| commit | d7aa9198a728f29179a95f1621b8dc1726a14136 | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Android Build Coastguard Worker <[email protected]> | Tue Nov 01 21:32:29 2022 +0000 |
| committer | Android Build Coastguard Worker <[email protected]> | Tue Nov 01 21:32:29 2022 +0000 |
| tree | 95353df6eca9bf63f57a86070e6fad69c6061276 | |
| parent | 8674d66d3bf3ed5f3769f549555cb89626681fdd [diff] | |
| parent | 399211bce45f5e285ffd1f42e97764c0e716541b [diff] |
Snap for 9239618 from 399211bce45f5e285ffd1f42e97764c0e716541b to tm-platform-release Change-Id: Ic6fc4462199a5a0ac9c12b394efb06175591dc20
once_cell provides two new cell-like types, unsync::OnceCell and sync::OnceCell. OnceCell might store arbitrary non-Copy types, can be assigned to at most once and provide direct access to the stored contents. In a nutshell, API looks roughly like this:
impl OnceCell<T> { fn new() -> OnceCell<T> { ... } fn set(&self, value: T) -> Result<(), T> { ... } fn get(&self) -> Option<&T> { ... } }
Note that, like with RefCell and Mutex, the set method requires only a shared reference. Because of the single assignment restriction get can return an &T instead of Ref<T> or MutexGuard<T>.
once_cell also has a Lazy<T> type, build on top of OnceCell which provides the same API as the lazy_static! macro, but without using any macros:
use std::{sync::Mutex, collections::HashMap}; use once_cell::sync::Lazy; static GLOBAL_DATA: Lazy<Mutex<HashMap<i32, String>>> = Lazy::new(|| { let mut m = HashMap::new(); m.insert(13, "Spica".to_string()); m.insert(74, "Hoyten".to_string()); Mutex::new(m) }); fn main() { println!("{:?}", GLOBAL_DATA.lock().unwrap()); }
More patterns and use-cases are in the docs!
The API of once_cell is being proposed for inclusion in std.