Ranges
This crate contains a performance-optimized type for generic version ranges and operations on them.
Ranges can represent version selectors such as (>=1.5.1, <2) OR (==3.1) OR (>4). Internally, it is an ordered list
of contiguous intervals (segments) with inclusive, exclusive or open-ended ends, similar to a
Vec<(Bound<T>, Bound<T>)>.
You can construct a basic range from one of the following build blocks. All other ranges are concatenation, union, and complement of these basic ranges.
Ranges::empty(): No versionRanges::full(): All versionsRanges::singleton(v): Only the version v exactlyRanges::higher_than(v): All versionsv <= versionsRanges::strictly_higher_than(v): All versionsv < versionsRanges::lower_than(v): All versionsversions <= vRanges::strictly_lower_than(v): All versionsversions < vRanges::between(v1, v2): All versionsv1 <= versions < v2
The optimized operations include complement, contains, contains_many, intersection, is_disjoint,
subset_of and union.
Ranges is generic over any type that implements Ord + Clone and can represent all kinds of slices with ordered
coordinates, not just version ranges. While built as a performance-critical piece
of pubgrub, it can be adopted for other domains, too.
You can imagine a Ranges as slices over a number line.
Note that there are limitations to the equality implementation: Given a Ranges<u32>, the segments
(Unbounded, Included(42u32)) and (Included(0), Included(42u32)) as well as
(Included(1), Included(5)) and (Included(1), Included(3)) + (Included(4), Included(5))
are reported as unequal, even though the match the same versions: We can't tell that there isn't a version between 0
and -inf or 3 and 4 respectively.
Optional features
serde: serialization and deserialization for the version range, given that the version type also supports it.proptest: Exports are proptest strategy forRanges<u32>.