←back to thread

Zlib-rs is faster than C

(trifectatech.org)
341 points dochtman | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.234s | source
Show context
YZF ◴[] No.43381858[source]
I found out I already know Rust:

        unsafe {
            let x_tmp0 = _mm_clmulepi64_si128(xmm_crc0, crc_fold, 0x10);
            xmm_crc0 = _mm_clmulepi64_si128(xmm_crc0, crc_fold, 0x01);
            xmm_crc1 = _mm_xor_si128(xmm_crc1, x_tmp0);
            xmm_crc1 = _mm_xor_si128(xmm_crc1, xmm_crc0);
Kidding aside, I thought the purpose of Rust was for safety but the keyword unsafe is sprinkled liberally throughout this library. At what point does it really stop mattering if this is C or Rust?

Presumably with inline assembly both languages can emit what is effectively the same machine code. Is the Rust compiler a better optimizing compiler than C compilers?

replies(30): >>43381895 #>>43381907 #>>43381922 #>>43381925 #>>43381928 #>>43381931 #>>43381934 #>>43381952 #>>43381971 #>>43381985 #>>43382004 #>>43382028 #>>43382110 #>>43382166 #>>43382503 #>>43382805 #>>43382836 #>>43383033 #>>43383096 #>>43383480 #>>43384867 #>>43385039 #>>43385521 #>>43385577 #>>43386151 #>>43386256 #>>43386389 #>>43387043 #>>43388529 #>>43392530 #
Aurornis ◴[] No.43381931[source]
Using unsafe blocks in Rust is confusing when you first see it. The idea is that you have to opt-out of compiler safety guarantees for specific sections of code, but they’re clearly marked by the unsafe block.

In good practice it’s used judiciously in a codebase where it makes sense. Those sections receive extra attention and analysis by the developers.

Of course you can find sloppy codebases where people reach for unsafe as a way to get around Rust instead of writing code the Rust way, but that’s not the intent.

You can also find die-hard Rust users who think unsafe should never be used and make a point to avoid libraries that use it, but that’s excessive.

replies(10): >>43381986 #>>43382095 #>>43382102 #>>43382323 #>>43385098 #>>43385651 #>>43386071 #>>43386189 #>>43386569 #>>43392018 #
1. rendaw ◴[] No.43385098[source]
While everything you say is true, your reply (and most of its siblings!) entirely misses GP's point.

All languages at some point interface with syscalls or low level assembly that can be done wrong, but one of Rust's selling points is a safe wrapping of low-level interactions. Like safe heap allocation/deallocation with `Box`, or swapping with `swap`, etc. Except... here.

Why does a library like zlib need to go beyond Rust's safe offerings? Why doesn't rust provide safe versions of the constructs zlib needs?