Semantic version parsing and comparison (semver). The implementation of this crate is based on the node-semver npm package. The tests are taken directly from node-semver's repo. This should make this crate as good at parsing semver expressions as the node package manager.
Add this to your [dependencies]
section in Cargo.toml
:
semver_rs = "0.2"
use semver_rs::Version;
// by constructing version instances manually
let ver1 = Version::new("2.0.0").parse()?;
let ver2 = Version::new("1.2.3").parse()?;
assert!(ver1 > ver2);
// by using the exported helper function
use semver_rs::compare;
use std::cmp::Ordering;
assert!(compare("2.0.0", "1.2.3", None)? == Ordering::Greater);
use semver_rs::{Range, Version};
// by constructing version instances manually
let range = Range::new(">=1.2.3").parse()?;
let ver = Version::new("1.2.4").parse()?;
assert!(range.test(&ver));
// by using the exported helper function
use semver_rs::satisfies;
assert!(satisfies("1.2.4", ">=1.2.4", None)?);
use semver_rs::{Version, Range, Options};
let opts = Options::builder().loose(true).include_prerelease(true).build();
let range = Range::new(">=1.2.3").with_options(opts).parse()?;
let ver = Version::new("1.2.4-pre1").with_options(opts).parse()?;
assert!(range.test(&ver));
In order to allow serializing the semver structs allow the serde
feature:
semver_rs = { version = "0.2", features = ["serde"] }
use semver_rs::{Range, Options};
let opts = Options::builder().loose(true).include_prerelease(true).build();
let range = Range::new(">=1.2.3").with_options(opts).parse().unwrap();
let _ = serde_json::to_string(&opts).unwrap();
Install just and run the setup:
cargo install just && just setup
To run the benchmarks populating the next point run:
just bench
This shell script collects some ranges from random npm packages and compares the results for the three implementations -
semver_node
, semver_rs
and steveklabnik/semver
. From the table bellow the results can be observed.
At the time of writing this README there's only one other crate in the Rust ecosystem capable of parsing semver - steveklabnik/semver. While this crate is being used in cargo and is clearly doing its job there very well, while comparing arbitrary semver strings from a number of NPM packages I found it unable to parse a lot of them. Since its implementation of semver was vastly different from NPM's I decided to base this crate on NPM's package in the hopes of making it easier to keep up with any updates in the future. I kept the implementation as close as possible so the code structure and the way input is parsed should be very similar.
One trade-off this implementation had to make was a tiny bit of performance. Since the parsing is based heavily on Regex it's a little bit slower. There are still a lot of string allocations that can be eliminated, especially in parsing Ranges and Versions with prereleases.
┌─────────┬───────────────────────┬───────────┬───────────────┬────────┬─────────────────────┐
│ (index) │ name │ satisfies │ not_satisfies │ errors │ average_us │
├─────────┼───────────────────────┼───────────┼───────────────┼────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ 0 │ 'semver_node' │ 14 │ 451 │ 1 │ 32.68025751072961 │
│ 1 │ 'semver_rs' │ 14 │ 451 │ 1 │ 8.454935622317597 │
│ 2 │ 'steveklabnik/semver' │ 11 │ 445 │ 10 │ 0.27682403433476394 │
└─────────┴───────────────────────┴───────────┴───────────────┴────────┴─────────────────────┘
In conclussion semver_rs
is faster than semver_node
and slower than steveklabnik/semver
. It's also as accurate
in parsing as semver_node
, while steveklabnik/semver
couldn't handle 9 of the ranges.