Book Image

Rust High Performance

By : Iban Eguia Moraza
Book Image

Rust High Performance

By: Iban Eguia Moraza

Overview of this book

This book teaches you how to optimize the performance of your Rust code so that it is at the same level as languages such as C/C++. You'll understand and fi x common pitfalls, learn how to improve your productivity by using metaprogramming, and speed up your code. You will master the features of the language, which will make you stand out, and use them to greatly improve the efficiency of your algorithms. The book begins with an introduction to help you identify bottlenecks when programming in Rust. We highlight common performance pitfalls, along with strategies to detect and resolve these issues early. We move on to mastering Rust's type system, which will enable us to optimize both performance and safety at compile time. You will learn how to effectively manage memory in Rust, mastering the borrow checker. We move on to measuring performance and you will see how this affects the way you write code. Moving forward, you will perform metaprogramming in Rust to boost the performance of your code and your productivity. Finally, you will learn parallel programming in Rust, which enables efficient and faster execution by using multithreading and asynchronous programming.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Extra performance tips


Compile-time checks are not the only place where you can benefit from a performance enhancement at no cost. While in Chapter 1Common Performance Pitfalls, we saw the common errors people write in Rust, we left the most advanced tips and tricks for this chapter.

Using closures to avoid runtime evaluation

Sometimes, it might seem natural to write code that does not perform as fast as expected. Many times, this is due to Rust doing some extra computations at runtime. An example of an unnecessary computation that someone could write is the following:

    let opt = Some(123);
    let non_opt = opt.unwrap_or(some_complex_function());

I have intentionally made this example simply because a real example usually takes really long code. The idea behind it is valid though. When you have an Option or a Result, you have some very useful functions to allow you get the value inside or a default. There is this specific function, the unwrap_or() function, that allows you specify the...