I get to rewrite Java to Rust and I'm beyond excited to see what the differences will be. The person that requested it was interested in lower memory consumption.
@DenysSéguret Denys, you are more familiar with Java, right? I am not that familiar with Java, but the idea I have of it is that it isn't the most performant when it comes to memory consumption? Of course it depends on what the program does, but in general is it hard to beat for Rust?
It's mostly focused on multi-threading, reading/parsing json and a HashMap.
I think in some sense I'm asking you to look into a crystal ball and give the most generic answer, so I'll eventually see for myself once I have some benchmarks running, but … I'm incredibly excited! It'll be my first rewrite of something else to Rust for performance reasons.
Well, if you don't have to interface with a language where you have to give away your internals (i.e. share stuff in a thread-safe way that you also hold a reference to) then it will be a pretty smooth sail.
Pro tip: sometimes regular Vecs make things surprisingly faster over HashMaps. I couldn't believe when I looked at the profiled results -- as if all the mental models I had about datastructures and how they map to modern hardware were completely obsolete at that point.
@Stargateur Maybe you don't get it either? ;) (Perhaps I don't get it either..) It's not about amortisation and expected costs as you stated, that's negligible still. It is about cache and miss I believe.
@Jason Yes, reducing memory consumption when going from Java to Rust will be a very easy goal. Perf will depend on the problem. What's the program doing ?
@DenysSéguret I'll unfortunately have to keep it very abstract, but it involves a ) a lot of deserialization b ) keeping many items in memory and performing expensive calculations on these as it's a graph.
This looks like something that Java does very badly
of course you'll have to be smart when replacing the "graph" structure. But it helps to have a finite application which lets you start with the right data structure
What I like for graphs is to use arenas (a simple vec is usually good) and define an indexing type by aliasing usize. You then have no borrowing problem, you have Option<MyIndex> or MyIndex instead of pointers. This doesn't protect you against logic error but it's quite easy to deal with once your mind is clear
or maybe cause hardware is complex and optimizes and prepares queues of instructions and memory and doesn't like to branch when it thought you were going to read some part of the memory cache or to execute some instructions