pub struct Mutex<T>where
T: ?Sized,{ /* private fields */ }
Expand description
A futures-aware mutex.
Fairness
This mutex provides no fairness guarantees. Tasks may not acquire the mutex in the order that they requested the lock, and it’s possible for a single task which repeatedly takes the lock to starve other tasks, which may be left waiting indefinitely.
Implementations§
source§impl<T> Mutex<T>where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Mutex<T>where T: ?Sized,
sourcepub fn try_lock(&self) -> Option<MutexGuard<'_, T>>
pub fn try_lock(&self) -> Option<MutexGuard<'_, T>>
Attempt to acquire the lock immediately.
If the lock is currently held, this will return None
.
sourcepub fn try_lock_owned(
self: &Arc<Mutex<T>, Global>
) -> Option<OwnedMutexGuard<T>>
pub fn try_lock_owned( self: &Arc<Mutex<T>, Global> ) -> Option<OwnedMutexGuard<T>>
Attempt to acquire the lock immediately.
If the lock is currently held, this will return None
.
sourcepub fn lock(&self) -> MutexLockFuture<'_, T> ⓘ
pub fn lock(&self) -> MutexLockFuture<'_, T> ⓘ
Acquire the lock asynchronously.
This method returns a future that will resolve once the lock has been successfully acquired.
sourcepub fn lock_owned(self: Arc<Mutex<T>, Global>) -> OwnedMutexLockFuture<T> ⓘ
pub fn lock_owned(self: Arc<Mutex<T>, Global>) -> OwnedMutexLockFuture<T> ⓘ
Acquire the lock asynchronously.
This method returns a future that will resolve once the lock has been successfully acquired.
sourcepub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
Returns a mutable reference to the underlying data.
Since this call borrows the Mutex
mutably, no actual locking needs to
take place – the mutable borrow statically guarantees no locks exist.
Examples
use futures::lock::Mutex;
let mut mutex = Mutex::new(0);
*mutex.get_mut() = 10;
assert_eq!(*mutex.lock().await, 10);