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Bincode

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A compact encoder / decoder pair that uses a binary zero-fluff encoding scheme. The size of the encoded object will be the same or smaller than the size that the object takes up in memory in a running Rust program.

In addition to exposing two simple functions (one that encodes to Vec<u8>, and one that decodes from &[u8]), binary-encode exposes a Reader/Writer API that makes it work perfectly with other stream-based apis such as rust files, network streams, and the flate2-rs compression library.

Api Documentation

Bincode in the wild

Example

#[macro_use]
extern crate serde_derive;
extern crate bincode;

use bincode::{serialize, deserialize};

#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Debug)]
struct Entity {
    x: f32,
    y: f32,
}

#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Debug)]
struct World(Vec<Entity>);

fn main() {
    let world = World(vec![Entity { x: 0.0, y: 4.0 }, Entity { x: 10.0, y: 20.5 }]);

    let encoded: Vec<u8> = serialize(&world).unwrap();

    // 8 bytes for the length of the vector, 4 bytes per float.
    assert_eq!(encoded.len(), 8 + 4 * 4);

    let decoded: World = deserialize(&encoded[..]).unwrap();

    assert_eq!(world, decoded);
}

Details

The encoding (and thus decoding) proceeds unsurprisingly -- primitive types are encoded according to the underlying Writer, tuples and structs are encoded by encoding their fields one-by-one, and enums are encoded by first writing out the tag representing the variant and then the contents.

However, there are some implementation details to be aware of: