tame/tamer
Mike Gerwitz 885d5e4d8f tamer: Switch back to nightly toolchain
This is to support two things:
  1. Early switch to 2021 Edition, which is stable Oct 21; and
  2. To make use of unstable const features.

The rationale is that switching to nightly does not really have any
significant downside for us, given that TAMER is used only by us and
the only risk is that unstable features may change a bit, which can be
mitigated with certain precautions.

The rationale for each unstable feature will be documented as they are used,
including documentation on what would be required to remove it and what
functionality would be lost / need to change in doing so.
2021-10-02 00:58:14 -04:00
..
benches tamer: Remove Ix generalization throughout system 2021-09-23 14:52:54 -04:00
build-aux Copyright year update 2021 2021-07-22 15:00:15 -04:00
src tamer: obj::xmle::xir: Minor clean and docs 2021-10-02 00:58:14 -04:00
tests Copyright year update 2021 2021-07-22 15:00:15 -04:00
.gitignore TAMER: Initial commit 2019-11-18 14:05:47 -05:00
Cargo.lock tamer: Start of XIR-based xmle writer 2021-09-28 14:52:53 -04:00
Cargo.toml tamer: Start of XIR-based xmle writer 2021-09-28 14:52:53 -04:00
Makefile.am tamer: Switch back to nightly toolchain 2021-10-02 00:58:14 -04:00
README.md Copyright year update 2021 2021-07-22 15:00:15 -04:00
autogen.sh Copyright year update 2021 2021-07-22 15:00:15 -04:00
bootstrap Copyright year update 2021 2021-07-22 15:00:15 -04:00
configure.ac tamer: Switch back to nightly toolchain 2021-10-02 00:58:14 -04:00
rustfmt.toml tamer/rustfmt (max_width): Set to 80 2019-11-27 09:15:15 -05:00

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.