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Caches (bounded-size key-value stores) and other bounded-size stores

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Dune Dependency

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Sources

ringo-v0.2.tar.gz
md5=d506032acd287702d0d098ddd7ead15e
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Description

Published: 15 Apr 2020

README

Ringo

Caches (bounded-size key-value stores) and other bounded-size collections.

Cache

A cache (Sigs.CACHE) is a module that implements a key-value imperative store. A cache is bounded in size – meaning that inserting bindings beyond the cache capacity removes other bindings – hash-table-like data-structure – meaning that it holds key-value bindings.

The specific behaviour of the cache is controlled by different options. Specifically, the replacement policy (which bindings are removed when supernumerary bindings are inserted), the overflow policy (when are bindings removed), the accounting policy (how precisely are bindings counted), and the capacity (how many elements a cache can hold), are all controlled by parameters.

Cache parameters

  • replacement is for defining the replacement policy of a cache and is provided when instantiating the Cache module.

    LRU is for "Least Recently Used", meaning that when a supernumerary item is inserted in the cache, the least recently used item is removed to make room. FIFO is for "First-In, First-Out" meaning that when a supernumerary item is inserted in the cache, the oldest inserted element is removed to make room.

  • overflow is for defining the overflow policy of a cache and is provided when instantiating the Cache module.

    Strict means that the cache never holds more element than is specified when calling create. Loose means that the cache may hold more elements than specified when calling create but that supernumerary elements may be collected by the Garbage Collector.

  • accounting is for defining the accounting policy of a cache and is provided when instantiating the Cache module.

    Precise means that the cache counts its number of elements precisely. Sloppy means that the cache may count elements that have been removed from the cache as still being held by the cache.

    Note that when requesting a Sloppy cache, the library might give you a Precise cache if there is no additional runtime cost. In general, Sloppy caches are more efficient, but (1) they are not adapted to situations where you remove many elements and (2) depending on the other parameters they might be only as-efficient-as (not more) than Precise caches.

    Use Precise only if you use remove a lot or if you need strong guarantee on the number of elements.

  • capacity is for specifying the size-bound of the cache and is specified when calling Cache.create to instantiate a cache.

Ring, Dll

Both rings and dlls are bounded-size imperative collections. They are similar to caches but they hold values rather than bindings – meaning there is no find function – and they are dumber – meaning there is no fine control over their specific behaviour.

They are used internally to implement some components of the caches. They are exposed because they can be useful.

Dependencies (2)

  1. dune >= "1.7"
  2. ocaml >= "4.05"

Dev Dependencies

None

Used by

None

Conflicts

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