Book Image

Rust Standard Library Cookbook

By : Jan Hohenheim, Daniel Durante
Book Image

Rust Standard Library Cookbook

By: Jan Hohenheim, Daniel Durante

Overview of this book

Mozilla’s Rust is gaining much attention with amazing features and a powerful library. This book will take you through varied recipes to teach you how to leverage the Standard library to implement efficient solutions. The book begins with a brief look at the basic modules of the Standard library and collections. From here, the recipes will cover packages that support file/directory handling and interaction through parsing. You will learn about packages related to advanced data structures, error handling, and networking. You will also learn to work with futures and experimental nightly features. The book also covers the most relevant external crates in Rust. By the end of the book, you will be proficient at using the Rust Standard library.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Locking resources with BiLocks

BiLocks are used when we need to store a value across multiple threads with up to two owners associated with that value. Applicable uses for a BiLock type would be splitting TCP/UDP data for reading and writing, or adding a layer between a sink and a stream (for logging, monitoring, and so on), or it can be a sink and a stream at the same time.

When using futures with an additional crate (such as tokio or hyper), knowing BiLocks can help us wrap data around the other crate's common methods. This would allow us to build futures and concurrency on top of existing crates without having to wait until the crate's maintainers support concurrency explicitly. BiLocks are a very low-level utility, but understanding how they work can help us further down the road with our (web) applications.

In the next chapter, we will mostly focus on networking with Rust, but we will also get to practice integrating futures with other crates. BiLocks can...