Logos
Create ridiculously fast Lexers.
Logos has two goals:
- To make it easy to create a Lexer, so you can focus on more complex problems.
- To make the generated Lexer faster than anything you'd write by hand.
To achieve those, Logos:
- Combines all token definitions into a single deterministic state machine.
- Optimizes branches into lookup tables or jump tables.
- Prevents backtracking inside token definitions.
- Unwinds loops, and batches reads to minimize bounds checking.
- Does all of that heavy lifting at compile time.
Example
use Logos;
// Ignore this regex pattern between tokens
For more examples and documentation, please refer to the Logos handbook or the crate documentation.
How fast?
Ridiculously fast!
test identifiers ... bench: 647 ns/iter (+/- 27) = 1204 MB/s
test keywords_operators_and_punctators ... bench: 2,054 ns/iter (+/- 78) = 1037 MB/s
test strings ... bench: 553 ns/iter (+/- 34) = 1575 MB/s
Acknowledgements
- Pedrors for the Logos logo.
Thank you
Logos is very much a labor of love. If you find it useful, consider getting me some coffee. ☕
If you'd like to contribute to Logos, then consider reading the Contributing guide.
Contributing
Logos welcome any kind of contribution: bug reports, suggestions, or new features!
Please use the issues or pull requests tabs, when appropriate.
To release a new version, follow the RELEASE-PROCESS
License
This code is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0), choose whatever works for you.
See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details.