Sophia
ck
Sophia | ck | |
---|---|---|
2 | 7 | |
1,848 | 2,297 | |
- | 0.5% | |
0.0 | 6.9 | |
over 5 years ago | 28 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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Sophia
- Sophia – Modern transactional key-value storage in C
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C Deep
sophia - Modern, embeddable key-value database. BSD-2-Clause
ck
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Falsehoods programmers believe about undefined behavior
Maybe I'm missing something, but x is not volatile and the compiler is free to assume that it is not modified concurrently outside the bounds of C's memory model. Compilers can and do hoist out loop invariants, and https://github.com/concurrencykit/ck/commit/b54ae5c4ace9b94442bbb46858449069f566d269 seems like an example of compilers doing what you say they don't. What am I missing?
- Concurrency Kit
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A portable, license-free, lock-free data structure library written in C.
Recommend checking out http://concurrencykit.org instead.
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Does a thread have a better chance of acquiring a mutex if it's just in time? Or if it's been in the queue? Neither?
If you're interested in how other approaches work, or how one achieves concurrency on shared mutable state without mutual exclusion, would recommend checking out concurrency kit.
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Libdill: Structured Concurrency for C (2016)
There are plenty of practical solutions to the safe memory reclamation problem in C. The language just doesn't force one on you.
From epoch-based reclamation (https://github.com/concurrencykit/ck/blob/master/include/ck_..., especially with the multiplexing extension to Fraser's classic scheme), to quiescence schemes (https://liburcu.org/), or hazard pointers (https://github.com/facebook/folly/blob/master/folly/synchron..., or https://pvk.ca/Blog/2020/07/07/flatter-wait-free-hazard-poin...)... or even simple using a type-stable (https://www.usenix.org/legacy/publications/library/proceedin...) memory allocator.
In my experience, it's easier to write code that is resilient to hiccups in C than in Java. Solving SMR with GC only offers something close to lock-freedom when you can guarantee global GC pauses are short enough... and common techniques to bound pauses, like explicitly managed freelists land you back in the same problem space as C.
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C Deep
ck - Concurrency primitives, safe memory reclamation mechanisms and non-blocking data structures. BSD-2-Clause
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Super-expressive – Write regex in natural language
Indeed they do, https://github.com/concurrencykit/ck
What are some alternatives?
LMDB - Read-only mirror of official repo on openldap.org. Issues and pull requests here are ignored. Use OpenLDAP ITS for issues.
libcds - A C++ library of Concurrent Data Structures
RocksDB - A library that provides an embeddable, persistent key-value store for fast storage.
libdill - Structured concurrency in C
LevelDB - LevelDB is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.
moodycamel - A fast multi-producer, multi-consumer lock-free concurrent queue for C++11
SQLite - Unofficial git mirror of SQLite sources (see link for build instructions)
Thrust - [ARCHIVED] The C++ parallel algorithms library. See https://github.com/NVIDIA/cccl
libmdbx - One of the fastest embeddable key-value ACID database without WAL. libmdbx surpasses the legendary LMDB in terms of reliability, features and performance.
HPX - The C++ Standard Library for Parallelism and Concurrency
Hiredis - Minimalistic C client for Redis >= 1.2
CUB - THIS REPOSITORY HAS MOVED TO github.com/nvidia/cub, WHICH IS AUTOMATICALLY MIRRORED HERE.