#[repr(C, align(1))]pub struct AtomicU8 { /* private fields */ }Expand description
An integer type which can be safely shared between threads.
This type has the same in-memory representation as the underlying
integer type, u8. For more about the differences between atomic types and
non-atomic types as well as information about the portability of
this type, please see the module-level documentation.
Note: This type is only available on platforms that support
atomic loads and stores of u8.
Implementations§
source§impl AtomicU8
impl AtomicU8
const: 1.34.0 · sourcepub const fn new(v: u8) -> AtomicU8
pub const fn new(v: u8) -> AtomicU8
Creates a new atomic integer.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::AtomicU8;
let atomic_forty_two = AtomicU8::new(42);const: unstable · sourcepub unsafe fn from_ptr<'a>(ptr: *mut u8) -> &'a AtomicU8
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (atomic_from_ptr)
pub unsafe fn from_ptr<'a>(ptr: *mut u8) -> &'a AtomicU8
atomic_from_ptr)Creates a new reference to an atomic integer from a pointer.
Examples
#![feature(atomic_from_ptr, pointer_is_aligned)]
use std::sync::atomic::{self, AtomicU8};
use std::mem::align_of;
// Get a pointer to an allocated value
let ptr: *mut u8 = Box::into_raw(Box::new(0));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(align_of::<AtomicU8>()));
{
// Create an atomic view of the allocated value
let atomic = unsafe {AtomicU8::from_ptr(ptr) };
// Use `atomic` for atomic operations, possibly share it with other threads
atomic.store(1, atomic::Ordering::Relaxed);
}
// It's ok to non-atomically access the value behind `ptr`,
// since the reference to the atomic ended its lifetime in the block above
assert_eq!(unsafe { *ptr }, 1);
// Deallocate the value
unsafe { drop(Box::from_raw(ptr)) }Safety
ptrmust be aligned toalign_of::<AtomicBool>()(note that on some platforms this can be bigger thanalign_of::<bool>()).ptrmust be aligned toalign_of::<AtomicU8>()(note that on some platforms this can be bigger thanalign_of::<u8>()).ptrmust be valid for both reads and writes for the whole lifetime'a.- The value behind
ptrmust not be accessed through non-atomic operations for the whole lifetime'a.
sourcepub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut u8
pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut u8
Returns a mutable reference to the underlying integer.
This is safe because the mutable reference guarantees that no other threads are concurrently accessing the atomic data.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let mut some_var = AtomicU8::new(10);
assert_eq!(*some_var.get_mut(), 10);
*some_var.get_mut() = 5;
assert_eq!(some_var.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 5);sourcepub fn from_mut(v: &mut u8) -> &mut AtomicU8
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (atomic_from_mut)
pub fn from_mut(v: &mut u8) -> &mut AtomicU8
atomic_from_mut)Get atomic access to a &mut u8.
Examples
#![feature(atomic_from_mut)]
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let mut some_int = 123;
let a = AtomicU8::from_mut(&mut some_int);
a.store(100, Ordering::Relaxed);
assert_eq!(some_int, 100);sourcepub fn get_mut_slice(this: &mut [AtomicU8]) -> &mut [u8] ⓘ
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (atomic_from_mut)
pub fn get_mut_slice(this: &mut [AtomicU8]) -> &mut [u8] ⓘ
atomic_from_mut)Get non-atomic access to a &mut [AtomicU8] slice
This is safe because the mutable reference guarantees that no other threads are concurrently accessing the atomic data.
Examples
#![feature(atomic_from_mut, inline_const)]
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let mut some_ints = [const { AtomicU8::new(0) }; 10];
let view: &mut [u8] = AtomicU8::get_mut_slice(&mut some_ints);
assert_eq!(view, [0; 10]);
view
.iter_mut()
.enumerate()
.for_each(|(idx, int)| *int = idx as _);
std::thread::scope(|s| {
some_ints
.iter()
.enumerate()
.for_each(|(idx, int)| {
s.spawn(move || assert_eq!(int.load(Ordering::Relaxed), idx as _));
})
});sourcepub fn from_mut_slice(v: &mut [u8]) -> &mut [AtomicU8]
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (atomic_from_mut)
pub fn from_mut_slice(v: &mut [u8]) -> &mut [AtomicU8]
atomic_from_mut)Get atomic access to a &mut [u8] slice.
