Struct multiqueue::BroadcastReceiver [−][src]
pub struct BroadcastReceiver<T: Clone> { /* fields omitted */ }Expand description
This class is the receiving half of the broadcast MultiQueue.
Within each stream, it supports both single and multi consumer modes
with competitive performance in each case. It supports blocking and
nonblocking read modes as well as being the conduit for adding
new streams.
Examples
use std::thread;
let (send, recv) = multiqueue::broadcast_queue(4);
let mut handles = vec![];
for i in 0..2 { // or n
let cur_recv = recv.add_stream();
for j in 0..2 {
let stream_consumer = cur_recv.clone();
handles.push(thread::spawn(move || {
for val in stream_consumer {
println!("Stream {} consumer {} got {}", i, j, val);
}
}));
}
// cur_recv is dropped here
}
// Take notice that I drop the reader - this removes it from
// the queue, meaning that the readers in the new threads
// won't get starved by the lack of progress from recv
recv.unsubscribe();
for i in 0..10 {
// Don't do this busy loop in real stuff unless you're really sure
loop {
if send.try_send(i).is_ok() {
break;
}
}
}
drop(send);
for t in handles {
t.join();
}
// prints along the lines of
// Stream 0 consumer 1 got 2
// Stream 0 consumer 0 got 0
// Stream 1 consumer 0 got 0
// Stream 0 consumer 1 got 1
// Stream 1 consumer 1 got 1
// Stream 1 consumer 0 got 2
// etcImplementations
Tries to receive a value from the queue without blocking.
Examples:
use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
let (w, r) = broadcast_queue(10);
w.try_send(1).unwrap();
assert_eq!(1, r.try_recv().unwrap());use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
use std::thread;
let (send, recv) = broadcast_queue(10);
let handle = thread::spawn(move || {
for _ in 0..10 {
loop {
match recv.try_recv() {
Ok(val) => {
println!("Got {}", val);
break;
},
Err(_) => (),
}
}
}
assert!(recv.try_recv().is_err()); // recv would block here
});
for i in 0..10 {
send.try_send(i).unwrap();
}
// Drop the sender to close the queue
drop(send);
handle.join();Receives a value from the queue, blocks until there is data.
Examples:
use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
let (w, r) = broadcast_queue(10);
w.try_send(1).unwrap();
assert_eq!(1, r.recv().unwrap());use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
use std::thread;
let (send, recv) = broadcast_queue(10);
let handle = thread::spawn(move || {
// note the lack of dealing with failed reads.
// unwrap 'ignores' the error where sender disconnects
for _ in 0..10 {
println!("Got {}", recv.recv().unwrap());
}
assert!(recv.try_recv().is_err());
});
for i in 0..10 {
send.try_send(i).unwrap();
}
// Drop the sender to close the queue
drop(send);
handle.join();Adds a new data stream to the queue, starting at the same position
as the BroadcastReceiver this is being called on.
Examples
use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
let (w, r) = broadcast_queue(10);
w.try_send(1).unwrap();
assert_eq!(r.recv().unwrap(), 1);
w.try_send(1).unwrap();
let r2 = r.add_stream();
assert_eq!(r.recv().unwrap(), 1);
assert_eq!(r2.recv().unwrap(), 1);
assert!(r.try_recv().is_err());
assert!(r2.try_recv().is_err());use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
use std::thread;
let (send, recv) = broadcast_queue(4);
let mut handles = vec![];
for i in 0..2 { // or n
let cur_recv = recv.add_stream();
handles.push(thread::spawn(move || {
for val in cur_recv {
println!("Stream {} got {}", i, val);
}
}));
}
// Take notice that I drop the reader - this removes it from
// the queue, meaning that the readers in the new threads
// won't get starved by the lack of progress from recv
recv.unsubscribe();
for i in 0..10 {
// Don't do this busy loop in real stuff unless you're really sure
loop {
if send.try_send(i).is_ok() {
break;
}
}
}
// Drop the sender to close the queue
drop(send);
for t in handles {
t.join();
}
Removes the given reader from the queue subscription lib Returns true if this is the last reader in a given broadcast unit
Examples
use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
let (writer, reader) = broadcast_queue(1);
let reader_2_1 = reader.add_stream();
let reader_2_2 = reader_2_1.clone();
writer.try_send(1).expect("This will succeed since queue is empty");
reader.try_recv().expect("This reader can read");
assert!(writer.try_send(1).is_err(), "This fails since the reader2 group hasn't advanced");
assert!(!reader_2_2.unsubscribe(), "This returns false since reader_2_1 is still alive");
assert!(reader_2_1.unsubscribe(),
"This returns true since there are no readers alive in the reader_2_x group");
writer.try_send(1).expect("This succeeds since the reader_2 group is not blocking");Returns a non-owning iterator that iterates over the queue until it fails to receive an item, either through being empty or begin disconnected. This iterator will never block.
Examples:
use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
let (w, r) = broadcast_queue(2);
for _ in 0 .. 3 {
w.try_send(1).unwrap();
w.try_send(2).unwrap();
for val in r.try_iter().zip(1..2) {
assert_eq!(val.0, val.1);
}
}If there is only one BroadcastReceiver on the stream, converts the
Receiver into a BroadcastUniReceiver otherwise returns the Receiver.
Example:
use multiqueue::broadcast_queue;
let (w, r) = broadcast_queue(10);
w.try_send(1).unwrap();
let r2 = r.clone();
// Fails since there's two receivers on the stream
assert!(r2.into_single().is_err());
let single_r = r.into_single().unwrap();
let val = match single_r.try_recv_view(|x| 2 * *x) {
Ok(val) => val,
Err(_) => panic!("Queue should have an element"),
};
assert_eq!(2, val);Trait Implementations
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<T> !RefUnwindSafe for BroadcastReceiver<T>
impl<T> !Sync for BroadcastReceiver<T>
impl<T> Unpin for BroadcastReceiver<T>
impl<T> !UnwindSafe for BroadcastReceiver<T>
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
