Spin-based synchronization primitives.
This crate provides spin-based
versions of the primitives in std::sync
. Because synchronization is done
through spinning, the primitives are suitable for use in no_std
environments.
Before deciding to use spin
, we recommend reading
this superb blog post
by @matklad that discusses the pros and cons of
spinlocks. If you have access to std
, it's likely that the primitives in
std::sync
will serve you better except in very specific circumstances.
Mutex
, RwLock
, Once
, Lazy
and Barrier
equivalentsno_std
environmentslock_api
compatibilityRwLock
guardsInclude the following under the [dependencies]
section in your Cargo.toml
file.
toml
spin = "x.y"
When calling lock
on a Mutex
you will get a guard value that provides access
to the data. When this guard is dropped, the mutex will become available again.
```rust extern crate spin; use std::{sync::Arc, thread};
fn main() { let counter = Arc::new(spin::Mutex::new(0));
let thread = thread::spawn({
let counter = counter.clone();
move || {
for _ in 0..100 {
*counter.lock() += 1;
}
}
});
for _ in 0..100 {
*counter.lock() += 1;
}
thread.join().unwrap();
assert_eq!(*counter.lock(), 200);
} ```
The crate comes with a few feature flags that you may wish to use.
mutex
enables the Mutex
type.
spin_mutex
enables the SpinMutex
type.
ticket_mutex
enables the TicketMutex
type.
use_ticket_mutex
switches to a ticket lock for the implementation of Mutex
. This
is recommended only on targets for which ordinary spinning locks perform very badly
because it will change the implementation used by other crates that depend on spin
.
rwlock
enables the RwLock
type.
once
enables the Once
type.
lazy
enables the Lazy
type.
barrier
enables the Barrier
type.
lock_api
enables support for lock_api
std
enables support for thread yielding instead of spinning.
It is often desirable to have a lock shared between threads. Wrapping the lock in an
std::sync::Arc
is route through which this might be achieved.
Locks provide zero-overhead access to their data when accessed through a mutable
reference by using their get_mut
methods.
The behaviour of these lock is similar to their namesakes in std::sync
. they
differ on the following:
Many of the feature flags listed above are enabled by default. If you're writing a library, we recommend disabling those that you don't use to avoid increasing compilation time for your crate's users. You can do this like so:
[dependencies]
spin = { version = "x.y", default-features = false, features = [...] }
spin
is distributed under the MIT License, (See LICENSE
).