package ringo

  1. Overview
  2. Docs

Preamble

module type UNBOXED_COLLECTION = sig ... end

A mutable structure that holds at most a fixed number of values of a same type. Values are not removed by hand, instead, once the limit is reached, adding a value replaces the oldest one in the buffer.

Ring is a potentially useful module that is used internally to manage bounded, FIFO collections of items. The documentation is available in UNBOXED_COLLECTION.

Dll is a potentially useful module that is used internally to manage bounded, LRU collections of items. The documentation is available in UNBOXED_COLLECTION.

Caches

module type CACHE_MAP = sig ... end

A Mutable structure akin to a hash-table, but with a size bound. Note that, different caches have different policies towards the size bounds: some uphold the bound strictly, some treat the bound as a suggestion. In addition, some caches count their elements somewhat sloppily.

module type CACHE_SET = sig ... end

A Mutable structure akin to a set, but with a size bound. Note that, different caches have different policies towards the size bounds: some uphold the bound strictly, some treat the bound as a suggestion. In addition, some caches count their elements somewhat sloppily.

All caches of Ringo have either the CACHE_MAP interface (for key-value stores) or the CACHE_SET interface (for value stores). However, their behavior can be tweaked by the parameters below.

type replacement =
  1. | LRU
  2. | FIFO

replacement is for defining the replacement policy of a cache. 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.

type overflow =
  1. | Strong
  2. | Weak

overflow is for defining the overflow policy of a cache. Strong means that the cache never holds more element than is specified when calling create (see MAP_MAKER and SET_MAKER below and CACHE_MAP and CACHE_SET). Weak means that the cache may hold more elements than specified when calling create but that supernumerary elements may be collected by the Garbage Collector.

type accounting =
  1. | Precise
  2. | Sloppy

accounting is for defining the accounting policy of a cache. 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.

module type MAP_MAKER = functor (H : Hashtbl.HashedType) -> CACHE_MAP with type key = H.t

A MAP_MAKER is a functor that instantiates CACHE_MAPs based on a given type and its associated hash function.

type map_maker = (module MAP_MAKER)
val map_maker : replacement:replacement -> overflow:overflow -> accounting:accounting -> map_maker

map_maker ~replacement ~overflow ~accounting is a first-class MAP_MAKER that instantiates caches with the policies specified by replacement, overflow, and accounting.

module type SET_MAKER = functor (H : Hashtbl.HashedType) -> CACHE_SET with type elt = H.t

A SET_MAKER is a functor that instantiates CACHE_SETs based on a given type and its associated hash function.

type set_maker = (module SET_MAKER)
val set_maker : replacement:replacement -> overflow:overflow -> accounting:accounting -> set_maker

set_maker ~replacement ~overflow ~accounting is a first-class SET_MAKER that instantiates caches with the policies specified by replacement, overflow, and accounting.

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