opam-version: "2.0" maintainer: "Spiros Eliopoulos " authors: [ "Spiros Eliopoulos " ] license: "BSD-3-clause" homepage: "https://github.com/inhabitedtype/bigstringaf" bug-reports: "https://github.com/inhabitedtype/bigstringaf/issues" dev-repo: "git+https://github.com/inhabitedtype/bigstringaf.git" build: [ ["dune" "subst"] {dev} ["dune" "build" "-p" name "-j" jobs] ["dune" "runtest" "-p" name] {with-test & arch != "x86_32" & arch != "arm32"} ] depends: [ "dune" {>= "2.6.0"} "alcotest" {with-test} "bigarray-compat" "ocaml" {>= "4.03.0"} "conf-pkg-config" {build} ] depopts: [ "ocaml-freestanding" ] conflicts: [ "mirage-xen" {< "6.0.0"} "ocaml-freestanding" {< "0.4.1"} "js_of_ocaml" {< "3.5.0"} ] synopsis: "Bigstring intrinsics and fast blits based on memcpy/memmove" description: """ Bigstring intrinsics and fast blits based on memcpy/memmove The OCaml compiler has a bunch of intrinsics for Bigstrings, but they're not widely-known, sometimes misused, and so programs that use Bigstrings are slower than they have to be. And even if a library got that part right and exposed the intrinsics properly, the compiler doesn't have any fast blits between Bigstrings and other string-like types. So here they are. Go crazy. """ url { src: "https://github.com/inhabitedtype/bigstringaf/archive/0.8.0.tar.gz" checksum: [ "sha256=1f0578dd6f9899e30f6fe214e9e376c6e7ea7337782c50ba4819ed876d37861b" "md5=c3b8164c1ed1eba9977dcd0c5490e61d" ] }