Crates.io | rc-slice2 |
lib.rs | rc-slice2 |
version | 0.4.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2023-07-18 21:39:23.820145 |
updated_at | 2023-07-20 00:48:43.947583 |
description | Reference-counted slices with easy subdivision |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/phlosioneer/rc-slice2 |
max_upload_size | |
id | 919775 |
size | 84,199 |
rc-slice2
The rc-slice2 library provides RcSlice
and ArcSlice
types representing slices of array-like data structures contained within Rc
and Arc
. Supports raw arrays, boxed slices, Vec
, and SmallVec
(with feature smallvec
). Includes limited support for resizing the original array, to conserve memory.
The library is fully no_std
, and has zero unsafe
blocks. Every function is now fully tested with examples and thorough documentation.
rc_slice
?rc-slice2
is the successor to the rc_slice
crate. Ownership was not transferred due to supply chain trust concerns. This crate's 0.3.1
version is fully backwards compatible with rc_slice 0.3.0
. Version 0.4.0
includes a minor breaking change, because the method of specifying generic parameters was changed. However, the behavior of the API is still backwards compatible.
rc-slice2 = "0.4"
extern crate alloc;
use rc_slice2::RcSlice;
use alloc::rc::Rc;
use RcSlice as Rcs;
let buffer: Rc<[u8]> = Rc::new([2, 4, 6, 8, 10]);
// Supports all kinds of slicing during construction
assert_eq!(*Rcs::new(&buffer, 1..4), [4, 6, 8]);
assert_eq!(*Rcs::new(&buffer, ..), [2, 4, 6, 8, 10]);
assert_eq!(*Rcs::new(&buffer, 0..=2), [2, 4, 6]);
assert_eq!(*Rcs::new(&buffer, 10..), []);
// Behaves like any other slice.
let mut slice = Rcs::new(&buffer, 1..);
assert_eq!(*slice, [4, 6, 8, 10]);
assert_eq!(slice[2..], [8, 10]);
assert_eq!(slice[1], 6);
// The slice can shrink, and returns cut-off elements.
assert_eq!(Rcs::advance(&mut slice, 2), Some([4, 6].as_slice()));
assert_eq!(*slice, [8, 10]);
assert_eq!(Rcs::retract(&mut slice, 1), Some([10].as_slice()));
assert_eq!(*slice, [8]);
// If the original buffer can change size, and there is only one
// strong reference, then the buffer can be shrunk to the slice.
let buffer = Rc::new(vec![12, 14, 16, 18, 20]);
let mut slice = Rcs::new(&buffer, 2..4);
assert_eq!(*slice, [16, 18]);
// Fails because `buffer` is still alive.
assert_eq!(Rcs::shrink(&mut slice), false);
let weak_buffer = Rc::downgrade(&buffer);
core::mem::drop(buffer);
// Success; only one strong reference. Original buffer has been shrunk.
assert_eq!(Rcs::shrink(&mut slice), true);
let buffer = Rcs::inner(&slice).clone();
assert_eq!(*buffer, [16, 18]);
// But weak references were not preserved.
assert_eq!(weak_buffer.upgrade(), None);
rc-slice2 is released under the terms of the Apache License, version 2.0 (see LICENSE-APACHE) or the MIT license (see LICENSE-MIT), at your option.