home_run 0.9.0-x86-mingw32

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  1. data/CHANGELOG +3 -0
  2. data/LICENSE +19 -0
  3. data/README.rdoc +314 -0
  4. data/Rakefile +136 -0
  5. data/bench/cpu_bench.rb +279 -0
  6. data/bench/dt_garbage_bench.rb +11 -0
  7. data/bench/dt_mem_bench.rb +14 -0
  8. data/bench/garbage_bench.rb +11 -0
  9. data/bench/mem_bench.rb +14 -0
  10. data/bin/home_run +91 -0
  11. data/default.mspec +12 -0
  12. data/ext/1.8/date_ext.so +0 -0
  13. data/ext/1.9/date_ext.so +0 -0
  14. data/ext/date.rb +7 -0
  15. data/ext/date/format.rb +842 -0
  16. data/ext/date_ext.c +4548 -0
  17. data/ext/date_parser.c +367 -0
  18. data/ext/date_parser.rl +134 -0
  19. data/ext/datetime.c +2804 -0
  20. data/ext/extconf.rb +6 -0
  21. data/spec/date/accessor_spec.rb +176 -0
  22. data/spec/date/add_month_spec.rb +26 -0
  23. data/spec/date/add_spec.rb +23 -0
  24. data/spec/date/boat_spec.rb +38 -0
  25. data/spec/date/civil_spec.rb +147 -0
  26. data/spec/date/commercial_spec.rb +153 -0
  27. data/spec/date/constants_spec.rb +44 -0
  28. data/spec/date/conversions_spec.rb +246 -0
  29. data/spec/date/day_spec.rb +73 -0
  30. data/spec/date/downto_spec.rb +17 -0
  31. data/spec/date/eql_spec.rb +16 -0
  32. data/spec/date/format_spec.rb +52 -0
  33. data/spec/date/gregorian_spec.rb +52 -0
  34. data/spec/date/hash_spec.rb +11 -0
  35. data/spec/date/julian_spec.rb +129 -0
  36. data/spec/date/leap_spec.rb +19 -0
  37. data/spec/date/minus_month_spec.rb +25 -0
  38. data/spec/date/minus_spec.rb +51 -0
  39. data/spec/date/next_prev_spec.rb +108 -0
  40. data/spec/date/ordinal_spec.rb +83 -0
  41. data/spec/date/parse_spec.rb +442 -0
  42. data/spec/date/parsing_spec.rb +77 -0
  43. data/spec/date/relationship_spec.rb +28 -0
  44. data/spec/date/step_spec.rb +109 -0
  45. data/spec/date/strftime_spec.rb +223 -0
  46. data/spec/date/strptime_spec.rb +201 -0
  47. data/spec/date/succ_spec.rb +20 -0
  48. data/spec/date/today_spec.rb +15 -0
  49. data/spec/date/upto_spec.rb +17 -0
  50. data/spec/datetime/accessor_spec.rb +218 -0
  51. data/spec/datetime/add_month_spec.rb +26 -0
  52. data/spec/datetime/add_spec.rb +36 -0
  53. data/spec/datetime/boat_spec.rb +43 -0
  54. data/spec/datetime/constructor_spec.rb +142 -0
  55. data/spec/datetime/conversions_spec.rb +54 -0
  56. data/spec/datetime/day_spec.rb +73 -0
  57. data/spec/datetime/downto_spec.rb +39 -0
  58. data/spec/datetime/eql_spec.rb +17 -0
  59. data/spec/datetime/format_spec.rb +59 -0
  60. data/spec/datetime/hash_spec.rb +11 -0
  61. data/spec/datetime/leap_spec.rb +19 -0
  62. data/spec/datetime/minus_month_spec.rb +25 -0
  63. data/spec/datetime/minus_spec.rb +77 -0
  64. data/spec/datetime/next_prev_spec.rb +138 -0
  65. data/spec/datetime/now_spec.rb +18 -0
  66. data/spec/datetime/parse_spec.rb +390 -0
  67. data/spec/datetime/parsing_spec.rb +77 -0
  68. data/spec/datetime/relationship_spec.rb +28 -0
  69. data/spec/datetime/step_spec.rb +155 -0
  70. data/spec/datetime/strftime_spec.rb +118 -0
  71. data/spec/datetime/strptime_spec.rb +117 -0
  72. data/spec/datetime/succ_spec.rb +24 -0
  73. data/spec/datetime/upto_spec.rb +39 -0
  74. data/spec/spec_helper.rb +59 -0
  75. metadata +154 -0
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
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+ === 0.9.0 (2010-08-20)
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+
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+ * Initial Public Release
data/LICENSE ADDED
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+ Copyright (c) 2010 Jeremy Evans
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+
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+ Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
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+ of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
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+ deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
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+ rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
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+ sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
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+ furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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+
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+ The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
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+ all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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+
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+ THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
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+ IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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+ FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
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+ THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER
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+ IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
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+ CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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+
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+ = home_run
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+
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+ home_run is an implementation of ruby's Date/DateTime classes in C,
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+ with much better performance (20-200x) than the version in the
