This matches `ahash::RandomState`, which provides both `Debug` and `Clone`.
Notably, implementing `Clone` allows the `StableHashMap`/`Set` to also implement `Clone`.
# Objective
- Allow `bevy_utils::StableHashMap` to be cloned.
## Solution
- Derive `Clone` for `bevy_utils::FixedState`.
- Also derive `Debug`, since we're touching it anyway, and this aligns `FixedState` with `ahash::RandomState`.
This relicenses Bevy under the dual MIT or Apache-2.0 license. For rationale, see #2373.
* Changes the LICENSE file to describe the dual license. Moved the MIT license to docs/LICENSE-MIT. Added the Apache-2.0 license to docs/LICENSE-APACHE. I opted for this approach over dumping both license files at the root (the more common approach) for a number of reasons:
* Github links to the "first" license file (LICENSE-APACHE) in its license links (you can see this in the wgpu and rust-analyzer repos). People clicking these links might erroneously think that the apache license is the only option. Rust and Amethyst both use COPYRIGHT or COPYING files to solve this problem, but this creates more file noise (if you do everything at the root) and the naming feels way less intuitive.
* People have a reflex to look for a LICENSE file. By providing a single license file at the root, we make it easy for them to understand our licensing approach.
* I like keeping the root clean and noise free
* There is precedent for putting the apache and mit license text in sub folders (amethyst)
* Removed the `Copyright (c) 2020 Carter Anderson` copyright notice from the MIT license. I don't care about this attribution, it might make license compliance more difficult in some cases, and it didn't properly attribute other contributors. We shoudn't replace it with something like "Copyright (c) 2021 Bevy Contributors" because "Bevy Contributors" is not a legal entity. Instead, we just won't include the copyright line (which has precedent ... Rust also uses this approach).
* Updates crates to use the new "MIT OR Apache-2.0" license value
* Removes the old legion-transform license file from bevy_transform. bevy_transform has been its own, fully custom implementation for a long time and that license no longer applies.
* Added a License section to the main readme
* Updated our Bevy Plugin licensing guidelines.
As a follow-up we should update the website to properly describe the new license.
Closes#2373
# Objective
Re-introduce `AHashExt` and respective `with_capacity()` implementations to give a more ergonomic way to set a `HashMap` / `HashSet` capacity.
As a note, this has also been discussed and agreed on issue #2115, which this PR addresses (leaving `new()` out of the `AHashExt` trait).
Fixes#2115.
## Solution
PR #1235 had removed the `AHashExt` trait and respective `with_capacity()`s implementations, leaving only the less ergonomic `HashMap::with_capacity_and_hasher(size, Default::default())` option available.
This re-introduces `AHashExt` and respective `with_capacity()` implementations to give a more ergonomic way to set a `HashMap` / `HashSet` capacity.
There are cases where we want an enum variant name. Right now the only way to do that with rust's std is to derive Debug, but this will also print out the variant's fields. This creates the unfortunate situation where we need to manually write out each variant's string name (ex: in #1963), which is both boilerplate-ey and error-prone. Crates such as `strum` exist for this reason, but it includes a lot of code and complexity that we don't need.
This adds a dead-simple `EnumVariantMeta` derive that exposes `enum_variant_index` and `enum_variant_name` functions. This allows us to make cases like #1963 much cleaner (see the second commit). We might also be able to reuse this logic for `bevy_reflect` enum derives.
* Remove AHashExt
There is little benefit of Hash*::new() over Hash*::default(), but it
does require more code that needs to be duplicated for every Hash* in
bevy_utils. It may also slightly increase compile times.
* Add StableHash* to bevy_utils
* Use StableHashMap instead of HashMap + BTreeSet for diagnostics
This is a significant reduction in the release mode compile times of
bevy_diagnostics
```
Benchmark #1: touch crates/bevy_diagnostic/src/lib.rs && cargo build --release -p bevy_diagnostic -j1
Time (mean ± σ): 3.645 s ± 0.009 s [User: 3.551 s, System: 0.094 s]
Range (min … max): 3.632 s … 3.658 s 20 runs
```
```
Benchmark #1: touch crates/bevy_diagnostic/src/lib.rs && cargo build --release -p bevy_diagnostic -j1
Time (mean ± σ): 2.938 s ± 0.012 s [User: 2.850 s, System: 0.090 s]
Range (min … max): 2.919 s … 2.969 s 20 runs
```