Fast bytes and bytearray processing functions
Project description
- Version:
- 3.4.0 for 2022-12-11
- Copyright:
- 2014 - 2022
- License:
This document may be distributed under the Apache 2.0 License.
- Language:
Python 3.6 or later
Introduction
The BytesFunc module provides high speed array processing functions for use with Python ‘bytes’ and ‘bytearray’ objects. These functions are patterned after the functions in the standard Python “operator” module together with some additional ones from other sources.
The purpose of these functions is to perform mathematical calculations on “bytes” and “bytearray” objects significantly faster than using native Python.
See full documentation at: https://bytesfunc.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
If you are installing on an ARM platform such as the Raspberry Pi, see the installation notes at the end before attempting to install from PyPI using PIP.
Function Summary
The compare operators used for ‘ball’, ‘bany’, and ‘findindex’ are examples only, and other compare operations are available. Many functions will accept other parameter combinations of sequences and numeric parameters. See the details for each function for what parameter combinations are valid.
Brief Description
Function |
Equivalent to |
---|---|
and_ |
Perform a bitwise AND across the sequence. |
ball |
True if all elements of the sequence meet the match criteria. |
bany |
True if any elements of the sequence meet the match criteria. |
bmax |
Return the maximum value in the sequence. |
bmin |
Return the minimum value in the sequence. |
bsum |
Return the sum of the sequence. |
eq |
True if all elements of the sequence equal the compare value. |
findindex |
Returns the index of the first value in an array to meet the specified criteria. |
ge |
True if all elements of the sequence are greater than or equal to the compare value. |
gt |
True if all elements of the sequence are greater than the compare value. |
invert |
Perform a bitwise invert across the sequence. |
le |
True if all elements of the sequence are less than or equal to the compare value. |
lshift |
Perform a bitwise left shift across the sequence. |
lt |
True if all elements of the sequence are less than the compare value. |
ne |
True if all elements of the sequence are not equal the compare value. |
or_ |
Perform a bitwise OR across the sequence. |
rshift |
Perform a bitwise right shift across the sequence. |
xor |
Perform a bitwise XOR across the sequence. |
Python Equivalent
Function |
Equivalent to |
---|---|
and_ |
[x & param for x in sequence1] |
ball |
all([(x > param) for x in array]) |
bany |
any([(x > param) for x in array]) |
bmax |
max(sequence) |
bmin |
min(sequence) |
bsum |
sum(sequence) |
eq |
all([x == param for x in sequence]) |
findindex |
[x for x,y in enumerate(array) if y > param][0] |
ge |
all([x >= param for x in sequence]) |
gt |
all([x > param for x in sequence]) |
invert |
[~x for x in sequence1] |
le |
all([x <= param for x in sequence]) |
lshift |
[x << param for x in sequence1] |
lt |
all([x < param for x in sequence]) |
ne |
all([x != param for x in sequence]) |
or_ |
[x | param for x in sequence1] |
rshift |
[x >> param for x in sequence1] |
xor |
[x ^ param for x in sequence1] |
Supported Sequence Types
BytesFunc supports Python native “bytes” and “bytearray” objects.
Performance
Average performance increase on x86_64 Ubuntu with GCC is 600 times faster than native Python. Performance will vary depending on the function, with the performance increase ranging from 7 times to 1500 times.
Other platforms show similar improvements.
Detailed performance figures are listed in the full documentation.
Platform support
BytesFunc is written in ‘C’ and uses the standard C libraries to implement the underlying math functions. BytesFunc has been tested on the following platforms.
OS |
Hardware |
Bits |
Compiler |
Python Version |
---|---|---|---|---|
Debian 11 |
i686 |
32 |
GCC |
3.9.2 |
Debian 11 |
x86_64 |
64 |
GCC |
3.9.2 |
Ubuntu 22.04 |
x86_64 |
64 |
GCC |
3.10.6 |
Ubuntu 22.10 |
x86_64 |
64 |
GCC |
3.10.7 |
opensuse-leap 15.4 |
x86_64 |
64 |
GCC |
3.6.15 |
almalinux 9.0 |
x86_64 |
64 |
GCC |
3.9.10 |
alpine 3.16.2 |
i686 |
32 |
GCC |
3.10.5 |
FreeBSD 13.1 |
amd64 |
64 |
Clang |
3.9.15 |
OpenBSD 7.2 |
amd64 |
64 |
Clang |
3.9.15 |
MS Windows 10 |
AMD64 |
64 |
MSC |
3.11.0 |
MS Windows 11 |
AMD64 |
64 |
MSC |
3.11.0 |
Raspbian 11 |
armv7l |
32 |
GCC |
3.9.2 |
Ubuntu 22.04 |
aarch64 |
64 |
GCC |
3.10.6 |
amd64 is another name for x86_64 and does not indicate the CPU brand. armv7l is 32 bit ARM. The test hardware is a Raspberry Pi 3. aarch64 is 64 bit ARM. The test hardware is a Raspberry Pi 4.
