compiler version and enable certain features or change code paths automatically. Since this makes it easy to unintentionally make use of features requiring a more recent Rust version, we recommend testing with a pinned version of Rustc if you require compatibility with a specific version.
Rand is built with the std and rand_os features enabled by default:
std enables functionality dependent on the std lib and implies alloc and rand_osrand_os enables the rand_os crate, rngs::OsRng and enables its usage; the continued existance of this feature is not guaranteed so users are encouraged to specify std insteadThe following optional features are available:
alloc can be used instead of std to provide Vec and Box.log enables some logging via the log crate.nightly enables all unstable features (simd_support).serde1 enables serialization for some types, via Serde version 1.simd_support enables uniform sampling of SIMD types (integers and floats).stdweb enables support for OsRng on wasm32-unknown-unknown via stdweb combined with cargo-web.wasm-bindgen enables support for OsRng on wasm32-unknown-unknown via wasm-bindgenno_std mode is activated by setting default-features = false; this removes functionality depending on std:
thread_rng(), and random() are not available, as they require thread-local storage and an entropy source.OsRng and EntropyRng are unavailable.JitterRng code is still present, but a nanosecond timer must be provided via JitterRng::new_with_timerFromEntropy trait (user must provide a seed).exp and log functions are not provided in core.seq-uence module are unavailable, unless the alloc feature is used (several APIs and many implementations require Vec).Rand is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0).
See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT, and COPYRIGHT for details.