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+ standard library, while being almost completely compatible.
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+
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+ == Performance increase (microbenchmarks)
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+
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+ The speedup you'll get depends mostly on your version of ruby, but
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+ also on your operating system, platform, and compiler. Here are
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+ some comparative results for common methods:
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+
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+ # | i386 | i386 | i386 | i386 | amd64 |
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+ # |Windows| Linux | Linux | Linux |OpenBSD|
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+ # | 1.8.6 | 1.8.7 | 1.9.1 | 1.9.2 | 1.9.2 |
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+ # |-------+-------+-------+------ +-------|
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+ Date.civil | 82x | 66x | 27x | 21x | 14x |
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+ Date.parse | 56x | 56x | 33x | 30x | 25x |
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+ Date.today | 17x | 6x | 2x | 2x | 2x |
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+ Date.strptime | 43x | 62x | 63x | 37x | 23x |
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+ DateTime.civil | 252x | 146x | 52x | 41x | 17x |
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+ DateTime.parse | 52x | 54x | 32x | 27x | 20x |
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+ DateTime.now | 78x | 35x | 11x | 8x | 4x |
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+ DateTime.strptime | 63x | 71x | 58x | 35x | 23x |
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+ Date#strftime | 156x | 104x | 110x | 70x | 62x |
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+ Date#+ | 34x | 32x | 5x | 5x | 4x |
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+ Date#<< | 177x | 220x | 86x | 72x | 40x |
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+ Date#to_s | 15x | 6x | 5x | 4x | 2x |
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+ DateTime#strftime | 146x | 107x | 114x | 71x | 60x |
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+ DateTime#+ | 34x | 37x | 8x | 6x | 3x |
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+ DateTime#<< | 88x | 106x | 40x | 33x | 16x |
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+ DateTime#to_s | 144x | 47x | 54x | 29x | 24x |
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+
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+ == Real world difference
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+
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+ The standard library Date class is slow enough to be the
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+ bottleneck in much (if not most) of code that uses it.
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+ Here's a real world benchmark showing the retrieval of
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+ data from a database, first without home_run, and then
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+ with home_run.
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+
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+ $ script/console production
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+ Loading production environment (Rails 2.3.5)
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+ >> require 'benchmark'
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+ => false
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+ >> puts Benchmark.measure{Employee.all}
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+ 0.270000 0.020000 0.290000 ( 0.460604)
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+ => nil
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+ >> puts Benchmark.measure{Notification.all}
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+ 2.510000 0.050000 2.560000 ( 2.967896)
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+ => nil
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+
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+ $ home_run script/console production
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+ Loading production environment (Rails 2.3.5)
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+ >> require 'benchmark'
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+ => false
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+ >> puts Benchmark.measure{Employee.all}
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+ 0.100000 0.000000 0.100000 ( 0.114747)
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+ => nil
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+ >> puts Benchmark.measure{Notification.all}
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+ 0.860000 0.010000 0.870000 ( 0.939594)
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+
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+ Without changing any application code, there's a 4x
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+ increase when retrieving all employees, and a 3x
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+ increase when retrieving all notifications. The
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+ main reason for the performance difference between
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+ these two models is that Employee has 5 date columns,
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+ while Notification only has 3.
