# Retainer [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/whitfin/retainer/CI)](https://github.com/whitfin/retainer/actions) [![Crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/retainer.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/retainer) This crate offers a very small cache with asynchronous bindings, allowing it to be used in async Rust contexts (Tokio, async-std, smol, etc.) without blocking the worker thread completely. It also includes the ability to expire entries in the cache based on their time inside; this is done by spawning a monitor on your async runtime in order to perform cleanup tasks periodically. The eviction algorithm is similar to the one found inside [Redis](https://redis.io/commands/expire), although keys are not removed on access in order to reduce borrow complexity. This crate is still a work in progress, so feel free to file any suggestions or improvements and I'll get to them as soon as possible :). ### Getting Started This crate is available on [crates.io](https://crates.io/crates/retainer). The easiest way to use it is to add an entry to your `Cargo.toml` defining the dependency: ```toml [dependencies] retainer = "0.3" ``` ### Basic Usage The construction of a cache is very simple, and (currently) requires no options. If you need to make use of key expiration, you must ensure to either await a monitor or spawn a monitor on your runtime. There are many ways to provide an expiration time when inserting into a cache, by making use of several types implementing the `Into` trait. Below are some examples of types which are available and some of the typical APIs you will find yourself using. This code uses the Tokio runtime, but this crate should be compatible with most of the popular asynchronous runtimes. Currently a small set of tests are run against async-std, smol and Tokio. ```rust use retainer::*; use tokio::time::sleep; use std::sync::Arc; use std::time::{Duration, Instant}; #[tokio::main] async fn main() { // construct our cache let cache = Arc::new(Cache::new()); let clone = cache.clone(); // don't forget to monitor your cache to evict entries let monitor = tokio::spawn(async move { clone.monitor(4, 0.25, Duration::from_secs(3)).await }); // insert using an `Instant` type to specify expiration cache.insert("one", 1usize, Instant::now()).await; // insert using a `Duration` type to wait before expiration cache.insert("two", 2, Duration::from_secs(2)).await; // insert using a number of milliseconds cache.insert("three", 3, 3500).await; // insert using a random number of milliseconds cache.insert("four", 4, 3500..5000).await; // insert without expiration (i.e. manual removal) cache.insert("five", 5, CacheExpiration::none()).await; // wait until the monitor has run once sleep(Duration::from_millis(3250)).await; // the first two keys should have been removed assert!(cache.get(&"one").await.is_none()); assert!(cache.get(&"two").await.is_none()); // the rest should be there still for now assert!(cache.get(&"three").await.is_some()); assert!(cache.get(&"four").await.is_some()); assert!(cache.get(&"five").await.is_some()); // wait until the monitor has run again sleep(Duration::from_millis(3250)).await; // the other two keys should have been removed assert!(cache.get(&"three").await.is_none()); assert!(cache.get(&"four").await.is_none()); // the key with no expiration should still exist assert!(cache.get(&"five").await.is_some()); // but we should be able to manually remove it assert!(cache.remove(&"five").await.is_some()); assert!(cache.get(&"five").await.is_none()); // and now our cache should be empty assert!(cache.is_empty().await); // shutdown monitor monitor.abort(); } ``` In the case this example is not kept up to date, you can look for any types which implement the `Into` trait in the documentation for a complete list. ### Cache Monitoring All key expiration is done on an interval, carried out when you `await` the future returned by `Cache::monitor`. The basis for how this is done has been lifted roughly from the implementation found inside Redis, as it's simple but still works well. When you call `Cache::monitor`, you need to provide 3 arguments: * sample * frequency * threshold Below is a summarization of the flow of eviction, hopefully in a clear way: 1. Wait until the next tick of `frequency`. 2. Take a batch of `sample` entries from the cache at random. 3. Check for and remove any expired entries found in the batch. 4. If more than `threshold` percent of the entries in the batch were removed, immediately goto #2, else goto #1. This allows the user to control the aggressiveness of eviction quite effectively, by tweaking the `threshold` and `frequency` values. Naturally a cache uses more memory on average the higher your threshold is, so please do keep this in mind. ### Cache Logging As of v0.2, minimal logging is included using the [log](https://crates.io/crates/log) crate. You can attach any of the compatible logging backends to see what is happening in the cache (particularly the eviction loop) to better gauge your usage and parameters.