The Rasberry Pi 3 tests were conducted on a Raspberry Pi 3 ARM CPU running in 32 bit mode.
The Ubuntu ARM tests were conducted on a Raspberry Pi 4 ARM CPU running in 64 bit mode.
All others were conducted using VMs running on x86 hardware.
Installation
Please note that this is a Python 3 package. To install using Pip, you will need (with Debian package in brackets):
The appropriate C compiler and header files (gcc and build-essential).
The Python3 development headers (python3-dev).
Pip3 together with the corresponding Setuptools (python3-pip).
example:
# Install from PyPI. pip3 install bytesfunc # Force install from PyPI source instead of using a binary wheel. pip3 install --user --force-reinstall --no-binary=:all: bytesfunc # Install from a local copy of the source package (Linux). pip3 install --no-index --find-links=. bytesfunc # Install a local package as a user package. pip3 install --user --no-index --find-links=. bytesfunc # Windows, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD seems to use "pip" instead # of "pip3" for some reason. pip install bytesfunc
Newer versions of OpenBSD and FreeBSD will not install this package correctly when running setup.py directly. Use pip to install, even for local package installs. Testing of this package has been changed to use only pip (or pip3) in order to provide a common testing method for all platforms. Testing using setup.py directly is no longer done.
Recent versions of PyPI seem to be building their own binary wheels for some platforms using their own infrastruction. This may result in an invalid ARM binary on Raspberry Pi.
If you have difficulties, then either download the tar.gz version and install it locally (see the above instructions for a local install). Alternatively, see the above example for how to force a binary install instead of using a wheel. There is also a bash script called “setupuser.sh” which will call setup. py directly with the appropriate parameters.
The setup.py file has platform detection code which it uses to pass the correct flags to the C compiler. For ARM, this includes the CPU type. If you are using an ARM CPU type which is not recognized then setup.py may not compile in SIMD features. You can experiment with modifying setup.py to add new ARM models, but be sure that anything you try is compatible with the existing ones.
Release History
- 3.4.0 - Added pyproject.toml file to satisfy Python 3.11 requirements.
Updated build scripts to use python3 -m build instead of calling setup.py directly. Test targets were updated, Ubuntu 20.04 was dropped, Ubuntu 22.10 was added, FreeBSD python version upgraded to 3.9, OpenBSD upgraded to 7.2, Windows 10 Python upgraded to 3.11, Windows 11 Python upgraded to 3.11. Added __version__ attribute to allow checking package version number at run time. Added version unit test. Updated setup.py and other files to allow the version number to be automatically updated from a single source at build time.
- 3.3.0 - Major performance improvements for bsum through the use of SIMD and
other optimizations. Used splint (GCC lint) on all C code and fixed warnings. Other than bsum, no changes in functionality.
3.2.1 - Fixed formatting error in README.rst.
- 3.2.0 - Update to testing and support. Tested with new releases of Ubuntu
22.04 and OpenBSD 7.1. Changed “simdsupport” to also report the architecture the binary was compiled for. “Simdsupport” is only used for testing and benchmarking and is not a stable part of the release.
3.1.2 - Bump to correct minor documentation error in README.rst.
- 3.1.1 - Update to testing and support. Raspberry Pi 32 bit OS updated to
version 2022-04-04. Update to setup.py to improve ARM version detection.
- 3.1.0 - Update to testing and support. On Windows 10 the Python version is
3.10. Centos has been replaced by AlmaLinux due to Red Hat ending long term support for Centos. Ubuntu Server 21.04 replaced by 21.10. No actual code changes.
- 3.0.0 - Major speed improvement to lshfit and rshift on x86-64 due to adding
SIMD support. Debian test platforms were updated to latest versions (11).
- 2.2.0 - Updated benchmarks to make each one a separate file. Centos and
OpenSuse test platforms updated to latest versions.
- 2.1.1 - Documentation updated and version number bumped to reflect testing
with Ubuntu 21.04, FreeBSD 13.0, and OpenBSD 6.9. No code changes.
- 2.1.0 - Changed setup.py to detect Raspberry Pi 4 and set the compiler args
accordingly. Added support for Pi 4. Dropped testing of 64 bit mode on Pi 3.
- 2.0.1 - Documentation updated to reflect testing with the release version
of Ubuntu 20.04 ARM (Rasberry Pi), Ubuntu 2010 (x86-64), OpenBSD 6.8, and Python 3.9 on Windows. No code changes and no change in version number.
- 2.0.0 - Documentation updated to reflect testing with the release version
of Ubuntu 20.04. No code changes and no change in version number.
- 2.0.0 - Added SIMD support for ARMv8 AARCH64. This is 64 bit ARM on a
Raspberry Pi3 when running 64 bit Ubuntu. Raspbian is 32 bit only and has 64 bit SIMD vectors. 64 bit ARM has 128 bit SIMD vectors and so offers improved performance.
1.0.0 - First release.
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