endi

A simple endian-handling library for Rust

Latest version: 1.1.0 registry icon
Maintenance score
11
Safety score
100
Popularity score
70
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Security
  Vulnerabilities
Version Suggest Low Medium High Critical
1.1.0 0 0 0 0 0
1.0.2 0 0 0 0 0
1.0.1 0 0 0 0 0
1.0.0 0 0 0 0 0

Stability
Latest release:

1.1.0 - This version may not be safe as it has not been updated for a long time. Find out if your coding project uses this component and get notified of any reported security vulnerabilities with Meterian-X Open Source Security Platform

Licensing

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MIT   -   MIT License

Not a wildcard

Not proprietary

OSI Compliant



endi

Build Status API Documentation crates.io

Yet another endian handling library for Rust. The approach is very similar to that of byteordered crate with its Endianness enum, except that endi is much simpler and doesn't depend on byteorder (or anything at all).

Usage

The main type is Endian enum which can be either Big or Little. It provides various methods to read and write integers of different sizes and endianness.

use endi::{Endian, ReadBytes, WriteBytes};

let mut buf = [0u8; 4];
for endian in [Endian::Little, Endian::Big] {
    endian.write_u32(&mut buf, 0xAB_BA_FE_EF);
    assert_eq!(endian.read_u32(&buf), 0xAB_BA_FE_EF);

    // Using the `ReadBytes` and `WriteBytes` traits:
    let mut cursor = std::io::Cursor::new(&mut buf[..]);
    cursor.write_u32(endian, 0xAB_BA_FE_EF).unwrap();
    cursor.set_position(0);
    assert_eq!(cursor.read_u32(endian).unwrap(), 0xAB_BA_FE_EF);
}

nostd

You can disable std by disabling the default std feature. This will disable the ReadBytes and WriteBytes traits.

License

MIT