Marc-Andre Lemburg <[email protected]> added the comment:
Here's a wheel which only includes the portable code (I disabled
all the special cases as you suggested).
Archive: dist/blake3_experimental_c-0.0.1-cp310-cp310-linux_x86_64.whl
Length Date Time Name
--------- ---------- ----- ----
297680 2022-03-23 19:26 blake3.cpython-310-x86_64-linux-gnu.so
3183 2022-03-23 19:26 blake3_experimental_c-0.0.1.dist-info/METADATA
105 2022-03-23 19:26 blake3_experimental_c-0.0.1.dist-info/WHEEL
7 2022-03-23 19:26
blake3_experimental_c-0.0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt
451 2022-03-23 19:26 blake3_experimental_c-0.0.1.dist-info/RECORD
--------- -------
301426 5 files
I didn't run any benchmarks, but it's clear that the SIMD code was
used in my initial build and this adds some 50kB to the .so file.
This is on a older Linux x64 box with Intel i7-4770k CPU.
Could be that the Rust version adds several such SIMD variants and
then branches based on the platform running the code.
In any case, the C extension is indeed very easy to build and
install with a standard compiler setup.
----------
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