critical-section

Documentation

A critical section that works everywhere!

When writing software for embedded systems, it's common to use a "critical section" as a basic primitive to control concurrency. A critical section is essentially a mutex global to the whole process, that can be acquired by only one thread at a time. This can be used to protect data behind mutexes, to emulate atomics in targets that don't support them, etc.

There's a wide range of possible implementations depending on the execution environment: - For bare-metal single core, disabling interrupts globally. - For bare-metal multicore, acquiring a hardware spinlocks and disabling interrupts globally. - For bare-metal using a RTOS, it usually provides library functions for acquiring a critical section, often named "scheduler lock" or "kernel lock". - For bare-metal running in non-privileged mode, usually some system call is needed. - For std targets, acquiring a global std::sync::Mutex.

Libraries often need to use critical sections, but there's no universal API for this in core. This leads library authors to hardcode them for their target, or at best add some cfgs to support a few targets. This doesn't scale since there are many targets out there, and in the general case it's impossible to know which critical section impl is needed from the Rust target alone. For example, the thumbv7em-none-eabi target could be cases 1-4 from the above list.

This crate solves the problem by providing this missing universal API.

Built-in impls

| Target | Mechanism | Notes | |--------------------|---------------------------|-------------------| | thumbv[6-8] | cpsid / cpsie. | Only sound in single-core privileged mode. | | riscv32* | set/clear mstatus.mie | Only sound in single-core privileged mode. | | std targets | Global std::sync::Mutex | |

Providing a custom impl

```rust struct CriticalSection; criticalsection::customimpl!(CriticalSection);

unsafe impl critical_section::Impl for CriticalSection { unsafe fn acquire() -> u8 { // TODO return token; }

unsafe fn release(token: u8) {
    // TODO
}

} ```

If you're writing a library crate that provides a custom impl, it is strongly recommended that you only provide it if explicitly enabled by the user via a Cargo feature critical-section-impl. This allows the user to opt out from your impl to supply their own.

WHy not generics?

An alternative solution would be to use a CriticalSection trait, and make all code that needs acquiring the critical section generic over it. This has a few problems:

License

This work is licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.