The WarcRwLock crate is a Rust library that provides a macro attribute for mods, structs, and impls. The purpose of this library is to generate a wrapper that allows the struct to be used with the asynchronous reference control called Arc and the RwLock for asynchronous mutation control.
To use the WarcRwLock crate, add the following dependency to your Cargo.toml
:
toml
[dependencies]
warcrwlock = "1.0.0"
Here's a simple example of using WarcRwLock:
```rust
pub struct MyStruct { value: usize, }
impl MyStruct { pub fn new() -> Self { Self { value: 0, } }
pub fn reset(&mut self) {
self.value = 0;
}
pub fn value_mut(&mut self) -> &mut usize {
&mut self.value
}
pub fn get_value(&self) -> usize {
self.value
}
} ```
After applying the #[warcrwlock]
attribute, the code is transformed into:
```rust pub struct MyStructBase { value: usize, }
impl MyStructBase { pub fn new() -> Self { Self { value: 0, } }
fn reset(&mut self) {
self.value = 0;
}
pub fn value_mut(&mut self) -> &mut usize {
&mut self.value
}
fn get_value(&self) -> usize {
self.value
}
}
pub struct MyStruct {
base: Arc
impl MyStruct { pub fn new() -> Self { Self { base: Arc::new(RwLock::new(MyStructBase::new())), } }
pub fn reset(&mut self) {
self.base.write().unwrap().reset();
}
pub fn get_value(&self) -> usize {
self.base.read().unwrap().get_value()
}
}
impl MyStruct { pub fn read(&self) -> RwLockReadGuard<'_, MyStructBase> { self.base.read().unwrap() }
pub fn write(&self) -> RwLockWriteGuard<'_, MyStructBase> {
self.base.write().unwrap()
}
}
impl Clone for MyStruct { fn clone(&self) -> Self { Self { base: self.base.clone(), } } }
unsafe impl Send for MyStruct {} unsafe impl Sync for MyStruct {} ```
After using the #[warcrwlock]
attribute, the MyStruct
will be automatically rewritten with the addition of a base
field containing an Arc<RwLock<MyStructBase>>
. The functions of MyStruct
will then be implemented to safely access the base
field.
Similar to the methods in RwLock<T>
, these functions are used to lock the usage and gain access to read or write functions, as shown in the example below:
rust
fn main() {
use my_module::MyStruct;
let mut a = MyStruct::new();
*a.write().unwrap().value_mut() = 10;
assert_eq!(a.read().unwrap().get_value(), 10);
}
You can simplify the use of #[warcrwlock]
by placing it as an attribute for the module, which will have the same effect as in the previous example:
```rust
use warcrwlock::warcrwlock;
mod my_module { /// other mods, structs, and/or impls... } ```
When used on a module, all structs, impls, and mods will be included, with exceptions.
The use of the attribute may not work well with other attributes.
The WarcRwLock project is mainly maintained by a single developer known as PFP but welcomes contributions from the community. However, it's essential that contributions stay within the scope of the project's main function.
This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for more details.