Stdlib.Weak
Arrays of weak pointers and hash sets of weak pointers.
The type of arrays of weak pointers (weak arrays). A weak pointer is a value that the garbage collector may erase whenever the value is not used any more (through normal pointers) by the program. Note that finalisation functions are run before the weak pointers are erased, because the finalisation functions can make values alive again (before 4.03 the finalisation functions were run after).
A weak pointer is said to be full if it points to a value, empty if the value was erased by the GC.
Notes:
Stdlib.output_value
nor the functions of the Marshal
module.let create: int => t('a);
Weak.create n
returns a new weak array of length n
. All the pointers are initially empty.
let length: t('a) => int;
Weak.length ar
returns the length (number of elements) of ar
.
let set: t('a) => int => option('a) => unit;
Weak.set ar n (Some el)
sets the n
th cell of ar
to be a (full) pointer to el
; Weak.set ar n None
sets the n
th cell of ar
to empty.
let get: t('a) => int => option('a);
Weak.get ar n
returns None if the n
th cell of ar
is empty, Some x
(where x
is the value) if it is full.
let get_copy: t('a) => int => option('a);
Weak.get_copy ar n
returns None if the n
th cell of ar
is empty, Some x
(where x
is a (shallow) copy of the value) if it is full. In addition to pitfalls with mutable values, the interesting difference with get
is that get_copy
does not prevent the incremental GC from erasing the value in its current cycle (get
may delay the erasure to the next GC cycle).
let check: t('a) => int => bool;
Weak.check ar n
returns true
if the n
th cell of ar
is full, false
if it is empty. Note that even if Weak.check ar n
returns true
, a subsequent Weak.get
ar n
can return None
.
let fill: t('a) => int => int => option('a) => unit;
Weak.fill ar ofs len el
sets to el
all pointers of ar
from ofs
to ofs + len - 1
.
Weak.blit ar1 off1 ar2 off2 len
copies len
weak pointers from ar1
(starting at off1
) to ar2
(starting at off2
). It works correctly even if ar1
and ar2
are the same.
A weak hash set is a hashed set of values. Each value may magically disappear from the set when it is not used by the rest of the program any more. This is normally used to share data structures without inducing memory leaks. Weak hash sets are defined on values from a Hashtbl.HashedType
module; the equal
relation and hash
function are taken from that module. We will say that v
is an instance of x
if equal x v
is true
.
The equal
relation must be able to work on a shallow copy of the values and give the same result as with the values themselves.
Unsynchronized accesses
Unsynchronized accesses to weak hash sets are a programming error. Unsynchronized accesses to a weak hash set may lead to an invalid weak hash set state. Thus, concurrent accesses to weak hash sets must be synchronized (for instance with a Mutex.t
).