This is an extremely simple implementation of an on-disk broadcast channel that sort of pretends to be a ringbuffer! It uses memory-mapped pages to have interprocess, lock-free, reads and writes. It's blazingly fast, but tends to hog disk-space for better efficiency (fewer but bigger memory-mapped pages).
Example
use disk_ringbuffer::ringbuf;
fn example() {
// takes directory to use as ringbuf storage and the total number of pages to store as input.
// note that each page takes 80Mb and setting the max_pages to zero implies an unbounded queue
let (mut tx, mut rx) = ringbuf::new("test-example", 2).unwrap();
// you can clone readers and writers to use in other threads!
let tx2 = tx.clone();
for i in 0..500_000 {
tx.push(i.to_string());
}
for i in 0..500_000 {
let m = rx.pop().unwrap().unwrap();
assert_eq!(m, i.to_string());
}
}