Comment by QuiEgo

2 months ago

Rust still compiles into bigger binary sizes than C, by a small amount. Although it’s such a complex thing depending on your code that it really depends case-by-case, and you can get pretty close. On embedded systems with small amounts of ram (think on the order of 64kbytes), a few extra kb still hurts a lot.

Lack of stable build-std and panic_immediate_abort features result in a order of magnitude size difference for some rust code I have. Using no_std brings it to ~60kb from ~350kb, but still more than the ~40kb for the C version

  • Afaik despite Rust not having exceptions, panic still unwinds the stack and executes 'drop'-s the same way C++ does, which means the code retains much of the machinery necessary to support exceptions.

    • The panic_immediate_abort feature should prevent this. build-std is the name of the feature that recompiles the Rust standard libraries with your chosen profile, so the combination of these two features should result in no unwinding code bloat.

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