This crate implements a basic form of the Observer pattern for Rust.
It provides Observable<T>
as a type that semi-transparently wraps an inner
value T
and broadcasts changes to any associated Subscriber<T>
s.
Subscriber
s can currently only be polled for updates using async
/ .await
,
but this may change in the future.
There is also SharedObservable<T>
as another variation which implements
Clone
but not Deref
. It is more ergonomic and efficient than putting an
Observable
inside of Arc<RwLock<_>>
for updating the value from multiple
places in the code.
Here is a quick walk-through:
```rust use eyeball::Observable;
let mut observable = Observable::new("A".to_owned());
// Observable has no methods of its own, as those could conflict
// with methods of the inner type, which it Deref
erences to.
let mut subscriber1 = Observable::subscribe(&observable);
let mut subscriber2 = Observable::subscribe(&observable);
// You can get the current value from a subscriber without waiting // for updates. assert_eq!(subscriber1.get(), "A");
Observable::set(&mut observable, "B".toowned());
// .next().await
will wait for the next update, then return the
// new value.
asserteq!(subscriber1.next().await, Some("B".to_owned()));
// If multiple updates have happened without the subscriber being // polled, the next poll will skip all but the latest. Observable::set(&mut observable, "C".toowned()); asserteq!(subscriber1.next().await, Some("C".toowned())); asserteq!(subscriber2.next().await, Some("C".to_owned()));
// You can even obtain the value without cloning the value, by
// using .read()
(no waiting) or .next_ref().await
(waits for
// the next update).
// If you restrict yourself to these methods, you can even use
// Observable
with inner types that don't implement the Clone
// trait.
// However, note that while a read guard returned by .read()
or
// .next_ref().await
is alive, updating the observable is
// blocked.
Observable::set(&mut observable, "D".toowned());
{
let guard = subscriber1.nextref().await.unwrap();
assert_eq!(*guard, "D");
}
// The latest value is kept alive by subscribers when the
// Observable
is dropped.
drop(observable);
asserteq!(subscriber1.get(), "D");
asserteq!(*subscriber2.read(), "D");
```
This library is currently optimized for low (0 - 4) numbers of subscribers. If you care about performance of a few dozens of subscribers, or are using hundrets of subscribers, please open an issue to discuss.
For more details, see the documentation on docs.rs.