A nano-mutex is a lightweight mutex that can be used only within a single OCaml runtime.
=============== Nano-mutexes are intended to be significantly cheaper than OS-level mutexes. Creating a nano-mutex allocates a single OCaml record. Locking and unlocking an uncontested nano-mutex take a handful of instructions. Only if a nano-mutex is contested will it fall back to using an OS-level mutex. If a nano-mutex becomes uncontested again, it will switch back to using an OCaml-only lock.
Nano-mutexes can be faster than using OS-level mutexes because OCaml uses a global lock on the runtime, and requires all running OCaml code to hold the lock. The OCaml compiler only allows thread switches at certain points, and we can use that fact to get the atomic test-and-set used in the core of our implementaion without needing any primitive locking, essentially because we're protected by the OCaml global lock.
Here are some benchmarks comparing various mutexes available in OCaml:
|-------------------------------------------------------------| | Name | Run time | S. dev. | Allocated | |----------------------------+----------+---------+-----------+ | Caml.Mutex create | 247 ns | 0 ns | 3 | | Caml.Mutex lock/unlock | 49 ns | 0 ns | 0 | | Core.Mutex create | 698 ns | 0 ns | 3 | | Core.Mutex lock/unlock | 49 ns | 0 ns | 0 | | Nano_mutex create | 10 ns | 0 ns | 4 | | Nano_mutex lock/unlock | 28 ns | 0 ns | 0 | |-------------------------------------------------------------|
The benchmark code is in core/extended/lib_test/bench_nano_mutex.ml.
================== For any mutex, there are design choices as to how to behave in certain situations:
Here is a table comparing how the various mutexes behave:
|--------------------+------------+------------+------------+ | | Caml.Mutex | Core.Mutex | Nano_mutex | |--------------------+------------+------------+------------+ | recursive lock | undefined | error | error | | unlocking unlocked | undefined | error | error | | t1:lock t2:unlock | undefined | error | error | |--------------------+------------+------------+------------+
current_thread_has_lock t
returns true
iff the current thread has t
locked.
lock t
locks the mutex t
, blocking until it can be locked. lock
immediately
returns Error
if the current thread already holds t
.
try_lock t
locks t
if it can immediately do so. The result indicates whether
try_lock
succeeded in acquiring the lock. try_lock
returns Error
if the current
thread already holds t
.