Expand description
§Named Semaphore
Named semaphore for Linux & Windows.
To use this crate, add the following to Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
named-sem = "0.2"§Background
Named semaphore is a process synchronize mechanism provided by OS and libc in Linux & Windows. By giving the semaphore a name, processes with appropriate permissions can share the same semaphore.
In Linux, we use the POSIX semaphore as implementation, and in Windows, we use Semaphore Objects.
§Examples
use named_sem::{NamedSemaphore, Error};
fn use_named_semaphore() -> Result<(), Error> {
// In Linux, the semaphore's name should begin with "/"
let mut semaphore = NamedSemaphore::create("/my-semaphore", 3)?;
semaphore.wait_then_post(|| {
do_heavy_things();
})?;
Ok(())
}§Usage
A common usage for named semaphore is to control the process count across the system.
For example, we have four large directories, A, B, C and D, which needs to be compressed. While our computer’s hardware only allows for two 7z processes to run at the same time. So we can create a named semaphore with initial value 2, and require the semaphore before each 7z run.
There is a small utility, preempt-do, in this repo. Compile it by
cargo build --release --features=commandline --bin preempt-doOr you can install it by
cargo install named-sem --features=commandline --bin preempt-doThen you can use the following instructions to do the things above:
preempt-do --name /my-semaphore --count 2 -- 7z a A.7z A
preempt-do --name /my-semaphore --count 2 -- 7z a B.7z B
preempt-do --name /my-semaphore --count 2 -- 7z a C.7z C
preempt-do --name /my-semaphore --count 2 -- 7z a D.7z DThis will allow there to be no more than two 7z processes across the system.
Structs§
- Named
Semaphore - Named semaphore.
Enums§
- Error
- Common errors when dealing semaphore.