| commit | caf840c5c9a627ac1e39e960a95e3d3b98dc886b | [log] [tgz] | 
|---|---|---|
| author | Joel Galenson <jgalenson@google.com> | Wed Apr 28 21:52:40 2021 +0000 | 
| committer | Automerger Merge Worker <android-build-automerger-merge-worker@system.gserviceaccount.com> | Wed Apr 28 21:52:40 2021 +0000 | 
| tree | 8aa33bfe69d31d520c9f1aa0b31ed2e4683f5595 | |
| parent | 778c9f45025e8c3ad81324e24844ab75303dd34f [diff] | |
| parent | f5d829f250bcc59ed43bdfdbeeed7ae338f84d0f [diff] | 
Generate apex_available from c2a instead of a patch am: d00e1ff9c4 am: f5d829f250 Original change: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/external/rust/crates/spin/+/1689918 Change-Id: I0952c2319951c685cb6bdc9c5df2f7ec65c70b11
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 and Once equivalentsno_std environmentslock_api compatibilityRwLock guardsstd feature to enable yield to the OS scheduler in busy loopsMutex can become a ticket lockInclude the following under the [dependencies] section in your Cargo.toml file.
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 lock will be unlocked.
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..10 { *counter.lock() += 1; } } }); for _ in 0..10 { *counter.lock() += 1; } thread.join().unwrap(); assert_eq!(*counter.lock(), 20); }
The crate comes with a few feature flags that you may wish to use.
lock_api enabled support for lock_api
ticket_mutex uses a ticket lock for the implementation of Mutex
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:
spin is distributed under the MIT License, (See LICENSE).