Examples
#![feature(atomic_from_mut)]
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let mut some_ints = [0; 10];
let a = &*AtomicU8::from_mut_slice(&mut some_ints);
std::thread::scope(|s| {
for i in 0..a.len() {
s.spawn(move || a[i].store(i as _, Ordering::Relaxed));
}
});
for (i, n) in some_ints.into_iter().enumerate() {
assert_eq!(i, n as usize);
}const: unstable · sourcepub fn into_inner(self) -> u8
pub fn into_inner(self) -> u8
Consumes the atomic and returns the contained value.
This is safe because passing self by value guarantees that no other threads are
concurrently accessing the atomic data.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::AtomicU8;
let some_var = AtomicU8::new(5);
assert_eq!(some_var.into_inner(), 5);sourcepub fn load(&self, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn load(&self, order: Ordering) -> u8
Loads a value from the atomic integer.
load takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering of this operation.
Possible values are SeqCst, Acquire and Relaxed.
Panics
Panics if order is Release or AcqRel.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let some_var = AtomicU8::new(5);
assert_eq!(some_var.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 5);sourcepub fn store(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering)
pub fn store(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering)
Stores a value into the atomic integer.
store takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering of this operation.
Possible values are SeqCst, Release and Relaxed.
Panics
Panics if order is Acquire or AcqRel.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let some_var = AtomicU8::new(5);
some_var.store(10, Ordering::Relaxed);
assert_eq!(some_var.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 10);sourcepub fn swap(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn swap(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Stores a value into the atomic integer, returning the previous value.
swap takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let some_var = AtomicU8::new(5);
assert_eq!(some_var.swap(10, Ordering::Relaxed), 5);sourcepub fn compare_and_swap(&self, current: u8, new: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
👎Deprecated since 1.50.0: Use compare_exchange or compare_exchange_weak instead
pub fn compare_and_swap(&self, current: u8, new: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
compare_exchange or compare_exchange_weak insteadStores a value into the atomic integer if the current value is the same as
the current value.
The return value is always the previous value. If it is equal to current, then the
value was updated.
compare_and_swap also takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory
ordering of this operation. Notice that even when using AcqRel, the operation
might fail and hence just perform an Acquire load, but not have Release semantics.
Using Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed if it
happens, and using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Migrating to compare_exchange and compare_exchange_weak
compare_and_swap is equivalent to compare_exchange with the following mapping for
memory orderings:
| Original | Success | Failure |
|---|---|---|
| Relaxed | Relaxed | Relaxed |
| Acquire | Acquire | Acquire |
| Release | Release | Relaxed |
| AcqRel | AcqRel | Acquire |
| SeqCst | SeqCst | SeqCst |
compare_exchange_weak is allowed to fail spuriously even when the comparison succeeds,
which allows the compiler to generate better assembly code when the compare and swap
is used in a loop.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let some_var = AtomicU8::new(5);
assert_eq!(some_var.compare_and_swap(5, 10, Ordering::Relaxed), 5);
assert_eq!(some_var.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 10);
assert_eq!(some_var.compare_and_swap(6, 12, Ordering::Relaxed), 10);
assert_eq!(some_var.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 10);sourcepub fn compare_exchange(
&self,
current: u8,
new: u8,
success: Ordering,
failure: Ordering
) -> Result<u8, u8>
pub fn compare_exchange( &self, current: u8, new: u8, success: Ordering, failure: Ordering ) -> Result<u8, u8>
Stores a value into the atomic integer if the current value is the same as
the current value.
The return value is a result indicating whether the new value was written and
containing the previous value. On success this value is guaranteed to be equal to
current.
compare_exchange takes two Ordering arguments to describe the memory
ordering of this operation. success describes the required ordering for the
read-modify-write operation that takes place if the comparison with current succeeds.
failure describes the required ordering for the load operation that takes place when
the comparison fails. Using Acquire as success ordering makes the store part
of this operation Relaxed, and using Release makes the successful load
Relaxed. The failure ordering can only be SeqCst, Acquire or Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let some_var = AtomicU8::new(5);
assert_eq!(some_var.compare_exchange(5, 10,
Ordering::Acquire,
Ordering::Relaxed),
Ok(5));
assert_eq!(some_var.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 10);
assert_eq!(some_var.compare_exchange(6, 12,
Ordering::SeqCst,
Ordering::Acquire),
Err(10));
assert_eq!(some_var.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 10);sourcepub fn compare_exchange_weak(
&self,
current: u8,
new: u8,
success: Ordering,
failure: Ordering
) -> Result<u8, u8>
pub fn compare_exchange_weak( &self, current: u8, new: u8, success: Ordering, failure: Ordering ) -> Result<u8, u8>
Stores a value into the atomic integer if the current value is the same as
the current value.
