mason

Fast and extensible bytestring builder

LTS Haskell 22.43:0.2.6
Stackage Nightly 2024-07-21:0.2.6
Latest on Hackage:0.2.6

See all snapshots mason appears in

BSD-3-Clause licensed by Fumiaki Kinoshita
Maintained by [email protected]
This version can be pinned in stack with:mason-0.2.6@sha256:87e6233cf21222c2bb3392e453ad9ee4257a850c75bfb2537461f60574ce87e9,1274

Module documentation for 0.2.6

mason: alacritous builder library

Build Status Hackage

mason is a builder & IO library.

  • Fast: much faster than bytestring’s Builder.
  • Extensible: Builders can be consumed in a user-defined way.
  • Hackable: Low-level APIs are exposed. It’s easy to plug in even pointer-level operations.

Mason.Builder has API mostly compatible with Data.ByteString.Builder but there are some additions to the original API:

  • toStrictByteString produces a strict ByteString directly.
  • hPutBuilderLen writes a builder to a handle and returns the number of bytes.
  • sendBuilder sends the content of Builder over a socket.
  • withPopper turns a builder into http-client’sGivesPopper
  • toStreamingBody creates wai’s StreamingBody

Usage

Replace Data.ByteString.Builder with Mason.Builder. Note that if you have Builder in the type signature, you’ll need RankNTypes extensions because of the design explained below. Alternatively, you can also import Mason.Builder.Compat which has an API almost compatible with Data.ByteString.Builder.

Performance

As long as the code is optimised, mason’s builder can be very fast (twice or more as bytestring). Make sure that functions returning Builders are well inlined.

Serialisation of JSON-like structure:

mason/hPutBuilder                        mean 274.7 μs  ( +- 49.40 μs  )
fast-builder/hPutBuilder                 mean 399.9 μs  ( +- 76.05 μs  )
bytestring/hPutBuilder                   mean 335.1 μs  ( +- 86.96 μs  )
mason/toStrictByteString                 mean 106.6 μs  ( +- 6.680 μs  )
fast-builder/toStrictByteString          mean 254.8 μs  ( +- 31.64 μs  )
bytestring/toLazyByteString              mean 283.3 μs  ( +- 24.26 μs  )
mason/toLazyByteString                   mean 127.2 μs  ( +- 25.86 μs  )
fast-builder/toLazyByteString            mean 249.0 μs  ( +- 25.60 μs  )
bytestring/toLazyByteString              mean 263.4 μs  ( +- 9.401 μs  )

In the same benchmark application, the allocation footprint of mason is feathery.

toStrictByteString
mason           291,112    0
fast-builder    991,016    0
bytestring    1,158,584    0 (toStrict . toLazyByteString)

toLazyByteString
Case          Allocated  GCs
mason           228,936    0
fast-builder    903,752    0
bytestring    1,101,448    0

doubleDec employs Grisu3 which grants ~20x speedup over show-based implementation.

mason/double                             mean 116.2 ns  ( +- 6.654 ns  )
fast-builder/double                      mean 2.183 μs  ( +- 85.80 ns  )
bytestring/double                        mean 2.312 μs  ( +- 118.8 ns  )

You can find more benchmarks below:

Architecture

Mason’s builder is a function that takes a purpose-dependent environment and a buffer. There is little intermediate structure involved; almost everything runs in one pass. This design is inspired by fast-builder.

type Builder = forall s. Buildable s => BuilderFor s

newtype BuilderFor s = Builder { unBuilder :: s -> Buffer -> IO Buffer }

data Buffer = Buffer
  { bEnd :: {-# UNPACK #-} !(Ptr Word8) -- ^ end of the buffer (next to the last byte)
  , bCur :: {-# UNPACK #-} !(Ptr Word8) -- ^ current position
  }

class Buildable s where
  byteString :: B.ByteString -> BuilderFor s
  flush :: BuilderFor s
  allocate :: Int -> BuilderFor s

Instances of the Buildable class implement purpose-specific behaviour (e.g. exponentially allocate a buffer, flush to disk). This generic interface also allows creative uses of Builders such as on-the-fly compression.

Builder has a smart constructor called ensure:

ensure :: Int -> (Buffer -> IO Buffer) -> Builder

ensure n f secures at least n bytes in the buffer and passes the pointer to f. This gives rise to monoid homorphism; namely, ensure m f <> ensure n g will fuse into ensure (m + n) (f >=> g) so don’t worry about the overhead of bound checking.

Creating your own primitives

The easiest way to create a new primitive is withPtr, a simplified version of ensure. This is quite convenient for calling foreign functions or anything low-level.

-- | Construct a 'Builder' from a "poke" function.
withPtr :: Int -- ^ number of bytes to allocate (if needed)
  -> (Ptr Word8 -> IO (Ptr Word8)) -- ^ return a next pointer after writing
  -> Builder

grisu v = withPtr 24 $ \ptr -> do
  n <- dtoa_grisu3 v ptr
  return $ plusPtr ptr (fromIntegral n)

foreign import ccall unsafe "static dtoa_grisu3"
  dtoa_grisu3 :: Double -> Ptr Word8 -> IO CInt

Changes

0.2.5

  • Supported GHC 9.2.1

0.2.4

  • Generalised the argument intersperse, unlines, unwords from a list to any Foldable
  • Supported GHC 9.0.1

0.2.3

  • Added intDecPadded
  • Exported backend types: StrictByteStringBackend, LazyByteStringBackend and BufferedIOBackend

0.2.2

  • Added withPopper and toStreamingBody
  • Added viaShow
  • Added intersperse, unwords and unlines
  • Optmised the internal representation

0.2.1

  • Added Mason.Builder.Compat

0.2

  • Added doubleFixed, doubleSI and doubleExp
  • Added textUtf8
  • Added prefixVarInt, wordVLQ and intVLQ
  • Renamed padded and zeroPadded to paddedBoundedPrim and zeroPaddedBoundedPrim respectively
  • Added Mason.Builder.Dynamic

0 – 2019-12-05

  • First version. Released on an unsuspecting world.