1 unstable release
0.1.0 | Dec 14, 2020 |
---|
#620 in Memory management
520KB
9K
SLoC
Corundum: A Persistent Memory Programming Library in Rust
crndm
provides persistent memory support for Rust applications. This
is useful for developing safe persistent memory applications without concerning
much about crash consistency and data loss.
Carefully using Rust's strict type checking rules and borrowing mechanism,
crndm
guarantees that the implementation is free of common persistent memory
related bugs. crndm
leaves the software implementation with zero persistent
memory related problems of the following types:
- A persistent pointer pointing to the volatile heap,
- Cross pool pointers,
- Unrecoverable modification to data,
- Data inconsistency due to power-failure,
- plus All memory-related issues that Rust handles.
Developers will see these issues during the design time. Therefore, it lowers
the risk of making mistakes. crndm
's programming model consists of using safe
persistent pointers and software transactional memory.
Three pointer-wrappers lie at the heart of crndm
interface. Developers may use
them to allocate persistent memory safely.
Pbox<T>
: the simplest form of dynamic allocation,Prc<T>
: a single-thread reference counted pointer for shared persistent objects,Parc<T>
: a thread-safe reference-counted pointer for shared persistent objects.
Dependencies
crndm
depends on some unstable features of Rust. Therefore, it requires
nightly Rust compiler 1.50.0-nightly.
Please run the following commands to download the latest version of Rust (See
https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install for more details).
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
rustup default nightly
Corundum is also partially dependent on a few 3rd party crates which are listed
in Cargo.toml
.
Usage
Use either of the following instructions to add crndm
in your Cargo.toml
dependencies section:
[dependencies]
crndm = { git = "https://github.com/NVSL/Corundum.git" }
Or (will be available in crates.io
, soon)
[dependencies]
crndm = "0.1.0"
Memory Pools
A memory pool is a type that implements all necessary interfaces for working
with persistent memory. You can use the default memory pool, or define a new
memory pool type. The latter requires your type implementing
MemPool
trait. Please see the
pass-through allocator as an example. To automatically
implement a new pool type, pool!()
macro is provided which creates a new module
with a BuddyAlloc
type.
crndm::pool!(my_pool);
Opening a memory pool file
The first thing to do is to open the memory pool file(s) before using it. You
can do this by using either open()
or open_no_root()
methods. The first one
returns a the root
object given a root object type. The second one returns a
guard
object; the pool remains open as long as the root
/guard
object is in
the scope. The open functions take a pool file path and a flag set to create
the pool file.
if let Ok(_) = my_mod::BuddyAlloc::open_no_root("image", O_F) {
println!("Image file is formatted and ready to use");
} else {
println!("No image file found");
}
if let Ok(root) = my_mod::BuddyAlloc::open::<Root>("image", O_F) {
println!("Image file is formatted and the root object is created ({:?})", root);
} else {
println!("No image file");
}
PM Safe Data Structures
You may define any data structure with the given pointers, and without any raw pointers or references. Corundum helps you to write the right code down the road.
use crndm::rc::Prc;
use crndm::cell::LogCell;
type A = BuddyAlloc;
struct MyData {
id: i32,
link: Option<Prc<LogRefCell<MyData, A>, A>>
}
You may find it disturbing to specify the pool in every type. Corundum uses type
aliasing and procedural macros to provide an easier way for defining new data
structures. The pool!()
macro aliases all persistent types associated with the
internal pool type. For example
pool!(my_pool);
use my_pool::*;
struct MyData {
id: i32,
link: Option<Prc<PRefCell<MyData>>>
}
PClone
and Root
procedural macros can also be used to automatically derive
the implementation of the corresponding traits for the type.
use crndm::default::*;
#[derive(PClone, Root)]
struct MyData {
id: i32,
link: Option<Prc<PRefCell<MyData>>>
}
Transactional Memory
crndm
does not allow any modification to the protected data outside a
transaction. To let mutably borrowing the protected data, you may wrap it in
LogCell
, Mutex
, etc.,
and use their corresponding interface for interior mutability which requires a
reference to a journal object. To obtain a journal, you may use transaction
.
transaction(|j| {
let my_data = Prc::new(LogRefCell::new(
MyData {
id: 1,
link: None
}), j);
let mut my_data = my_data.borrow_mut(j);
my_data.id = 2;
})
Documentation
Please visit the Documentation
page for
more information.
Issues and Contribution
Please feel free to report any bug using GitHub issues.
If you have other questions or suggestions, you can contact us at cse-nvsl-discuss@eng.ucsd.edu.
License
'crndm' crate is licensed under Apache License, Version 2.0, (http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0).
Unless You explicitly state otherwise, any Contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the Work by You to the Licensor shall be under the terms and conditions of this License, without any additional terms or conditions.
Dependencies
~4.5–6MB
~117K SLoC