Unlike AtomicU8::compare_exchange,
this function is allowed to spuriously fail even
when the comparison succeeds, which can result in more efficient code on some
platforms. The return value is a result indicating whether the new value was
written and containing the previous value.
compare_exchange_weak takes two Ordering arguments to describe the memory
ordering of this operation. success describes the required ordering for the
read-modify-write operation that takes place if the comparison with current succeeds.
failure describes the required ordering for the load operation that takes place when
the comparison fails. Using Acquire as success ordering makes the store part
of this operation Relaxed, and using Release makes the successful load
Relaxed. The failure ordering can only be SeqCst, Acquire or Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let val = AtomicU8::new(4);
let mut old = val.load(Ordering::Relaxed);
loop {
let new = old * 2;
match val.compare_exchange_weak(old, new, Ordering::SeqCst, Ordering::Relaxed) {
Ok(_) => break,
Err(x) => old = x,
}
}sourcepub fn fetch_add(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_add(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Adds to the current value, returning the previous value.
This operation wraps around on overflow.
fetch_add takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(0);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_add(10, Ordering::SeqCst), 0);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 10);sourcepub fn fetch_sub(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_sub(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Subtracts from the current value, returning the previous value.
This operation wraps around on overflow.
fetch_sub takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(20);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_sub(10, Ordering::SeqCst), 20);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 10);sourcepub fn fetch_and(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_and(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Bitwise “and” with the current value.
Performs a bitwise “and” operation on the current value and the argument val, and
sets the new value to the result.
Returns the previous value.
fetch_and takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(0b101101);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_and(0b110011, Ordering::SeqCst), 0b101101);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 0b100001);sourcepub fn fetch_nand(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_nand(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Bitwise “nand” with the current value.
Performs a bitwise “nand” operation on the current value and the argument val, and
sets the new value to the result.
Returns the previous value.
fetch_nand takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(0x13);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_nand(0x31, Ordering::SeqCst), 0x13);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::SeqCst), !(0x13 & 0x31));sourcepub fn fetch_or(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_or(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Bitwise “or” with the current value.
Performs a bitwise “or” operation on the current value and the argument val, and
sets the new value to the result.
Returns the previous value.
fetch_or takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(0b101101);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_or(0b110011, Ordering::SeqCst), 0b101101);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 0b111111);sourcepub fn fetch_xor(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_xor(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Bitwise “xor” with the current value.
Performs a bitwise “xor” operation on the current value and the argument val, and
sets the new value to the result.
Returns the previous value.
fetch_xor takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(0b101101);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_xor(0b110011, Ordering::SeqCst), 0b101101);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 0b011110);1.45.0 · sourcepub fn fetch_update<F>(
&self,
set_order: Ordering,
fetch_order: Ordering,
f: F
) -> Result<u8, u8>where
F: FnMut(u8) -> Option<u8>,
pub fn fetch_update<F>( &self, set_order: Ordering, fetch_order: Ordering, f: F ) -> Result<u8, u8>where F: FnMut(u8) -> Option<u8>,
Fetches the value, and applies a function to it that returns an optional
new value. Returns a Result of Ok(previous_value) if the function returned Some(_), else
Err(previous_value).
Note: This may call the function multiple times if the value has been changed from other threads in
the meantime, as long as the function returns Some(_), but the function will have been applied
only once to the stored value.
fetch_update takes two Ordering arguments to describe the memory ordering of this operation.
The first describes the required ordering for when the operation finally succeeds while the second
describes the required ordering for loads. These correspond to the success and failure orderings of
AtomicU8::compare_exchange
respectively.
Using Acquire as success ordering makes the store part
of this operation Relaxed, and using Release makes the final successful load
Relaxed. The (failed) load ordering can only be SeqCst, Acquire or Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Considerations
This method is not magic; it is not provided by the hardware.
It is implemented in terms of
AtomicU8::compare_exchange_weak,
and suffers from the same drawbacks.
In particular, this method will not circumvent the ABA Problem.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let x = AtomicU8::new(7);
assert_eq!(x.fetch_update(Ordering::SeqCst, Ordering::SeqCst, |_| None), Err(7));
assert_eq!(x.fetch_update(Ordering::SeqCst, Ordering::SeqCst, |x| Some(x + 1)), Ok(7));
assert_eq!(x.fetch_update(Ordering::SeqCst, Ordering::SeqCst, |x| Some(x + 1)), Ok(8));
assert_eq!(x.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 9);1.45.0 · sourcepub fn fetch_max(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_max(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Maximum with the current value.
Finds the maximum of the current value and the argument val, and
sets the new value to the result.
