rat
is a performant re-implementation of cat
in rust
Turns out a rat fits in a pipe better than a cat anyways.
See rat.rs
Also checkout the uutils
project:
https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/
As run on and compared to: i7-6800K / 128GB DDR4 (file reads cached) / Linux 6.3.9 / btrfs (CoW) / coreutils 9.3 / uutils 0.0.20
# 4GB random data sample
$ dd if=/dev/urandom of=test.rand bs=1MB count=4096
# file to file
$ time rat test.rand >test.$(date +%s)
real 0m1.715s # <-- io::copy uses sendfile() first then copy_file_range() :(
user 0m0.001s
sys 0m1.710s
$ time cat test.rand >test.$(date +%s)
real 0m0.004s # <-- cat uses copy_file_range() all the time, great for btrfs
user 0m0.004s
sys 0m0.000s
# file to pipe
$ rat test.rand | pv -r >/dev/null
[2.69GiB/s] # <-- rat automagically configures size for FIFO pipes
$ cat test.rand | pv -r >/dev/null
[2.02GiB/s] # <-- cat does 128K writes onto default 64K sized FIFO pipe (???)
# from char devices
$ timeout 5 rat </dev/zero | pv -ab >/dev/null
25.2GiB [5.05GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 cat </dev/zero | pv -ab >/dev/null
16.0GiB [4.00GiB/s]
# between pipes
$ timeout -s SIGINT 5 yes | rat | pv -r >/dev/null
[4.68GiB/s]
$ timeout -s SIGINT 5 yes | cat | pv -r >/dev/null
[2.80GiB/s]
$ echo test | rat - /does/not/exists /etc/hosts /does/not/exists2 | md5sum
rat: /does/not/exists: No such file or directory
rat: /does/not/exists2: No such file or directory
27f2e6689a97a42813e55d44ef29cda4 -
$ rat < foo >> foo
rat: -: input file is output file
$ echo test | cat - /does/not/exists /etc/hosts /does/not/exists2 | md5sum
cat: /does/not/exists: No such file or directory
cat: /does/not/exists2: No such file or directory
27f2e6689a97a42813e55d44ef29cda4 -
$ cat < foo >> foo
cat: -: input file is output file
$ timeout 5 pv -r </dev/zero >/dev/null
[20.3GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 yes | pv -r >/dev/null
[6.13GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 pv -r </dev/zero | pv -q >/dev/null
[3.39GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 pv -r </dev/zero | uu-cat >/dev/null
[3.66GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 pv -r </dev/zero | rat >/dev/null
[3.26GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 pv -r </dev/zero | pv -q --no-splice >/dev/null
[2.70GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 pv -r </dev/zero | cat >/dev/null
[2.66GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 cat </dev/zero | pv -abC >/dev/null
10.8GiB [2.71GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 cat </dev/zero | rat | pv -abC >/dev/null # without splice
17.7GiB [3.54GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 cat </dev/zero | rat | pv -ab >/dev/null # with splice
19.4GiB [3.88GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 rat </dev/zero | rat | rat | rat | pv -r >/dev/null
[4.78GiB/s]
$ timeout 5 rat </dev/zero | cat | cat | cat | pv -r >/dev/null
[2.16GiB/s]
I just wanted to do this as a learning experience for rust.
At least, that's how it started.
I intend to make rat
nearly the same as cat
(uutils already did all this) but with additional niceties built in, maybe such as:
- Prefixing lines with timestamps in any arbitrary strftime format
- Strict mode - pre-emptively detect errors ie. missing files / permissions before providing possibly mangled output
- Human readable, colorized output of any generic text stream based on patterns (ie. red errors, blue debugs, etc)
-
Stdout
in rust will always be wrapped byLineWriter
which flushes the buffer on new lines. This seems fine for interactive stdin.For other I/O use the wrapped
BufWriter<File>
on the file descriptor for more flow control otherwise you get a ton of unnescessary small writes. -
Pre-allocation given a Sized
Vec<u8>
for the buffer handles has some interesting impacts on runtime performanceEven when that vector is immediately cleared on runtime the behavior between initially empty vs. initially padded (Sized?) vector is noticeable.
read()
calls seem to ramp up by pow2 starting at 8192 until it reaches the specified buffer size, instead of just passing the fixed amount of data.Alternatively
Vec.with_capacity
works too and apparently doesn't need to be cleared, so one less line of code. -
splice(2)
can show some insane performance improvements over traditional read()/write() callsHowever, these benefits are only fully realized under specifics conditions (ie.
</dev/zero >/dev/null
) which don't apply to writes on regular files. There is still an improvement over traditional syscalls. Probably excellent for network sockets... -
Linux pipes are limited to 64K buffers by default. They can be increased up to the sysctl
fs.pipe-max-size
setting (1MB by default).You can tweak pipes using
fcntl()
- see pipe(7) - Pipe Capacity and fcntl(2) - Changing the capacity of a pipe. -
GNU
cat
has odd behavior when writing to pipes, it clearly attempts to write its default 128K buffer size which subsequently reduces the performance.Only happens when on the left-side of the pipe (writing), reading pipes will fill and flush the 64K buffer immediately as expected. In between pipes (ie.
echo | cat | grep -
) will perform 64K read and write.rat
easily acheives ~500MB-1GBps+ more throughput here by using the proper pipe buffer size (see above) -
rust
io::copy
currently insists on usingsendfile()
first and then usingcopy_file_range()
on subsequent calls during the same runtime (ie. when given multiple parameters), also thecopy_file_range()
length is way lower thancat
for example (1073741824
vs9223372035781033984
)Reported and fixed: rust-lang/rust#114341
-
How can
copy_file_range()
concatenate a file multiple times (ie. each syscall is appending to the file) and yet doesn't work (EBADF) when appending from shell?
See TODO
in rat.rs