nikodream/esy.lock/opam/bigstringaf.0.10.0/opam
Kaustubh Maske Patil 4194ae6fda initial commit
2025-05-06 19:31:10 +05:30

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opam-version: "2.0"
maintainer: "Spiros Eliopoulos <spiros@inhabitedtype.com>"
authors: [ "Spiros Eliopoulos <spiros@inhabitedtype.com>" ]
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
"@install"
"@runtest" {with-test}
"@doc" {with-doc}
]
]
depends: [
"dune" {>= "3.0"}
"dune-configurator" {>= "3.0"}
"alcotest" {with-test}
"ocaml" {>= "4.08.0"}
]
conflicts: [
"mirage-xen" {< "6.0.0"}
"ocaml-freestanding"
"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/0.10.0.tar.gz"
checksum: "md5=be0a44416840852777651150757a0a3b"
}