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2018-06-19 01:18:09 -04:00
---
layout: post
title: "What I Learned: Porting Dateutil Parser to Rust"
description: ""
category:
tags: [dtparse, rust]
---
Hi. I'm Bradlee.
I've mostly been a lurker in Rust for a while, making a couple small contributions here and there.
So launching [dtparse](https://github.com/bspeice/dtparse) feels like nice step towards becoming a
functioning member of society. But not too much, because then you know people start asking you to
pay bills, and ain't nobody got time for that.
But I built dtparse, and you can read about my thoughts on the process. Or don't. I won't tell you
what to do with your life (but you should totally keep reading).
# Slow down, what?
OK, fine, I guess I should start with *why* someone would do this.
[Dateutil](https://github.com/dateutil/dateutil) is a Python library for handling dates.
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The standard library support for time in Python is kinda dope, but there are a lot of extras
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that go into making it useful beyond just the [datetime](https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/datetime.html)
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module. `dateutil.parser` specifically is code to take all the super-weird time formats people
come up with and turn them into something actually useful.
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Date/time parsing, it turns out, is just like everything else involving
[computers](https://infiniteundo.com/post/25326999628/falsehoods-programmers-believe-about-time)
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and [time](https://infiniteundo.com/post/25509354022/more-falsehoods-programmers-believe-about-time):
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it feels like it shouldn't be that difficult to do, until you try to do it,
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and you realize that people suck and this is why [we can't we have nice things](https://zachholman.com/talk/utc-is-enough-for-everyone-right).
But alas, we'll try and make contemporary art out of the rubble and give it a
pretentious name like *Time*.
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![A gravel mound](/assets/images/2018-06-25-gravel-mound.jpg)
> [Time](https://www.goodfreephotos.com/united-states/montana/elkhorn/remains-of-the-mining-operation-elkhorn.jpg.php)
What makes `dateutil.parser` great is that there's single function with a single argument that drives
what programmers interact with: [`parse(timestr)`](https://github.com/dateutil/dateutil/blob/6dde5d6298cfb81a4c594a38439462799ed2aef2/dateutil/parser/_parser.py#L1258).
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It takes in the time as a string, and gives you back a reasonable "look, this is the best
anyone can possibly do to make sense of your input" value. It doesn't expect much of you.
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[And now it's in Rust.](https://github.com/bspeice/dtparse/blob/7d565d3a78876dbebd9711c9720364fe9eba7915/src/lib.rs#L1332)
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# Lost in Translation
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Having worked at a bulge-bracket bank watching Java programmers try to be Python programmers,
I'm admittedly hesitant to publish Python code that's trying to be Rust.
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Interestingly, Rust code can actually do a great job of mimicking Python.
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It's certainly not idiomatic Rust, but I've had better experiences
than [this guy](https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:wkYMpktJtnUJ:https://jackstouffer.com/blog/porting_dateutil.html+&cd=3&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us)
who attempted the same thing for D. These are the actual take-aways:
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When transcribing code, **stay as close to the original library as possible**. I'm talking
about using the same variable names, same access patterns, the whole shebang.
It's way too easy to make a couple of typos, and all of a sudden
your code blows up in new and exciting ways. Having a reference manual for verbatim
what your code should be means that you don't spend that long debugging complicated logic,
you're more looking for typos.
Also, **don't use nice Rust things like enums**. While
[one time it worked out OK for me](https://github.com/bspeice/dtparse/blob/7d565d3a78876dbebd9711c9720364fe9eba7915/src/lib.rs#L88-L94),
I also managed to shoot myself in the foot a couple times because `dateutil` stores AM/PM as a boolean
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and I mixed up which was true, and which was false (side note: AM is false, PM is true).
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In general, writing nice code *should not be a first-pass priority* when you're just trying to recreate
the same functionality.
**Exceptions are a pain.** Make peace with it. Python code is just allowed to skip stack frames.
So when a co-worker told me "Rust is getting try-catch syntax" I properly freaked out.
Turns out [he's not quite right](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/243), and I'm OK with that.
And while `dateutil` is pretty well-behaved about not skipping multiple stack frames,
[130-line try-catch blocks](https://github.com/dateutil/dateutil/blob/16561fc99361979e88cccbd135393b06b1af7e90/dateutil/parser/_parser.py#L730-L865)
take a while to verify.
As another Python quirk, **be very careful about [long nested if-elif-else blocks](https://github.com/dateutil/dateutil/blob/16561fc99361979e88cccbd135393b06b1af7e90/dateutil/parser/_parser.py#L494-L568)**.
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I used to think that Python's whitespace was just there
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to get you to format your code correctly. I think that no longer. It's way too easy
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to close a block too early and have incredibly weird issues in the logic. Make sure you use an editor that displays
indentation levels so you can keep things straight.
