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An elegant and efficient C++ basic library for Linux, Windows and Mac.

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Basic

CO is an elegant and efficient C++ base library that supports Linux, Windows and Mac platforms.

CO pursues minimalism and efficiency. It does not rely on third-party libraries such as boost, and uses only a few C++11 features.

  • CO contains the following functional components:
    • Basic definitions (def)
    • Atomic operations (atomic)
    • Fast random number generator (random)
    • LruMap
    • Fast string casting for basic types (fast)
    • Efficient byte stream (fastream)
    • Efficient strings (fastring)
    • String operations (str)
    • Command line arguments and configuration file parsing library (flag)
    • Efficient streaming log library (log)
    • Unit testing framework (unitest)
    • Time library (time)
    • Thread library (thread)
    • Coroutine library (co)
    • Efficient json library
    • High-performance json rpc framework
    • Hash library
    • Path library
    • File system operations (fs)
    • System operations (os)

Special thanks

  • The relevant code for co coroutine library to switch context is taken from ruki's tbox, special thanks!
  • The English reference documents of CO are translated by Leedehai (1-10), daidai21 (11-15) and google, special thanks!
  • ruki has helped to improve the xmake compilation scripts, thanks in particular!
  • izhengfan provided cmake compilation scripts, thank you very much!

Reference documents

Highlight function

  • flag

    This is a Command line arguments and configuration file parsing library that is really considered for programmers. It supports automatic generation of configuration files. It supports integer types with units k, m, g, t, p.

  • log

    This is a super fast local logging system, see how fast it is below:

    log vs glog google glog co log
    win2012 HHD 1.6MB/s 180MB/s
    win10 SSD 3.7MB/s 560MB/s
    mac SSD 17MB/s 450MB/s
    linux SSD 54MB/s 1023MB/s

    The above table is the test result of one million info log (about 50 bytes) continuously printed by a single thread. The co/log is almost two orders of magnitude faster than glog.

    Why is it so fast? The first is that the log library is based on fastream that is 8-25 times faster than sprintf. The second is that the log library has almost no memory allocation operations.

  • json

    This is a json library that is comparable to rapidjson in performance. If you use jemalloc, the performance of parse and stringify will be further improved.

    co/json does not support the json standard as comprehensively as rapidjson, but it meets the basic needs of programmers and is easier to use.

  • co

    This is a golang-style coroutine library with built-in multi-threaded scheduling, which is a great tool for network programming.

  • json rpc

    This is a high-performance rpc framework based on coroutines and json. It supports automatic code generation, easy to use, and single-threaded qps can reach 120k+.

  • Kakalot(卡卡洛特)

    This is a template class for use with co::Pool. co::Pool is a coroutine-safe pool that stores void* pointers internally.

    Kakalot pulls a pointer from Pool during construction and puts it back during destruction. At the same time, Carcarrot also comes with smart pointer properties:

    co::Pool p;
    
    void f () {
        co::Kakalot<Redis> rds(p);         // Kakalot is now a Redis* pointer
        if (rds == NULL) rds = new Redis;  // reassign Kakalot 
        rds->get("xx");                    // Kakalot calls redis's get operation
    }
    
    go(f);

Compiling

Xmake is recommended for compiling the CO project. Scons, vs project may not be supported in the future.

izhengfan has helped to provide cmake support. If you need to compile with cmake, please refer to here.

  • Compiler

  • Install xmake

    For windows, mac and debian/ubuntu, you can directly go to the xmake release page to download the installation package. For other systems, please refer to xmake's installation instructions.

    Xmake disables compilation as root by default on linux. ruki says that root is not safe. You can add the following line to ~/.bashrc to enable root compilation:

    export XMAKE_ROOT=y
  • Compile libbase

    co/base is the core library of CO. Other test programs rely on the base library.

    # All commands are executed in the root directory of CO (the same below)
    xmake               # compile libbase and rpcgen by default
    xmake --all         # compile all projects
    xmake build base    # compile libbase only
  • Compile and run unitest code

    co/unitest is unit test code that verifies the correctness of the functionality of the base library.

    xmake build unitest      # build can be abbreviated as -b
    xmake run unitest -a     # run all unit tests, run can be abbreviated as r
    xmake run unitest -os    # run unit test os
    xmake run unitest -json  # run unit test json
  • Compile and run test code

    co/test contains some test code. You can easily add a xxx_test.cc source file in the co/test directory, and then execute xmake build xxx in the co root directory to build it.

    xmake build log        # compile log_test.cc
    xmake build flag       # compile flag_test.cc
    xmake build rpc        # compile rpc_test.cc
    xmake build stack      # compile stack_test.cc
    xmake build json       # compile json_test.cc
    xmake build rapidjson  # compile rapidjson_test.cc
                           # others can be compiled similarly
    
    xmake run log -perf    # log library performance test
    xmake run rpc -c = 0   # start rpc server
    xmake run rpc -c       # start rpc client
    xmake run flag -xz     # execute flag
    xmake run stack        # Print the stack information when the test program crashes, executed in coroutine by default.
    xmake run stack -t     # Print the stack information when the test program crashes, executed in a thread
    xmake run stack -m     # execute directly in the main thread
    xmake run json         # test json
    xmake run rapidjson    # test rapidjson
  • Compile rpcgen

    rpcgen is a code generator for json rpc, which automatically generates the corresponding code according to the specified proto file.

    xmake build rpcgen
    
    # It is recommended to put rpcgen in the system directory (e.g. /usr/local/bin/).
    # Some linux systems come with an rpcgen. To avoid conflicts, you may need to rename rpcgen.
    rpcgen hello_world.proto

    Proto file format can refer to co/test/rpc/hello_world.proto.

  • Installation

    # Install header files, libbase, rpcgen by default.
    xmake install -o pkg         # Package related files to the pkg directory.
    xmake install -o /usr/local  # Install to the /usr/local directory.

Contributing

  1. Modify or add code in the co/base directory and ensure that the base library compiles.
  2. If necessary, modify or add unit test cases in the co/unitest/base directory and ensure that all unit tests pass.
  3. If necessary, modify or add test code in the co/test directory.
  4. All other kinds of contributions are also welcome.

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An elegant and efficient C++ basic library for Linux, Windows and Mac.

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