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+
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+ == Installing the gem
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+
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+ gem install home_run
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+
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+ The standard gem requires compiling from source, so you need a working
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+ compiler toolchain. Since few Windows users have a working compiler
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+ toolchain, a windows binary gem is available that works on both 1.8
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+ and 1.9.
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+
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+ == Installing into site_ruby
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+
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+ This is only necessary on ruby 1.8, as on ruby 1.9, gem directories
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+ come before the standard library directories in the load path.
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+
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+ After installing the gem:
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+
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+ home_run --install
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+
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+ Installing into site_ruby means that ruby will always use home_run's
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+ Date/DateTime classes instead of the ones in the standard library.
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+
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+ If you ever want to uninstall from site_ruby:
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+
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+ home_run --uninstall
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+
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+ == Running without installing into site_ruby
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+
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+ Just like installing into site_ruby, this should only be necessary
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+ on ruby 1.8.
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+
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+ If you don't want to install into site_ruby, you can use home_run's
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+ Date/DateTime classes for specific programs by running your script
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+ using home_run:
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+
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+ home_run ruby ...
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+ home_run irb ...
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+ home_run unicorn ...
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+ home_run rake ...
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+
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+ This manipulates the RUBYLIB and RUBYOPT environment variables so
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+ that home_run's Date/DateTime classes will be used.
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+
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+ == Running the specs
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+
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+ You can run the specs after installing the gem, if you have MSpec
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+ installed (gem install mspec):
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+
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+ home_run --spec
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+
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+ If there are any failures, please report them as a bug.
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+
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+ == Running comparative benchmarks
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+
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+ You can run the benchmarks after installing the gem:
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+
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+ home_run --bench
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+
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+ The benchmarks compare home_run's Date/DateTime classes to the
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+ standard library ones, showing you the amount of time an average
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+ call to each method takes for both the standard library and
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+ home_run, and the number of times home_run is faster or slower.
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+ Output is in CSV, so an entry like this:
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+
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+ Date._parse,362562,10235,35.42
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+
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+ means that:
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+
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+ * The standard library's Date._parse averaged 362,562 nanoseconds
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+ per call.
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+ * home_run's Date._parse averaged 10,235 nanoseconds per call.
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+ * Therefore, home_run's Date._parse method is 35.42 times faster
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+
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+ The bench task tries to be fair by ensuring that it runs the
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+ benchmark for at least two seconds for both the standard
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+ library and home_run's versions.
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+
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+ == Usage
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+
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+ home_run aims to be compatible with the standard library, except
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+ for differences mentioned below. So you can use it the same way
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+ you use the standard library.
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+
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+ == Differences from standard library
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+
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+ * Written in C (mostly) instead of ruby. Stores information in a
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+ C structure, and therefore has a range limitation. home_run
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+ cannot handle dates after 5874773-08-15 or before -5877752-05-08
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+ on 32-bit platforms (with larger limits for 64-bit platforms).
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+ * The Date class does not store fractional days (e.g. hours, minutes),
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+ or offsets. The DateTime class does handle fractional days and
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+ offsets.
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+ * The DateTime class stores fractional days as the number of
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+ nanoseconds since midnight, so it cannot deal with differences
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+ less than a nanosecond.
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+ * Neither Date nor DateTime uses rational. Places where the standard
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+ library returns rationals, home_run returns integers or floats.
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+ * Because rational is not used, it is not required. This can break
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+ other libraries that use rational without directly requiring it.
