StaticRc is a safe reference-counted pointer, similar to Rc or Arc, though performing its reference-counting at
compile-time rather than run-time, and therefore avoiding most run-time overhead.
A number of collections, such as linked-lists, binary-trees, or B-Trees are most easily implemented with aliasing pointers.
Traditionally, this requires either unsafe raw pointers, or using Rc or Arc depending on the scenario. A key
observation, however, is that in those collections the exact number of aliases is known at compile-time:
- A doubly linked-list has 2 pointers to each node.
- A binary-tree has 3 pointers to each node: one from the parent, and one from each child.
- A B-Tree of cardinality N has N+1 pointers to each node.
In this type of scenario, static-rc offers the safety of Rc and Arc, with the performance of unsafe raw
pointers.
Provide safe and efficient reference-counting:
- Efficiency: most associated functions boil down to copying a
NonNull<T>, a trivial operation.- One key exception are
joinfunctions: a run-time check must be performed to ensure the instances being joined refer to the same pointer. Unsafe unchecked variants are available if their overhead is too high.
- One key exception are
- Safety: most associated functions are safe to use.
- The few unsafe functions are strictly optional.
This crate is still very much experimental.
Review:
- Minimally reviewed.
- Not audited.
- Not formally proven.
Documentation:
- All
StaticRcassociated functions are documented, with example. - All
StaticRcRefassociated functions are documented, with example.
Testing:
- All compile-time assertions are tested with compile-fail tests.
- All panics are tested with panic tests.
- Miri runs the test-suite without any complain.
This library contains a number of additional checks when building with debug_assertions, in particular the Drop
implementation of StaticRc will catch any attempt at destroying a StaticRc<T, N, D> where N <> D, as this would
typically result in a leak.
Those checks are not strictly necessary for safety, they are included to help point out logic errors.
From experience, the Drop check on top of an extensive test-suite will help catch all those instances where one path
accidentally let a pointer drop.
And thanks for reading.