tree: 2c92eea58d6f137c2d17d8fedca128875446b1a5 [path history] [tgz]
  1. benches/
  2. src/
  3. .cargo-checksum.json
  4. appveyor.yml
  5. Cargo.toml
  6. COPYING
  7. ctags.rust
  8. LICENSE-MIT
  9. Makefile
  10. README.md
  11. session.vim
  12. UNLICENSE
third_party/rust_crates/vendor/memchr-1.0.2/README.md

This crate provides a safe interface libc's memchr and memrchr. This crate also provides fallback implementations when either function is unavailable.

Build status Build status

Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.

Documentation

https://docs.rs/memchr

no_std

memchr links to the standard library by default, but you can disable the use_std feature if you want to use it in a #![no_std] crate:

[dependencies]
memchr = { version = "1.0", default-features = false }

Performance

On my system (Linux/amd64), memchr is about an order of magnitude faster than the more idiomatic haystack.iter().position(|&b| b == needle):

test iterator          ... bench:       5,280 ns/iter (+/- 13) = 1893 MB/s
test iterator_reversed ... bench:       5,271 ns/iter (+/- 7) = 1897 MB/s
test libc_memchr       ... bench:         202 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 49504 MB/s
test libc_memrchr      ... bench:         197 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 50761 MB/s