I am writing up a talk on XS and I need to know when the community thinks it is proper to reach for XS.
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I can think of at least three reasons to use XS:
Reason 1 is obvious and should need no explaination. When you really need reason 2 is less obvious. Often you are better off looking at how the code is structured. You should only invoke reason 2 if you have profiled your code and have a benchmark and test suite to prove that the XS code is faster and correct. Reason 3 is a dangerous reason. It is rare that you actually need to look into Perl's guts to do something, but there is at least one valid case. | |||||||||||||||||
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In a few cases, better memory management is another reason for using XS. For example, if you have a very large block of objects of some similar type, this can be managed more efficiently through XS. There are proposals to integrate some of this approach into core Perl in the long term, initially because it offers a chance to make sharing data in threading better: see: http://openparallel.com/2011/07/05/a-new-hope-for-efficient-safe-data-sharing-between-threads-in-perl/. | |||||||
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