RiteLinked provides more up to date versions of LinkedHashMap
& LinkedHashSet
.
You can easily use it on std
or no_std
environment.
Support some practical feature combinations to help you better embed them in existing code: serde
, inline-more
etc.
Especially, it uses griddle
by default, if you have a lot of data, it can effectively help you reduce the possible tail delay. (Of course, hashbrown
can also be used)
Add ritelinked
to Cargo.toml
:
ritelinked = "x.y.z"
Write some code like this:
let mut lru_cache = LinkedHashMap::new();
let key = "key".to_owned();
let _cached_val = lru_cache
.raw_entry_mut()
.from_key(&key)
.or_insert_with(|| (key.clone(), 42));
ritelinked time: [140.15 ns 141.06 ns 142.15 ns]
Found 11 outliers among 100 measurements (11.00%)
8 (8.00%) high mild
3 (3.00%) high severe
hashlink time: [147.01 ns 147.87 ns 148.75 ns]
Found 11 outliers among 100 measurements (11.00%)
4 (4.00%) high mild
7 (7.00%) high severe
linked-hash-map time: [301.44 ns 309.86 ns 319.40 ns]
Found 12 outliers among 100 measurements (12.00%)
9 (9.00%) high mild
3 (3.00%) high severe
It is a fork of the popular crate hashlink, but more adjustments and improvements have been made to the code .
This library is licensed the same as hashlink, it is licensed under either of:
- MIT license LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
- Apache License 2.0 LICENSE-APACHE or https://opensource.org/licenses/Apache-2.0
at your option.