java-2-times-faster-than-c
bencher
java-2-times-faster-than-c | bencher | |
---|---|---|
3 | 11 | |
50 | 417 | |
- | 6.7% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
about 3 years ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | MDX | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
java-2-times-faster-than-c
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"Clean" Code, Horrible Performance
As far as the absolute performance you have this sort of effect too. https://github.com/xemantic/java-2-times-faster-than-c
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Is it just me or can't I find a good use for Java?
There are plenty of cases where this is clearly disproved. Here's a few.
- Java 2 times faster than C
bencher
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Why SQLite Performance Tuning Made Bencher 1200x Faster
Bencher is a suite of continuous benchmarking tools. https://github.com/bencherdev/bencher
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15 open-source tools to elevate your software design workflow
Link | Github | License
- Show HN: Bencher – Continuous Benchmarking
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How to benchmark in Rust with libtest bench
Luckily, I've found this awesome open source tool called Bencher. There's a super generous free tier, so I can just use Bencher Cloud for my personal projects. And at work where everything needs to be in our private cloud, I've started using Bencher Self-Hosted.
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LinuxCon: Catch performance regressions in Rust
+1 and an `iai` adapter is in the works for Bencher: https://github.com/bencherdev/bencher/issues/82
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How to catch performance regressions in Rust
tab-based UI: Very true! So three, simultaneously visible columns feel better to you then? New tracking issue
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Bencher—Catch Performance Regressions in CI @ Rust DC, September 20, 2022 w/ Everett Pompeii
Was a great talk about a promising new tool (https://github.com/epompeii/bencher)! Fills a niche that most of the projects I currently work on haven't filled (i.e., the state+aggregation+heuristics on benchmark output so that we can actually do something with benchmarks other than randomly run them locally).
What are some alternatives?
customasm - 💻 An assembler for custom, user-defined instruction sets! https://hlorenzi.github.io/customasm/web/
signum-pool - Signum Pool: open-source, fair, auditable
jvm - JVM in Rust, written as a learning project.
rustc-perf - Website for graphing performance of rustc
oakc - A portable programming language with a compact intermediate representation
toast - Containerize your development and continuous integration environments. 🥂
inside-vm - Detect if code is running inside a virtual machine (x86 and x86-64 only).
bencher - bencher is just a port of the libtest (unstable) benchmark runner to Rust stable releases. `cargo bench` on stable. "Not a better bencher!" = No feature development. Go build a better stable benchmarking library.
OpenJ9 - Eclipse OpenJ9: A Java Virtual Machine for OpenJDK that's optimized for small footprint, fast start-up, and high throughput. Builds on Eclipse OMR (https://github.com/eclipse/omr) and combines with the Extensions for OpenJDK for OpenJ9 repo.
bruno - Opensource IDE For Exploring and Testing Api's (lightweight alternative to postman/insomnia)
perling-vm - Perling VM(a.k.a Perling Runtime Environment) is a interpreter for the compiled Perling byte code
cargo-chef - A cargo-subcommand to speed up Rust Docker builds using Docker layer caching.