Generate human readable random names.
Petnames are useful when you need to name a large number of resources – like servers, services, perhaps bicycles for hire – and you want those names to be easy to recall and communicate unambiguously. For example, over a telephone compare saying "please restart remarkably-striking-cricket" with "please restart s01O97i4": the former is easier to say and less likely to be misunderstood. Avoiding sequential names adds confidence too: petnames have a greater lexical distance between them, so errors in transcription can be more readily detected.
This crate is both a command-line tool and a Rust library. Dustin Kirkland's petname project is the inspiration for this project. The word lists and the basic command-line UX here are taken from there. Check it out! Dustin maintains packages for Python, and Golang too.
Notable features:
- Choose from 3 built-in word lists, or provide your own.
- Alliterative names, like viable-vulture, proper-pony, ...
- Build names with 1-255 components (adjectives, adverbs, nouns).
- Name components can be unseparated, or joined by any character or string.
- Generate 1..n names, or stream names continuously.
no_std
support (see later section).- Compile without built-in dictionaries to reduce library/binary size.
If you have installed Cargo, you can install rust-petname with
cargo install petname
. This puts a petname
binary in ~/.cargo/bin
, which
the Cargo installation process will probably have added to your PATH
.
The petname
binary from rust-petname is drop-in compatible with the original
petname
. It's more strict when validating arguments, but for most uses it
should behave the same.
$ petname --help
rust-petname 1.1.3
Gavin Panella <[email protected]>
Generate human readable random names
USAGE:
petname [OPTIONS]
OPTIONS:
-a, --alliterate Generate names where each word begins with the same letter
-A, --alliterate-with <LETTER> Generate names where each word begins with the given letter
-c, --complexity <COM> Use small words (0), medium words (1), or large words (2)
[default: 0]
--count <COUNT> Generate multiple names; pass 0 to produce infinite names
(--count=0 is deprecated; use --stream instead) [default: 1]
-d, --dir <DIR> Directory containing adjectives.txt, adverbs.txt, names.txt
-h, --help Print help information
-l, --letters <LETTERS> Maximum number of letters in each word; 0 for unlimited
[default: 0]
--non-repeating Do not generate the same name more than once
-s, --separator <SEP> Separator between words [default: -]
--stream Stream names continuously
-u, --ubuntu Alias; see --alliterate
-V, --version Print version information
-w, --words <WORDS> Number of words in name [default: 2]
Based on Dustin Kirkland's petname project <https://github.com/dustinkirkland/petname>.
$ petname
untaunting-paxton
$ petname -s _ -w 3
suitably_overdelicate_jamee
This implementation is considerably faster than the upstream petname
:
$ time /usr/bin/petname
fit-lark
real 0m0.038s
user 0m0.032s
sys 0m0.008s
$ time target/release/petname
cool-guinea
real 0m0.002s
user 0m0.002s
sys 0m0.000s
These timings are irrelevant if you only need to name a single thing, but if you need to generate 100s or 1000s of names then rust-petname is handy:
$ time { for i in $(seq 1000); do /usr/bin/petname; done; } > /dev/null
real 0m32.058s
user 0m29.360s
sys 0m5.163s
$ time { for i in $(seq 1000); do target/release/petname; done; } > /dev/null
real 0m2.199s
user 0m1.333s
sys 0m0.987s
To be fair, /usr/bin/petname
is a shell script. The Go command-line version
(available from the golang-petname package on Ubuntu) is comparable to the Rust
version for speed, but has very limited options compared to its shell-script
ancestor and to rust-petname.
Lastly, rust-petname has a --count
option that speeds up generation of names
considerably:
$ time target/release/petname --count=10000000 > /dev/null
real 0m1.327s
user 0m1.322s
sys 0m0.004s
That's ~240,000 (two hundred and forty thousand) times faster, for about 7.5 million petnames a second on this hardware. This is useful if you want to apply an external filter to the names being generated:
$ petname --words=3 --stream | grep 'love.*\bsalmon$'
There are a few features that can be selected – or, more correctly, deselected, since all features are enabled by default:
std_rng
enablesstd
andstd_rng
in rand.default_dictionary
enables the default word lists.clap
enables the clap command-line argument parser.
All of these are required to build the command-line utility.
However, the library can be built without any default features, and it will work
in a no_std
environment, like Wasm. You'll need to figure out a
source of randomness, but SmallRng::seed_from_u64 may
be a good starting point.
To install the command-line tool:
- Install Cargo,
- Install this crate:
cargo install petname
.
Alternatively, to hack the source:
- Install Cargo,
- Clone this repository,
- Build it:
cargo build
. - Optionally, hide noise when using
git blame
:git config blame.ignoreRevsFile .git-blame-ignore-revs
.
After installing the source (see above) run tests with: cargo test
.
- Bump version in
Cargo.toml
. - Paste updated
--help
output intoREADME.md
(this file; see near the top). On macOS the commandcargo run -- --help | pbcopy
is helpful. - Build and test:
cargo build && cargo test
. The latter on its own does do a build, but a test build can hide warnings about dead code, so do both. - Commit with message "Bump version to
$VERSION
." - Tag with "v
$VERSION
", e.g.git tag v1.0.10
. - Push:
git push --tags
. - Publish:
cargo publish
.
This project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License. See the LICENSE file for details.