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An implementation of Mellor-Crummey and Scott lock for mutual exclusion, referred to as MCS lock.

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A simple and correct implementation of the MCS lock

MIT Apache 2.0 Crates Docs CI Codecov No_std

MCS lock is a List-Based Queuing Lock that avoids network contention by having threads spin on local memory locations. The main properties of this mechanism are:

  • guarantees FIFO ordering of lock acquisitions;
  • spins on locally-accessible flag variables only;
  • requires a small constant amount of space per lock; and
  • works equally well (requiring only O(1) network transactions per lock acquisition) on machines with and without coherent caches.

This algorithm and several others were introduced by Mellor-Crummey and Scott paper. And a simpler correctness proof of the MCS lock was proposed by Johnson and Harathi.

Spinlock use cases

It is noteworthy to mention that spinlocks are usually not what you want. The majority of use cases are well covered by OS-based mutexes like std::sync::Mutex and parking_lot::Mutex. These implementations will notify the system that the waiting thread should be parked, freeing the processor to work on something else.

Spinlocks are only efficient in very few circumstances where the overhead of context switching or process rescheduling are greater than busy waiting for very short periods. Spinlocks can be useful inside operating-system kernels, on embedded systems or even complement other locking designs. As a reference use case, some Linux kernel mutexes run an customized MCS lock specifically tailored for optimistic spinning during contention before actually sleeping. This implementation is no_std by default, so it's useful in those environments.

Install

Run the following Cargo command in your project directory:

cargo add mcslock

Or add a entry under the [dependencies] section in your Cargo.toml:

# Cargo.toml

[dependencies]
# Available features: `yield`, `barging`, `thread_local` and `lock_api`.
mcslock = { version = "0.4", features = ["thread_local"] }

Documentation

This project documentation is hosted at docs.rs. Or you can build it locally with the following command:

RUSTDOCFLAGS="--cfg docsrs" cargo +nightly doc --all-features --open

Locking with a raw MCS spinlock

This implementation operates under FIFO. Raw locking APIs require exclusive access to a locally accessible queue node. This node is represented by the raw::MutexNode type. Callers are responsible for instantiating the queue nodes themselves. This implementation is no_std compatible. See the raw module for more information.

use std::sync::Arc;
use std::thread;

// `spins::Mutex` simply spins during contention.
use mcslock::raw::{spins::Mutex, MutexNode};

fn main() {
    let mutex = Arc::new(Mutex::new(0));
    let c_mutex = Arc::clone(&mutex);

    thread::spawn(move || {
        // A queue node must be mutably accessible.
        // Critical section must be defined as a closure.
        let mut node = MutexNode::new();
        c_mutex.lock_with_then(&mut node, |data| {
            *data = 10;
        });
    })
    .join().expect("thread::spawn failed");

    // A node is transparently allocated in the stack.
    // Critical section must be defined as a closure.
    assert_eq!(*mutex.try_lock_then(|data| *data.unwrap()), 10);
}

Thread local queue nodes

Enables raw::Mutex locking APIs that operate over queue nodes that are stored at the thread local storage. These locking APIs require a static reference to a raw::LocalMutexNode key. Keys must be generated by the thread_local_node! macro. Thread local nodes are not no_std compatible and can be enabled through the thread_local feature.

use std::sync::Arc;
use std::thread;

// `spins::Mutex` simply spins during contention.
use mcslock::raw::spins::Mutex;

// Requires `thread_local` feature.
mcslock::thread_local_node!(static NODE);

fn main() {
    let mutex = Arc::new(Mutex::new(0));
    let c_mutex = Arc::clone(&mutex);

    thread::spawn(move || {
        // Local node handles are provided by reference.
        // Critical section must be defined as a closure.
        c_mutex.lock_with_local_then(&NODE, |data| *data = 10);
    })
    .join().expect("thread::spawn failed");

    // Local node handles are provided by reference.
    // Critical section must be defined as a closure.
    assert_eq!(mutex.try_lock_with_local_then(&NODE, |data| *data.unwrap()), 10);
}

Locking with a barging MCS spinlock

This implementation will have non-waiting threads race for the lock against the front of the waiting queue thread, which means this it is an unfair lock. This implementation is suitable for no_std environments, and the locking APIs are compatible with the lock_api crate. See barging and barging::lock_api modules for more information.

use std::sync::Arc;
use std::thread;

// Requires `barging` feature.
// `spins::backoff::Mutex` spins with exponential backoff during contention.
use mcslock::barging::spins::backoff::Mutex;

fn main() {
    let mutex = Arc::new(Mutex::new(0));
    let c_mutex = Arc::clone(&mutex);

    thread::spawn(move || {
        *c_mutex.lock() = 10;
    })
    .join().expect("thread::spawn failed");

    assert_eq!(*mutex.try_lock().unwrap(), 10);
}

Features

This crate dos not provide any default features. Features that can be enabled are:

yield

The yield feature requires linking to the standard library, so it is not suitable for no_std environments. By enabling the yield feature, instead of busy-waiting during lock acquisitions and releases, this will call std::thread::yield_now, which cooperatively gives up a timeslice to the OS scheduler. This may cause a context switch, so you may not want to enable this feature if your intention is to to actually do optimistic spinning. The default implementation calls core::hint::spin_loop, which does in fact just simply busy-waits. This feature is not no_std compatible.

thread_local

The thread_local feature enables raw::Mutex locking APIs that operate over queue nodes that are stored at the thread local storage. These locking APIs require a static reference to a raw::LocalMutexNode key. Keys must be generated by the thread_local_node! macro. This feature is not no_std compatible.

barging

The barging feature provides locking APIs that are compatible with the lock_api crate. It does not require node allocations from the caller. The barging module is suitable for no_std environments. This implementation is not fair (does not guarantee FIFO), but can improve throughput when the lock is heavily contended.

lock_api

This feature implements the RawMutex trait from the lock_api crate for barging::Mutex. Aliases are provided by the barging::lock_api (no_std) module.

Minimum Supported Rust Version (MSRV)

This crate is guaranteed to compile on a Minimum Supported Rust Version (MSRV) of 1.65.0 and above. This version will not be changed without a minor version bump. If you intend to use this crate but can only target a older Rust version, feel free to open a issue with your specific target, it is possible to lower this crate MSRV substantially, it just has not been explored yet.

Related projects

These projects provide MCS lock implementations with slightly different APIs, implementation details or compiler requirements, you can check their repositories:

License

Licensed under either of

Contributing

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

Code review

It is recommended to always use cargo-crev to verify the trustworthiness of each of your dependencies, including this one.

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An implementation of Mellor-Crummey and Scott lock for mutual exclusion, referred to as MCS lock.

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