Fast random number generators.
turborand
's internal implementations use Wyrand, a simple and fast
generator but not cryptographically secure, and also ChaCha8, a cryptographically
secure generator tuned to 8 rounds of the ChaCha algorithm in order to increase throughput considerably without sacrificing
too much security, as per the recommendations set out in the Too Much Crypto paper.
```rust use turborand::prelude::*;
let rand = Rng::new();
if rand.bool() { println!("Success! :D"); } else { println!("Failure... :("); } ```
Sample a value from a list:
```rust use turborand::prelude::*;
let rand = Rng::new();
let values = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let value = rand.sample(&values); ```
Generate a vector with random values:
```rust use turborand::prelude::*; use std::iter::repeat_with;
let rand = Rng::new();
let values: Vec<_> = repeat_with(|| rand.f32()).take(10).collect(); ```
Wyrand
is a pretty fast PRNG, and is a good choice when speed is needed while still having decent statistical properties. Currently, the turborand
implementation benches extremely well against similar rand
algorithms. Below is a chart of the fill_bytes
method performance, tested on Windows 10 x64 on an AMD Ryzen 1700 clocked at 3.7Ghz with 32GB RAM at 3066Mhz.
For filling 2048 byte array buffers, turborand
's Rng
is able to do so in around 170-180ns, whereas SmallRng
does it between 260-268ns, and Pcg64Mcg
(the fastest PCG impl on 64bit systems) does it in 305-312ns.
For generating unbound u64
values, turborand
and fastrand
are equal in performance, which is expected given they both implement the Wyrand
algorithm, consistently performing around 820-830ps for generating a u64
value. SmallRng
performs around 1.16ns, while Pcg64Mcg
is at 1.35ns.
Version 0.6 introduces a major reworking of the crate, with code reorganised and also exposed more granularly via features. First things to note:
prelude
module. Top level only exports the new traits for turborand
.Rng
is now split into Rng
and AtomicRng
, no more top level generics that required exporting internal traits. State
trait is now made private and no longer available to be implemented, as this was an internal implementation detail for WyRand
.Rng
are now implemented in TurboCore
, GenCore
, SeededCore
and TurboRand
traits. These are part of the prelude
so as long as they are included, all existing methods will work as expected.Rng
is now under a feature flag, wyrand
. This is enabled by default however, unless default-features = false
is applied on the dependency declaration in Cargo.toml.rng!
, atomic_rng!
macros, as these are no longer needed to manage the generics spam that has since been refactored out. Instead, use ::new()
, ::default()
or ::with_seed(seed)
methods instead.Version 0.7 hasn't changed much except that the internals module is now fully private (so the State
traits and CellState
/AtomicState
structs are no longer public). They are not accessible from the prelude any more. The removal of these from the public API thus constitutes a breaking change, leading to a new major version.
Also, the serialisation format of ChaChaRng
has changed, so 0.7 is not compatible with older serialised structs. The plus side is also a flatter serialised format for ChaChaRng
. Also, ChaChaRng
is no longer backed by a Vec
for caching generated entropy, now preferring to use an aligned array for better random number generation at the slight cost of initialisation/cloning performance and increased struct size. This means that the single heap allocation ChaChaRng
needed is now reduced to zero.
Version 0.8 seperates the old Clone
behaviour into two: standard Clone
which maintains the original state and clones it to the new instance as is (and so both old and new equal to each other), and ForkableCore
which mutates the state of the original to fork a new instance with a random state generated from the original. Previous usage of .clone()
now should make use of .fork()
instead. Cloning now should be used where preserving the state of the original to the cloned instance is required.
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