scratchpad 1.2.0

Stack-like memory allocator with double-ended allocation support
Documentation

scratchpad

A Rust library providing a stack-like memory allocator with double-ended allocation support.

Build Status

Scratchpad provides a method for quick and safe dynamic allocations of arbitrary types without relying on the global heap (e.g. using Box or Vec). Allocations are made from a fixed-size region of memory in a stack-like fashion using two separate stacks (one for each end of the allocation buffer) to allow different types of allocations with independent lifecycles to be made from each end.

Such allocators are commonly used in game development, but are also useful in general for short-lived allocations or groups of allocations that share a common lifetime. While not quite as flexible as heap allocations, allocations from a stack allocator are usually much faster and are isolated from the rest of the heap, reducing memory fragmentation.

Features include:

  • User-defined backing storage of data (static arrays, boxed slices, or mutable slice references).
  • Allocation of any data type from any scratchpad instance.
  • Ability to combine allocations that are adjacent in memory or add to the most recently created allocation.
  • Double-ended allocation support (allocations from the "front" are separate from the "back", but share the same memory pool).
  • Use of lifetimes to prevent dangling references to allocated data.
  • Low runtime overhead.
  • Support for no_std usage.

Usage

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
scratchpad = "1.2"

and this to your crate root:

#[macro_use]
extern crate scratchpad;

Rust Version Support

The minimum supported Rust version is 1.25 due to use of NonNull<T> and the repr(align) attribute.

no_std Support

scratchpad doesn't require the Rust standard library, although it makes use of it by default (via the std crate feature) to provide support for use of Box and Vec in various places. For no_std support, the std feature must be disabled in your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
scratchpad = { version = "1.2", default-features = false }

Box and Vec support is still available for no_std builds when using a nightly toolchain by enabling the unstable crate feature.

Unstable Features

The unstable crate feature provides some additional functionality when using a nightly toolchain:

  • Support for Box and Vec types as mentioned with the std feature, regardless of whether the std feature is enabled (if std is disabled, this will use the alloc library directly).
  • Declaration of the function Scratchpad::new() as const.
  • ByteData trait implementations for u128/i128 for Rust versions prior to 1.26 (u128/i128 support is enabled by default with both stable and unstable toolchains if the detected Rust version is 1.26 or greater).

Simply add the unstable feature to your Cargo.toml dependency:

[dependencies]
scratchpad = { version = "1.2", features = ["unstable"] }