LfrLock: Lock-Free Read Lock
A high-performance Lock-Free Read Lock implementation where reads never block and writes are serialized using a Mutex.
Note: If you need a specialized Single-Writer Multiple-Reader (SWMR) version, please use smr-swap directly.
Features
- Lock-Free Reads: Read operations are wait-free and never block, ensuring low latency.
- Serialized Writes: Write operations are serialized using a
Mutexto prevent data races. - Unified Interface: Supports both read and write operations through a single
LfrLock<T>type, similar tostd::sync::Mutex. - Easy Usage: Provides a
WriteGuardfor familiar, mutable access that automatically commits changes on drop. - Safe Concurrency: Built on top of
smr-swapfor safe memory reclamation and concurrent access.
No-std Support
lfrlock supports no_std environments. To use it in a no_std crate:
- Disable default features.
- Enable the
spinfeature if you need Mutex support (whichLfrLockuses for writes). - Ensure
allocis available.
[]
= { = "0.2", = false, = ["spin"] }
Note: LfrLock relies on a Mutex for serializing writes. In std environments, it uses std::sync::Mutex. In no_std environments with the spin feature enabled, it uses spin::Mutex.
Quick Start
Installation
Add to your Cargo.toml:
[]
= "0.2"
Basic Usage
use LfrLock;
use thread;
Shared Access (Multi-threaded)
Since LfrLock is not Sync (it contains a thread-local reader), it cannot be shared via Arc<LfrLock>. Instead, obtain a LfrLockFactory from the lock (or create one directly), which is Sync and Clone.
use LfrLock;
use Arc;
use thread;
API Overview
LfrLock<T>
The main type combining reader and writer capabilities.
Creation
new(initial: T): Creates a new lock with an initial value.From<T>: SupportsLfrLock::from(value)orvalue.into().Default: WhenT: Default, supportsLfrLock::default().
Read Operations
read() -> ReadGuard<T>: Gets a lock-free read guard. Never blocks.get() -> T: Clones and returns the current value. RequiresT: Clone.map<F, U>(f: F) -> U: Applies a closure to the current value and returns the transformed result.filter<F>(f: F) -> Option<ReadGuard<T>>: Conditional read, returnsSome(guard)if closure returnstrue.factory() -> LfrLockFactory<T>: Creates a factory for sharing the lock across threads.
Write Operations
store(new_value: T): Directly replaces the current value.swap(new_value: T) -> T: Atomically swaps and returns the old value. RequiresT: Clone.update<F>(f: F): Updates data using a closureFnOnce(&T) -> T.update_and_fetch<F>(f: F) -> ReadGuard<T>: Updates and returns a guard to the new value.fetch_and_update<F>(f: F) -> ReadGuard<T>: Returns a guard to the old value and updates.write() -> WriteGuard<T>: Acquires a write lock and returns a guard for mutable access. RequiresT: Clone.try_write() -> Option<WriteGuard<T>>: Tries to acquire the write lock.
LfrLockFactory<T>
A factory for creating LfrLock instances. Sync and Clone, suitable for sharing across threads.
new(initial: T): Creates a new factory with an initial value.create() -> LfrLock<T>: Creates a newLfrLockhandle for the current thread.
WriteGuard<T>
Provides mutable access to the data.
- Automatic Commit: When the guard is dropped, the modified data is atomically swapped in.
- Deref/DerefMut: Access the underlying data transparently.
Implementation Details
LfrLock uses smr-swap internally to manage state. It wraps the Swapper in a Mutex to serialize writes, while the SwapReader allows concurrent, lock-free reads. This design is ideal for read-heavy workloads where writes are infrequent but need to be safe and atomic.
Performance Characteristics
Since v0.2.5, LfrLock defaults to the Write-Preferred strategy. The previous Read-Preferred strategy is now enabled via the read-preferred feature.
Benchmark results comparing LfrLock (both strategies), ArcSwap, and std::sync::Mutex on an Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-13900KS CPU @ 3.20GHz.
Benchmark Summary
| Scenario | LfrLock (Write-Pref/Default) | LfrLock (Read-Pref) | ArcSwap | Mutex |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Read Only (Single Thread) | 4.50 ns | 0.86 ns | 8.76 ns | 8.30 ns |
| Read Heavy (Concurrent) (1:1000) | 176 µs | 172 µs | 216 µs | 1.94 ms |
| Read Heavy (Concurrent) (1:100) | 183 µs | 195 µs | 252 µs | 2.01 ms |
| Read Heavy (Concurrent) (1:10) | 264 µs | 280 µs | 583 µs | 2.24 ms |
| Write Heavy (Concurrent) (16R:4W) | 1.25 ms | 3.22 ms | 3.08 ms | 1.30 ms |
| Write Heavy (Concurrent) (8R:4W) | 1.13 ms | 3.13 ms | 2.96 ms | 0.95 ms |
| Write Heavy (Concurrent) (4R:4W) | 1.12 ms | 3.13 ms | 2.86 ms | 0.79 ms |
| Creation (new) | 236 ns | 396 ns | 860 ns | 0.18 ns |
| Cloning | 84 ns | 92 ns | 8.65 ns | 8.64 ns |
Analysis
- Default Write-Preferred Strategy: While offering extremely fast reads (4.5ns), it significantly improves write performance. In mixed workloads and write-heavy scenarios, write performance is improved by about 2.5-3x compared to the Read-Preferred strategy, even outperforming
Mutexin some high-concurrency scenarios. - Read-Preferred Strategy: Still provides ultimate read performance (0.86ns), suitable for scenarios like configuration lists that are almost never updated.
- Compared to ArcSwap: Regardless of the strategy,
LfrLockshows more stable performance in high-concurrency read scenarios. In Write-Preferred mode, write performance also significantly surpassesArcSwap. - Compared to Mutex: In read-heavy scenarios,
LfrLockhas an overwhelming advantage. In write-heavy scenarios,LfrLockwith the Write-Preferred strategy can now compete withMutex.
License
This project is licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.