This will allow to make use of func (*Reader) Seek, instead of re-recreating a
new reader. It's a large commit for a small change, but anything to simply the
reader/buffer/ReadAll/… mess is a step in the right direction I think, and it
should enable more follow-up simplifications.
- allow youtube urls to start with `www`
- use `strings.Builder` instead of a `bytes.Buffer`
- use a `strings.NewReader` instead of a `bytes.NewBufferString`
- sprinkles a couple of `continue` to make the code-flow more obvious
- inline calls to `inList`, and put their parameters in the right order
- simplify isPixelTracker
- simplify `isValidIframeSource`, by extracting the hostname and comparing it
directly, instead of using the full url and checking if it starts with
multiple variations of the same one (`//`, `http:`, `https://` multiplied by
``/`www.`)
- add a benchmark
There is no need to do extra work like creating a session and its associated
view until the user has been properly identified and as many possibly-failing sql request have been successfully run.
- Reduce the amount of nested loops: it's preferable to search the whole page
once and filter on it (even with filters that should always be false),
than searching it again for every element we're looking for.
- Factorize the proxying conditions into a `shouldProxy` function to reduce the
copy-pasta.
- Refactorise the tests and add some
- Use 250 signs instead of the whole text
- Only check for Korean, Chinese and Japanese script
- Add a benchmark
- Use a more idiomatic control flow
```console
$ # main branch
$ go test -bench=.
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: miniflux.app/v2/internal/reader/readingtime
BenchmarkEstimateReadingTime-12 267 4821268 ns/op
PASS
ok miniflux.app/v2/internal/reader/readingtime 1.754s
$ # speed_up_reading_time branch
$ go test -bench=.
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: miniflux.app/v2/internal/reader/readingtime
cpu: 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-1265U
BenchmarkEstimateReadingTime-12 1941 653312 ns/op
PASS
ok miniflux.app/v2/internal/reader/readingtime 1.342s
$
```
If the user doesn't display reading times, there is no need to compute them.
This should speed things up a bit, since `whatlanggo.Detect` is abysmally slow.
Instead of having to allocate a ~100 keys map containing possibly dynamic
values (at least to the go compiler), allocate it once in a global variable.
This significantly speeds things up, by reducing the garbage
collector/allocator involvements.
Local synthetic benchmarks have shown a improvements from 38% of wall time to only
12%.
- `make([]a, b)` create a slice of `b` elements `a`
- `make([]a, b, c)` create a slice of `0` elements `a`, but reserve space for `c` of them
When using `append` on the former, it will result on a slice with `b` leading
elements, which is unlikely to be what we want. This commit replaces the two
instances where this happens with the latter construct.
Go 1.22 introduced a new [for-range](https://go.dev/ref/spec#For_range)
construct that looks a tad better than the usual `for i := 0; i < N; i++`
construct. I also tool the liberty of replacing some
`for i := 0; i < len(myitemsarray); i++ { … myitemsarray[i] …}`
with `for item := range myitemsarray` when `myitemsarray` contains only pointers.
- Use a simple regex to parse data uri instead of a hand-rolled parser, and
document what fields are considered mandatory.
- Use case-insensitive matching to find (fav)icons, instead of doing the same
query twice with different letter cases
- Add 'apple-touch-icon-precomposed.png' as a fallback favicon
- Reorder the queries to have i`con` first, since it seems to be the most
popular one. It used to be last, meaning that pages had to be parsed
completely 4 times, instead of one now.
- Minor factorisation in findIconURLsFromHTMLDocument