Mike Gerwitz
4117efc50c
This is a shift in approach. My original idea was to try to keep NIR parsing the way it was, since it's already hard enough to reason about with the `ele_parse!` parser-generator macro mess. The idea was to produce an IR that would explicitly be denoted as "maybe sugared", and have a desugaring operation as part of the lowering pipeline that would perform interpolation and lower the symbol into a plain version. The problem with that is: 1. The use of the type was going to introduce a lot of mapping for all the NIR token variants there are going to be; and 2. _The types weren't even utilized for interpolation._ Instead, if we interpolated _as attributes are encountered_ while parsing NIR, then we'd be able to expand directly into that NIR token stream and handle _all_ symbols in a generic way, without any mapping beyond the definition of NIR's grammar using `ele_parse!`. This is a step in that direction---it removes `NirSymbolTy` and introduces a generic abstraction for the concept of expansion, which will be utilized soon by the attribute parser to allow replacing `TryFrom` with something akin to `ParseFrom`, or something like that, which is able to produce a token stream before finally yielding the value of the attribute (which will be either the original symbol or the replacement metavariable, in the case of interpolation). (Note that interpolation isn't yet finished---errors still need to be implemented. But I want a working vertical slice first.) DEV-13156 |
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benches | ||
build-aux | ||
src | ||
.gitignore | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
Makefile.am | ||
README.md | ||
autogen.sh | ||
bootstrap | ||
configure.ac | ||
rustfmt.toml |
README.md
TAME in Rust (TAMER)
TAME was written to help tame the complexity of developing comparative insurance rating systems. This project aims to tame the complexity and performance issues of TAME itself. TAMER is therefore more tame than TAME.
TAME was originally written in XSLT. For more information about the
project, see the parent README.md
.
Building
To bootstrap from the source repository, run ./bootstrap
.
To configure the build for your system, run ./configure
. To build, run
make
. To run tests, run make check
.
You may also invoke cargo
directly, which make
will do for you using
options provided to configure
.
Note that the default development build results in terrible runtime performance! See [#Build Flags][] below for instructions on how to generate a release binary.
Build Flags
The environment variable CARGO_BUILD_FLAGS
can be used to provide
additional arguments to cargo build
when invoked via make
. This can be
provided optionally during configure
and can be overridden when invoking
make
. For example:
# release build
$ ./configure && make CARGO_BUILD_FLAGS=--release
$ ./configure CARGO_BUILD_FLAGS=--release && make
# dev build
$ ./configure && make
$ ./configure CARGO_BUILD_FLAGS=--release && make CARGO_BUILD_FLAGS=
Hacking
This section contains advice for those developing TAMER.
Running Tests
Developers should be using test-driven development (TDD). make check
will
run all necessary tests.
Code Format
Rust provides rustfmt
that can automatically format code for you. This
project mandates its use and therefore eliminates personal preference in
code style (for better or worse).
Formatting checks are run during make check
and, on failure, will output
the diff that would be applied if you ran make fmt
(or make fix
); this
will run cargo fmt
for you (and will use the binaries configured via
configure
).
Since developers should be doing test-driven development (TDD) and therefore
should be running make check
frequently, the hope is that frequent
feedback on formatting issues will allow developers to quickly adjust their
habits to avoid triggering formatting errors at all.
If you want to automatically fix formatting errors and then run tests:
$ make fmt check
Benchmarking
Benchmarks serve two purposes: external integration tests (which are subject
to module visibility constraints) and actual benchmarking. To run
benchmarks, invoke make bench
.
Note that link-time optimizations (LTO) are performed on the binary for benchmarking so that its performance reflects release builds that will be used in production.
The configure
script will automatically detect whether the test
feature
is unstable (as it was as of the time of writing) and, if so, will
automatically fall back to invoking nightly (by running cargo +nightly bench
).
If you do not have nightly, run you install it via rustup install nightly
.