The rayon-hash
crate duplicates the standard HashMap
and HashSet
, adding
native support for Rayon parallel iterators.
Rayon does provide iterators for these standard types already, but since it
can't access internal fields, it has to collect to an intermediate vector to be
split into parallel jobs. With the custom types in rayon-hash
, we can
instead read the raw hash table directly, for much better performance.
test rayon_set_sum_parallel ... bench: 1,077,602 ns/iter (+/- 50,610)
test rayon_set_sum_serial ... bench: 6,363,125 ns/iter (+/- 101,513)
test std_set_sum_parallel ... bench: 8,519,683 ns/iter (+/- 219,785)
test std_set_sum_serial ... bench: 6,295,263 ns/iter (+/- 98,600)
This crate currently requires rustc 1.28.0
or greater.
Some compromises may be made to let this work on stable Rust, compared to the standard types that may use unstable features. There is an example included which demonstrates one difference.
examples/may_dangle.rs
: Since we don't use the unstable#[may_dangle]
attributes, the type parameters ofHashMap<K, V>
andHashSet<T>
must strictly outlive the container itself.
Some of the features copied from std
would be guarded with #[unstable]
attributes, but this isn't available to general crates. Instead, we guard
these features with a config flag rayon_hash_unstable
. The easiest way to
use this is to set the RUSTFLAGS
environment variable:
RUSTFLAGS='--cfg rayon_hash_unstable' cargo build
Note that this must not only be done for your crate, but for any crate that depends on your crate. This infectious nature is intentional, as it serves as a reminder that you are outside of the normal semver guarantees. These features also require a nightly Rust compiler.
When such features are stabilized in the standard library, we will remove the
rayon_hash_unstable
guard here too.
Rayon-hash is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0). See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details. Opening a pull requests is assumed to signal agreement with these licensing terms.