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+ * There is no support for modifying the date of calendar reform, the
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+ sg arguments are ignored and the Gregorian calendar is always used.
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+ This means that julian day 0 is -4173-11-24, instead of -4712-01-01.
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+ * The undocumented Date#strftime format modifiers are not supported.
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+ * The DateTime offset is checked for reasonableness. home_run
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+ does not support offsets with an absolute difference of more than
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+ 14 hours from UTC.
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+ * DateTime offsets are stored in minutes, so it will round offsets
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+ with fractional minutes to the nearest minute.
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+ * All public class and instance methods for both Date and DateTime
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+ are implemented, except that the allocate class method is not
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+ available and on 1.9, _dump and _load are used instead of
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+ marshal_dump and marshal_load.
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+ * Only the public API is compatible, the private methods in the
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+ standard library are not implemented.
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+ * The marshalling format differs from the one used by the standard
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+ library. Note that the 1.8 and 1.9 standard library date
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+ marshalling formats differ from each other.
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+ * Date#step treats the step value as an integer, so it cannot handle
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+ steps of fractional days. DateTime#step can handle fractional
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+ day steps, though.
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+ * When parsing the %Q modifier in _strptime, the hash returned
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+ includes an Integer :seconds value and a Float :sec_fraction
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+ value instead of a single rational :seconds value.
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+ * The string returned by #inspect has a different format, since it
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+ doesn't use rational.
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+ * The conversion of 2-digit years to 4-digit years in Date._parse
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+ is set to true by default. On ruby 1.8, the standard library
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+ has it set to false by default.
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+ * You can use the Date::Format::STYLE hash to change how to parse
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+ DD/DD/DD and DD.DD.DD date formats, allowing you to get ruby 1.9
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+ behavior on 1.8 or vice-versa. This is probably the only new
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+ feature in that isn't in the standard library.
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+
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+ Any other differences will either be documented here or considered
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+ bugs, so please report any other differences you find.
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+
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+ == Reporting issues/bugs
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+
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+ home_run uses GitHub Issues for tracking issues/bugs:
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+
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+ http://github.com/jeremyevans/home_run/issues
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+
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+ == Contributing
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+
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+ The source code is on GitHub:
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+
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+ http://github.com/jeremyevans/home_run
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+
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+ To get a copy:
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+
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+ git clone git://github.com/jeremyevans/home_run.git
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+
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+ There are a few requirements:
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+
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+ * Rake
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+ * Ragel 6.5+ for building the ragel parser. The compiled C file is
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+ included in the gem, so people installing the gem don't need
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+ Ragel. The compiled C file is not checked into git, so you need
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+ Ragel if you are working with a git checkout.
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+ * MSpec (not RSpec) for running the specs. The specs are based on
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+ the rubyspec specs, which is why they use MSpec.
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+ * RDoc 2.5.10+ if you want to build the documentation.
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+
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+ The directory layout is slightly unusual in that there is no
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+ lib directory and there are .rb files in the ext directory. This may
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+ change in a future version.
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+
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+ == Building
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+
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+ To build the library from a git checkout, after installing the
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+ requirements:
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+
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+ rake parser build
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+
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+ == Testing
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+
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+ The default rake task runs the specs, so just run:
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+
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+ rake
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+
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+ You need to build the library before running the specs.
