quanta

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quanta is a high-speed timing library, useful for getting the current time very quickly, as well as manipulating it.

code of conduct

NOTE: All conversations and contributions to this project shall adhere to the Code of Conduct.

usage

The API documentation of this library can be found at docs.rs/quanta.

general features

platform / architecture support

For most major platforms -- Linux, Windows, and macOS -- with processors made around or after 2008, you should have no problems using quanta with full TSC support. quanta will always fallback to the included stdlib timing facilities if TSC support is not present. The biggest caveat to this, as evidenced in the compatibility matrix below, is that we only support the TSC on x86/x86_64 platforms.

Platform stdlib fallback TSC support? CI tests?
Linux (x86/x86_64)
Linux (MIPS/ARM)
Windows (x86/x86_64)
Windows (ARM)
macOS (x86/x86_64)
macOS (ARM)
iOS (ARM)

performance

quanta sits neck-and-neck with native OS time facilities: the cost of Clock::now is on par Instant::now from the stdlib, if not better.

why use this over stdlib?

Beyond having a performance edge in specific situations, the ability to use mocked time makes it easier to actually test that your application is doing the right thing when time is involved.

Additionally, and as mentioned in the general features section, quanta provides a safe/thin wrapper over accessing the Time Stamp Counter, which allows measuring cycle counts over short sections of code. This can be relevant/important for accurately measuring performance-critical sections of code.

alternative crates

license

quanta is licensed under the MIT license. (LICENSE or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)

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