pub struct ReadHandle<T> { /* private fields */ }Expand description
A read handle to a left-right guarded data structure.
To use a handle, first call enter to acquire a ReadGuard. This is similar
to acquiring a Mutex, except that no exclusive lock is taken. All reads of the underlying
data structure can then happen through the ReadGuard (which implements Deref<Target = T>).
Reads through a ReadHandle only see the changes up until the last time
WriteHandle::publish was called. That is, even if a writer performs a number of
modifications to the underlying data, those changes are not visible to reads until the writer
calls publish.
ReadHandle is not Sync, which means that you cannot share a ReadHandle across many
threads. This is because the coordination necessary to do so would significantly hamper the
scalability of reads. If you had many reads go through one ReadHandle, they would need to
coordinate among themselves for every read, which would lead to core contention and poor
multi-core performance. By having ReadHandle not be Sync, you are forced to keep a
ReadHandle per reader, which guarantees that you do not accidentally ruin your performance.
You can create a new, independent ReadHandle either by cloning an existing handle or by using
a ReadHandleFactory. Note, however, that creating a new handle through either of these
mechanisms does take a lock, and may therefore become a bottleneck if you do it frequently.
Implementations§
Source§impl<T> ReadHandle<T>
impl<T> ReadHandle<T>
Sourcepub fn factory(&self) -> ReadHandleFactory<T>
pub fn factory(&self) -> ReadHandleFactory<T>
Create a ReadHandleFactory which is Send & Sync and can be shared across threads to create
additional ReadHandle instances.
Source§impl<T> ReadHandle<T>
impl<T> ReadHandle<T>
Sourcepub fn enter(&self) -> Option<ReadGuard<'_, T>>
pub fn enter(&self) -> Option<ReadGuard<'_, T>>
Take out a guarded live reference to the read copy of the T.
While the guard lives, the WriteHandle cannot proceed with a call to
WriteHandle::publish, so no queued operations will become visible to any reader.
If the WriteHandle has been dropped, this function returns None.
Sourcepub fn was_dropped(&self) -> bool
pub fn was_dropped(&self) -> bool
Returns true if the WriteHandle has been dropped.
Sourcepub fn raw_handle(&self) -> Option<NonNull<T>>
pub fn raw_handle(&self) -> Option<NonNull<T>>
Returns a raw pointer to the read copy of the data.
Note that it is only safe to read through this pointer if you know that the writer will
not start writing into it. This is most likely only the case if you are calling this method
from inside a method that holds &mut WriteHandle.
Casting this pointer to &mut is never safe.