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**Rust macros are not free.** I originally had the
[main test body](https://github.com/bspeice/dtparse/blob/b0e737f088eca8e83ab4244c6621a2797d247697/tests/compat.rs#L63-L217)
wrapped up in a macro using [pyo3](https://github.com/PyO3/PyO3). It took two minutes to compile. After
[moving things to a function](https://github.com/bspeice/dtparse/blob/e017018295c670e4b6c6ee1cfff00dbb233db47d/tests/compat.rs#L76-L205)
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compile times dropped down to ~5 seconds. Turns out 150 lines * 100 tests = a lot of redundant code to be compiled.
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My new rule of thumb is that any macros longer than 10-15 lines are actually functions that need to be liberated, man.
Finally, **I really miss list comprehensions and dictionary comprehensions.**
As a quick comparison, see
[this dateutil code](https://github.com/dateutil/dateutil/blob/16561fc99361979e88cccbd135393b06b1af7e90/dateutil/parser/_parser.py#L476)
and [the implementation in Rust](https://github.com/bspeice/dtparse/blob/7d565d3a78876dbebd9711c9720364fe9eba7915/src/lib.rs#L619-L629).
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I probably wrote it wrong, and I'm sorry. Ultimately though, I hope that these comprehensions can be added through macros or syntax extensions.
Either way, they're expressive, save typing, and are super-readable. Let's get more of that.
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# Using a young language
Now, Rust is exciting and new, which means that there's opportunity to make a substantive impact.
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On more than one occasion though, I've had issues navigating the Rust ecosystem.
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What I'll call the "canonical library" is still being built. In Python, if you need datetime parsing,
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you use `dateutil`. If you want `decimal` types, it's already in the
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[standard library](https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/decimal.html). While I might've gotten away with `f64`,
`dateutil` uses decimals, and I wanted to follow the principle of **staying as close to the original library as possible**.
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Thus began my quest to find a decimal library in Rust. What I quickly found was summarized
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in a comment:
> Writing a BigDecimal is easy. Writing a *good* BigDecimal is hard.
>
> [-cmr](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/8937#issuecomment-34582794)
In practice, this means that there are at least [4](https://crates.io/crates/bigdecimal)
[different](https://crates.io/crates/rust_decimal) [implementations](https://crates.io/crates/decimal)
[available](https://crates.io/crates/decimate). And that's a lot of decisions to worry about
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when all I'm thinking is "why can't [calendar reform](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendar_reform) be a thing"
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and I'm forced to dig through a [couple](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/8937#issuecomment-31661916)
[different](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/334) [threads](https://github.com/rust-num/num/issues/8)
to figure out if the library I'm look at is dead or just stable.
And even when the "canonical library" exists, there's no guarantees that it will be well-maintained.
[Chrono](https://github.com/chronotope/chrono) is the *de facto* date/time library in Rust,
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and just released version 0.4.4 like two days ago. Meanwhile, [chrono-tz](https://github.com/chronotope/chrono-tz)
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appears to be dead in the water even though [there are people happy to help maintain it](https://github.com/chronotope/chrono-tz/issues/19).
I know relatively little about it, but it appears that most of the release process is automated; keeping
that up to date should be a no-brainer.
## Trial Maintenance Policy
Specifically given "maintenance" being an [oft-discussed](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/48540g/thoughts_on_initiators_vs_maintainers/)
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issue, I'm going to try out the following policy to keep things moving on `dtparse`:
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1. Issues/PRs needing *maintainer* feedback will be updated at least weekly. I want to make sure nobody's blocking on me.
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2. To keep issues/PRs needing *contributor* feedback moving, I'm going to (kindly) ask the contributor to check in after two weeks,
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and close the issue without resolution if I hear nothing back after a month.
The second point I think has the potential to be a bit controversial, so I'm happy to receive feedback on that.
And if a contributor responds with "hey, still working on it, had a kid and I'm running on 30 seconds of sleep a night,"
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then first: congratulations on sustaining human life. And second: I don't mind keeping those requests going indefinitely.
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I just want to try and balance keeping things moving with giving people the necessary time they need.
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I should also note that I'm still getting some best practices in place - CONTRIBUTING and CONTRIBUTORS files
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need to be added, as well as issue/PR templates. In progress. None of us are perfect.
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# Roadmap and Conclusion
So if I've now built a `dateutil`-compatible parser, we're done, right? Of course not! That's not
nearly ambitious enough.
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Ultimately, I'd love to have a library that's capable of parsing everything the Linux `date`
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command can do (and not `date` on OSX, because seriously, BSD coreutils are the worst). I know Rust has a
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coreutils rewrite going on, and `dtparse` would potentially be an interesting candidate since it
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doesn't bring in a lot of extra dependencies. [`humantime`](https://crates.io/crates/humantime)
could help pick up some of the (current) slack in dtparse, so maybe we can share and care with each other?
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All in all, I'm mostly hoping that nobody's already done this and I haven't spent a bit over a month
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on redundant code. So if it exists, tell me. I need to know, but be nice about it, because I'm going to take it hard.
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And in the mean time, I'm looking forward to building more. Onwards.