4 releases (stable)
1.1.1 | Nov 4, 2024 |
---|---|
1.1.0 | Oct 26, 2024 |
1.0.0 | Oct 26, 2024 |
0.1.0 | Oct 20, 2024 |
#281 in Data structures
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38KB
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timed-map
Lightweight map implementation that supports expiring entries and fully
compatible with both std
and no_std
environments.
TimedMap
allows storing key-value pairs with optional expiration times. Expiration is
handled by an implementation of the Clock
trait, which abstracts time handling for
no_std
environments.
When std
feature is enabled (which is the default case), Clock
trait is handled
automatically from the crate internals with std::time::SystemTime
.
Basic Usage:
In std
environments:
use timed_map::{TimedMap, StdClock};
use std::time::Duration;
let mut map: TimedMap<StdClock, _, _> = TimedMap::new();
map.insert_expirable(1, "expirable value", Duration::from_secs(60));
assert_eq!(map.get(&1), Some(&"expirable value"));
assert!(map.get_remaining_duration(&1).is_some());
map.insert_constant(2, "constant value");
assert_eq!(map.get(&2), Some(&"constant value"));
assert!(map.get_remaining_duration(&2).is_none());
In no_std
environments:
use core::time::Duration;
use timed_map::{Clock, TimedMap};
struct CustomClock;
impl Clock for CustomClock {
fn elapsed_seconds_since_creation(&self) -> u64 {
// Hardware-specific implementation to measure the elapsed time.
0 // placeholder
}
}
let clock = CustomClock;
let mut map = TimedMap::new(clock);
map.insert_expirable(1, "expirable value", Duration::from_secs(60));
assert_eq!(map.get(&1), Some(&"expirable value"));
assert!(map.get_remaining_duration(&1).is_some());
map.insert_constant(2, "constant value");
assert_eq!(map.get(&2), Some(&"constant value"));
assert!(map.get_remaining_duration(&2).is_none());
Advanced Usage & Tuning:
Customizing the Internal Map
By default, TimedMap
uses BTreeMap
to store data, but you can switch to FxHashMap
or HashMap
.
This is only available on std
environments.
use timed_map::{MapKind, StdClock, TimedMap};
let mut map: TimedMap<StdClock, _, _> = TimedMap::new_with_map_kind(MapKind::FxHashMap);
Manual Expiration Control
To have fully control over expired entries, use the *_unchecked
functions and drop_expired_entries
to handle expiration manually.
This can boost performance by running expiration logic only when it's necessary to maximize the performance.
let mut map: TimedMap<StdClock, _, _> = TimedMap::new();
map.insert_expirable_unchecked(1, "expirable value", Duration::from_secs(60));
assert_eq!(map.get_unchecked(&1), Some(&"expirable value"));
map.insert_constant_unchecked(2, "constant value");
assert_eq!(map.get_unchecked(&2), Some(&"constant value"));
map.drop_expired_entries();
Setting Expiration Check Frequency
In cases where inserts are frequent, expiration_tick_cap
can be set to control how often expired entries are removed. For instance,
if there are 100 inserts per second, setting expiration_tick_cap
to 100 will trigger the expiration check every 100 inserts which will
reduce the expiration logic overhead significantly.
use timed_map::{TimedMap, StdClock};
let mut map: TimedMap<StdClock, _, _> = TimedMap::new().expiration_tick_cap(500);
Dependencies
~0–250KB