Crate zbuf [] [src]

BytesBuf and StrBuf are “zero-copy”[1] buffers. They are semantically equivalent to Vec<u8> and String respectively (they derefence to &[u8] / &str, they are mutable and growable), but have optimizations that minimize the number of data copies and memory allocations required.

  • Inline buffers (a.k.a. small string optimization): Small buffers (up to 15 bytes on 64-bit platforms, up to 11 bytes on 32-bit platforms) are stored inline and do not allocate heap memory.
  • Reference counting: Multiple buffers can refer to the same reference-counted heap allocation. Cloning a buffer is cheap: it never allocates, at most it increments a reference count.
  • Slicing without borrowing: A buffer can be a sub-slice of another without being tied to its lifetime, nor allocating more heap memory.

Limitations:

  • Up to 4 GB: To keep the std::mem::size_of() of buffers more compact, sizes are stored as u32 internally. Trying to allocate more than 4 gigabytes will panic, even on 64-bit platforms with enough RAM available.
  • No cheap conversions with standard library vectors: In heap-allocated buffers the data is stored next to a header of metadata. Conversion to or from Vec<u8> / Box<[u8]> / String / Box<str> therefore necessarily goes through slices and incurs and data copy and memory allocation.

[1] Disclaimer: we use “zero-copy” with quotes because it is an exaggeration. In typical usage there is at least one copy, for example from the kernel’s network stack to a newly allocated buffer. However, the library’s design is intended to minimize the number of copies needed after that.

Structs

BytesBuf

A “zero copy” bytes buffer.

FromUtf8Error

The error type for StrBuf::from_utf8.

LossyUtf8Decoder

A “zero-copy” incremental lossy UTF-8 decoder.

StrBuf

A “zero copy” string buffer.

StrictUtf8Decoder

A “zero-copy” incremental strict UTF-8 decoder.

Utf8DecoderError

The error type for StrictUtf8Decoder.