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Russ Cox authored
Making Value opaque means we can drop the interface kludges in favor of a significantly simpler and faster representation. v.Kind() will be a prime candidate for inlining too. On a Thinkpad X201s using -benchtime 10: benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta json.BenchmarkCodeEncoder 284391780 157415960 -44.65% json.BenchmarkCodeMarshal 286979140 158992020 -44.60% json.BenchmarkCodeDecoder 717175800 388288220 -45.86% json.BenchmarkCodeUnmarshal 734470500 404548520 -44.92% json.BenchmarkCodeUnmarshalReuse 707172280 385258720 -45.52% json.BenchmarkSkipValue 24630036 18557062 -24.66% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup json.BenchmarkCodeEncoder 6.82 12.33 1.81x json.BenchmarkCodeMarshal 6.76 12.20 1.80x json.BenchmarkCodeDecoder 2.71 5.00 1.85x json.BenchmarkCodeUnmarshal 2.64 4.80 1.82x json.BenchmarkCodeUnmarshalReuse 2.74 5.04 1.84x json.BenchmarkSkipValue 77.92 103.42 1.33x I cannot explain why BenchmarkSkipValue gets faster. Maybe it is one of those code alignment things. R=iant, r, gri, r CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/5373101
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all_test.go | ||
deepequal.go | ||
set_test.go | ||
tostring_test.go | ||
type.go | ||
value.go |