// Copyright 2018 Amanieu d'Antras // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0, or the MIT license , at your option. This file may not be // copied, modified, or distributed except according to those terms. //! This library provides type-safe and fully-featured `Mutex` and `RwLock` //! types which wrap a simple raw mutex or rwlock type. This has several //! benefits: not only does it eliminate a large portion of the work in //! implementing custom lock types, it also allows users to write code which is //! generic with regards to different lock implementations. //! //! Basic usage of this crate is very straightforward: //! //! 1. Create a raw lock type. This should only contain the lock state, not any //! data protected by the lock. //! 2. Implement the `RawMutex` trait for your custom lock type. //! 3. Export your mutex as a type alias for `lock_api::Mutex`, and //! your mutex guard as a type alias for `lock_api::MutexGuard`. //! See the [example](#example) below for details. //! //! This process is similar for RwLocks, except that two guards need to be //! exported instead of one. (Or 3 guards if your type supports upgradable read //! locks, see [extension traits](#extension-traits) below for details) //! //! # Example //! //! ``` //! use lock_api::{RawMutex, Mutex, GuardSend}; //! use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicBool, Ordering}; //! //! // 1. Define our raw lock type //! pub struct RawSpinlock(AtomicBool); //! //! // 2. Implement RawMutex for this type //! unsafe impl RawMutex for RawSpinlock { //! const INIT: RawSpinlock = RawSpinlock(AtomicBool::new(false)); //! //! // A spinlock guard can be sent to another thread and unlocked there //! type GuardMarker = GuardSend; //! //! fn lock(&self) { //! // Note: This isn't the best way of implementing a spinlock, but it //! // suffices for the sake of this example. //! while !self.try_lock() {} //! } //! //! fn try_lock(&self) -> bool { //! self.0 //! .compare_exchange(false, true, Ordering::Acquire, Ordering::Relaxed) //! .is_ok() //! } //! //! unsafe fn unlock(&self) { //! self.0.store(false, Ordering::Release); //! } //! } //! //! // 3. Export the wrappers. This are the types that your users will actually use. //! pub type Spinlock = lock_api::Mutex; //! pub type SpinlockGuard<'a, T> = lock_api::MutexGuard<'a, RawSpinlock, T>; //! ``` //! //! # Extension traits //! //! In addition to basic locking & unlocking functionality, you have the option //! of exposing additional functionality in your lock types by implementing //! additional traits for it. Examples of extension features include: //! //! - Fair unlocking (`RawMutexFair`, `RawRwLockFair`) //! - Lock timeouts (`RawMutexTimed`, `RawRwLockTimed`) //! - Downgradable write locks (`RawRwLockDowngradable`) //! - Recursive read locks (`RawRwLockRecursive`) //! - Upgradable read locks (`RawRwLockUpgrade`) //! //! The `Mutex` and `RwLock` wrappers will automatically expose this additional //! functionality if the raw lock type implements these extension traits. //! //! # Cargo features //! //! This crate supports three cargo features: //! //! - `owning_ref`: Allows your lock types to be used with the `owning_ref` crate. //! - `arc_lock`: Enables locking from an `Arc`. This enables types such as `ArcMutexGuard`. Note that this //! requires the `alloc` crate to be present. #![no_std] #![warn(missing_docs)] #![warn(rust_2018_idioms)] #[macro_use] extern crate scopeguard; #[cfg(feature = "arc_lock")] extern crate alloc; /// Marker type which indicates that the Guard type for a lock is `Send`. pub struct GuardSend(()); /// Marker type which indicates that the Guard type for a lock is not `Send`. pub struct GuardNoSend(*mut ()); unsafe impl Sync for GuardNoSend {} mod mutex; pub use crate::mutex::*; mod remutex; pub use crate::remutex::*; mod rwlock; pub use crate::rwlock::*;