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+
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+ == Benchmarking
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+
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+ To see the speedup that home_run gives you over the standard library:
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+
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+ rake bench
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+
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+ To see how much less memory home_run uses compared to the standard
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+ library:
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+
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+ rake mem_bench
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+
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+ To see how much less garbage is created when instantiating objects
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+ with home_run compared to the standard library:
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+
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+ rake garbage_bench
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+
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+ If you want to run all three benchmarks at once:
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+
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+ rake bench_all
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+
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+ == Platforms Supported
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+
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+ home_run has been tested on the following:
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+
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+ === Operating Systems/Platforms
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+
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+ * Linux (x86_64, i386)
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+ * Mac OS X 10.6 (x86_64, i386)
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+ * OpenBSD (amd64, i386)
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+ * Windows XP (i386)
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+
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+ === Compiler Versions
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+
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+ * gcc (3.3.5, 4.2.1, 4.4.3, 4.5.0)
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+
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+ === Ruby Versions
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+
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+ * rbx head (as of commit 0e265b92727cf3536053, 2010-08-16)
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+ * ruby 1.8.6 (p0, p398, p399)
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+ * ruby 1.8.7 (p174, p248, p299, p302)
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+ * ruby 1.9.1 (p243, p378, p429, p430)
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+ * ruby 1.9.2 (p0)
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+ * ruby head
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+
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+ If your platform, compiler version, or ruby version is not listed
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+ above, please test and send me a report including:
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+
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+ * Your operating system and platform (e.g. i386, x86_64/amd64)
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+ * Your compiler
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+ * Your ruby version
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+ * The output of home_run --spec
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+ * The output of home_run --bench
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+
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+ == Todo
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+
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+ * Get it working on jruby with the cext branch
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+ * Add more specs for greater code coverage and to test
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+ boundry conditions
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+ * Expand main ragel parser to handle more formats
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+ * Add ragel versions of the 1.9 date parsing functions
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+
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+ == Author
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+
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+ Jeremy Evans <code@jeremyevans.net>
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+ require "rake"
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+ require "rake/clean"
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+ require 'rbconfig'
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+
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+ CLEAN.include %w'ext/Makefile ext/date_ext.*o **/*.rbc *.core rdoc'
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+ RUBY=ENV['RUBY'] || File.join(RbConfig::CONFIG['bindir'], RbConfig::CONFIG['ruby_install_name'])
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+
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+ begin
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+ gem 'rdoc'
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+ require 'rdoc/rdoc'
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+ require "rake/rdoctask"
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+ Rake::RDocTask.new do |rdoc|
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+ rdoc.rdoc_dir = "rdoc"
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+ rdoc.options += ["--quiet", "--line-numbers", "--inline-source", '--title',
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+ 'home_run: Fast Date/DateTime classes for ruby', '--main', 'README.rdoc']
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+ rdoc.rdoc_files.add %w"README.rdoc CHANGELOG LICENSE ext/**/*.rb ext/*.c"
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+ end
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+ rescue LoadError
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Run the specs with mspec"
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+ task :default => :spec
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+ task :spec do
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+ ENV['RUBY'] ||= RUBY
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+ sh %{mspec}
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Build the gem"
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+ task :gem => [:clean, :parser] do
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+ sh %{gem build home_run.gemspec}
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Try to clean up everything"
