2.0 KiB
go-mangler
To put it simply is a bit of an odd library. It aims to provide incredibly fast, unique string outputs for all default supported input data types during a given runtime instance. See mangler.String()
for supported types.
It is useful, for example, for use as part of larger abstractions involving hashmaps. That was my particular usecase anyways...
This package does make liberal use of the "unsafe" package.
Benchmarks are below. Please note the more important thing to notice here is the relative difference in benchmark scores, the actual ns/op
,B/op
,allocs/op
accounts for running through ~80 possible test cases, including some not-ideal situations.
The choice of libraries in the benchmark are just a selection of libraries that could be used in a similar manner to this one, i.e. serializing in some manner.
go test -run=none -benchmem -gcflags=all='-l=4' -bench=.*
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: codeberg.org/gruf/go-mangler
cpu: 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-1185G7 @ 3.00GHz
BenchmarkMangle-8 1278526 966.0 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkMangleKnown-8 3443587 345.9 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkJSON-8 228962 4717 ns/op 1849 B/op 99 allocs/op
BenchmarkLoosy-8 307194 3447 ns/op 776 B/op 65 allocs/op
BenchmarkFmt-8 150254 7405 ns/op 1377 B/op 143 allocs/op
BenchmarkFxmackerCbor-8 364411 3037 ns/op 1224 B/op 105 allocs/op
BenchmarkMitchellhHashStructure-8 102272 11268 ns/op 8996 B/op 1000 allocs/op
BenchmarkCnfStructhash-8 6789 168703 ns/op 288301 B/op 5779 allocs/op
PASS
ok codeberg.org/gruf/go-mangler 11.715s