Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
80 lines (63 loc) · 3.81 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

80 lines (63 loc) · 3.81 KB

radium

Latest Version Documentation

radium provides abstractions and graceful degradation for behavior that must be shared-mutable, but merely may use atomic instructions to do so.

The primary export is the Radium trait. This is implemented on all symbols in the atomic module, and on their Cell<T> equivalents, and presents the atomic inherent API as a trait. Your code can be generic over Radium, use a stable and consistent API, and permit callers to select atomic or Cell behavior as they need.

The symbols in the atomic module are conditionally present according to the target architecture’s atomic support. As such, code that is portable across targets with varying atomic support cannot use those names directly. Instead, the radium::types module provides names that will always exist, and forward to the corresponding atomic type when it exists and the equivalent Cell<T> type when it does not.

As the cfg(target_has_atomic) compiler attribute is unstable, radium provides the macro radium::if_atomic! to perform conditional compilation based on atomic availability.

This crate is #![no_std]-compatible, and uses no non-core types.

Versioning

Each change of supported target architecture will result in a new minor version. Furthermore, radium is by definition attached to the Rust standard library. As the atomic API evolves, radium will follow it. MSRV raising is always at least a minor-version increase.

If you require a backport of architecture discovery to older Rust versions, please file an issue. We will happily backport upon request, but we do not proactively guarantee support for compilers older than ~six months.

Target Architecture Compatibility

Because the compiler does not expose this information to libraries, radium uses a build script to detect the target architecture and emit its own directives that mark the presence or absence of an atomic integer. We accomplish this by reading the compiler’s target information records and copying the information directly into the build script.

If radium does not work for your architecture, please update the build script to handle your target string and submit a pull request. We write the build script on an as-needed basis; it is not proactively filled with all of the information listed in the compiler.

NOTE: The build script receives information through two variables: TARGET and CARGO_CFG_TARGET_ARCH. The latter is equivalent to the value in cfg!(target_arch =); however, this value does not contain enough information to fully disambiguate the target. The build script attempts to do rudimentary parsing of the env!(TARGET) string; if this does not work for your target, consider using the TARGET_ARCH matcher, or match on the full TARGET string rather than the parse attempt.


@kneecaw - https://twitter.com/kneecaw/status/1132695060812849154

Feelin' lazy: Has someone already written a helper trait abstracting operations over AtomicUsize and Cell<usize> for generic code which may not care about atomicity?

@ManishEarth - https://twitter.com/ManishEarth/status/1132706585300496384

no but call the crate radium

(since people didn't care that it was radioactive and used it in everything)