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+ task :distclean do
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+ CLEAN.concat(%w'pkg home_run-*.gem ext/1.* tmp rdoc ext/date_parser.c')
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+ Rake::Task[:clean].invoke
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+ end
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+
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+ if RUBY_PLATFORM !~ /win|w32/ and File.directory?(File.join(File.expand_path(ENV['HOME']), '.rake-compiler'))
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+ begin
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+ require "rake/extensiontask"
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+ ENV['RUBY_CC_VERSION'] = '1.8.6:1.9.1'
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+ load('home_run.gemspec')
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+ desc "Internal--cross compile the windows binary gem"
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+ cross_platform = ENV['CROSS_PLATFORM'] || 'i386-mingw32'
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+ Rake::ExtensionTask.new('date_ext', HOME_RUN_GEMSPEC) do |ext|
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+ ext.name = 'date_ext'
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+ ext.ext_dir = 'ext'
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+ ext.lib_dir = 'ext'
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+ ext.cross_compile = true
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+ ext.cross_platform = cross_platform
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+ ext.source_pattern = '*.c'
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+ end
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+
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+ # FIXME: Incredibly hacky, should figure out how to get
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+ # rake compiler to do this correctly
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+ desc "Build the cross compiled windows binary gem"
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+ task :windows_gem => [:clean, :parser] do
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+ sh %{rm -rf tmp pkg home_run-*.gem ext/1.*}
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+ system %{rake cross native gem}
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+ unless File.directory?('pkg')
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+ sh "cp ext/*.c tmp/#{cross_platform}/date_ext/1.8.6"
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+ system %{rake cross native gem}
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+ sh %{cp ext/*.c tmp/#{cross_platform}/date_ext/1.9.1}
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+ system %{rake cross native gem}
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+ sh %{rake cross native gem}
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+ end
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+ sh %{rm -rf home_run-*.gem tmp ext/1.*}
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+ sh %{mv pkg/home_run-*.gem .}
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+ sh %{rmdir pkg}
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+ end
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+ rescue LoadError
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Build the ragel parser"
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+ task :parser do
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+ sh %{cd ext && ragel date_parser.rl}
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Build the extension"
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+ task :build=>[:clean] do
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+ sh %{cd ext && #{RUBY} extconf.rb && make}
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Build debug version of extension"
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+ task :build_debug=>[:clean] do
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+ ENV['DEBUG'] = '1'
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+ sh %{cd ext && #{RUBY} extconf.rb && make}
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Start an IRB shell using the extension"
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+ task :irb do
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+ irb = ENV['IRB'] || File.join(RbConfig::CONFIG['bindir'], File.basename(RUBY).sub('ruby', 'irb'))
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+ sh %{#{irb} -I ext -r date}
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Run comparative benchmarks"
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+ task :bench do
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+ sh %{#{RUBY} bench/cpu_bench.rb}
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+ end
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+
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+ desc "Run all benchmarks"
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+ task :bench_all => [:bench, :mem_bench, :garbage_bench]
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+
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+ desc "Run comparative memory benchmarks"
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+ task :mem_bench do
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+ if RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /win|w32/
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+ puts "Memory benchmarks not supported on Windows"
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+ next
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+ end
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+
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+ stdlib = `#{RUBY} -I #{RbConfig::CONFIG['rubylibdir']} bench/mem_bench.rb`.to_i
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+ home_run = `#{RUBY} -I ext bench/mem_bench.rb`.to_i
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+ puts "Date memory use,#{stdlib}KB,#{home_run}KB,#{sprintf('%0.1f', stdlib/home_run.to_f)}"
116
+
117
+ stdlib = `#{RUBY} -I #{RbConfig::CONFIG['rubylibdir']} bench/dt_mem_bench.rb`.to_i
118
+ home_run = `#{RUBY} -I ext bench/dt_mem_bench.rb`.to_i
119
+ puts "DateTime memory use,#{stdlib}KB,#{home_run}KB,#{sprintf('%0.1f', stdlib/home_run.to_f)}"
120
+ end
121
+
122
+ desc "Run comparative garbage creation benchmarks"
123
+ task :garbage_bench do
124
+ if RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /win|w32/
125
+ puts "Garbage creation benchmarks not supported on Windows"
126
+ next
127
+ end
128
+
129
+ stdlib = `#{RUBY} -I #{RbConfig::CONFIG['rubylibdir']} bench/garbage_bench.rb`.to_i
130
+ home_run = `#{RUBY} -I ext bench/garbage_bench.rb`.to_i
131
+ puts "Date garbage created,#{stdlib}KB,#{home_run}KB,#{sprintf('%0.1f', stdlib/home_run.to_f)}"
132
+
133
+ stdlib = `#{RUBY} -I #{RbConfig::CONFIG['rubylibdir']} bench/dt_garbage_bench.rb`.to_i
134
+ home_run = `#{RUBY} -I ext bench/dt_garbage_bench.rb`.to_i
135
+ puts "DateTime garbage created,#{stdlib}KB,#{home_run}KB,#{sprintf('%0.1f', stdlib/home_run.to_f)}"
136
+ end