Returns the previous value.
fetch_max takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(23);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_max(42, Ordering::SeqCst), 23);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 42);If you want to obtain the maximum value in one step, you can use the following:
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(23);
let bar = 42;
let max_foo = foo.fetch_max(bar, Ordering::SeqCst).max(bar);
assert!(max_foo == 42);1.45.0 · sourcepub fn fetch_min(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
pub fn fetch_min(&self, val: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
Minimum with the current value.
Finds the minimum of the current value and the argument val, and
sets the new value to the result.
Returns the previous value.
fetch_min takes an Ordering argument which describes the memory ordering
of this operation. All ordering modes are possible. Note that using
Acquire makes the store part of this operation Relaxed, and
using Release makes the load part Relaxed.
Note: This method is only available on platforms that support atomic operations on
u8.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(23);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_min(42, Ordering::Relaxed), 23);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 23);
assert_eq!(foo.fetch_min(22, Ordering::Relaxed), 23);
assert_eq!(foo.load(Ordering::Relaxed), 22);If you want to obtain the minimum value in one step, you can use the following:
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicU8, Ordering};
let foo = AtomicU8::new(23);
let bar = 12;
let min_foo = foo.fetch_min(bar, Ordering::SeqCst).min(bar);
assert_eq!(min_foo, 12);1.70.0 (const: 1.70.0) · sourcepub const fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut u8
pub const fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut u8
Returns a mutable pointer to the underlying integer.
Doing non-atomic reads and writes on the resulting integer can be a data race.
This method is mostly useful for FFI, where the function signature may use
*mut u8 instead of &AtomicU8.
Returning an *mut pointer from a shared reference to this atomic is safe because the
atomic types work with interior mutability. All modifications of an atomic change the value
through a shared reference, and can do so safely as long as they use atomic operations. Any
use of the returned raw pointer requires an unsafe block and still has to uphold the same
restriction: operations on it must be atomic.
Examples
use std::sync::atomic::AtomicU8;
extern "C" {
fn my_atomic_op(arg: *mut u8);
}
let atomic = AtomicU8::new(1);
// SAFETY: Safe as long as `my_atomic_op` is atomic.
unsafe {
my_atomic_op(atomic.as_ptr());
}Trait Implementations§
source§impl BitStore for AtomicU8
impl BitStore for AtomicU8
§type Mem = u8
type Mem = u8
BitSlice. It
is always one of the unsigned integer fundamentals.§type Access = AtomicU8
type Access = AtomicU8
Self::Mem value between the processor and the memory system. Read more§type Alias = AtomicU8
type Alias = AtomicU8
BitStore implementor that is known to be alias-safe. It is
used when a BitSlice introduces multiple handles that view the same
memory location, and at least one of them has write capabilities to it.
It must have the same underlying memory type, and can only change access
patterns or public-facing usage.§type Unalias = AtomicU8
type Unalias = AtomicU8
::Alias. It is used when a BitSlice removes the
conditions that required a T -> T::Alias transition.source§fn new(value: <AtomicU8 as BitStore>::Mem) -> AtomicU8
fn new(value: <AtomicU8 as BitStore>::Mem) -> AtomicU8
BitStore type.source§fn load_value(&self) -> <AtomicU8 as BitStore>::Mem
fn load_value(&self) -> <AtomicU8 as BitStore>::Mem
::Access
rules. This may be called when the value is aliased by a write-capable
reference.source§fn store_value(&mut self, value: <AtomicU8 as BitStore>::Mem)
fn store_value(&mut self, value: <AtomicU8 as BitStore>::Mem)
::Access
constraints.source§const ALIGNED_TO_SIZE: [(); 1] = [(); mem::aligned_to_size::<Self>() as usize]
const ALIGNED_TO_SIZE: [(); 1] = [(); mem::aligned_to_size::<Self>() as usize]
source§impl<'de> Deserialize<'de> for AtomicU8
impl<'de> Deserialize<'de> for AtomicU8
source§fn deserialize<D>(
deserializer: D
) -> Result<AtomicU8, <D as Deserializer<'de>>::Error>where
D: Deserializer<'de>,
fn deserialize<D>( deserializer: D ) -> Result<AtomicU8, <D as Deserializer<'de>>::Error>where D: Deserializer<'de>,
source§impl Radium for AtomicU8
impl Radium for AtomicU8
type Item = u8
source§fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut u8
fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut u8
source§fn into_inner(self) -> u8
fn into_inner(self) -> u8
source§fn swap(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
fn swap(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
source§fn compare_and_swap(&self, current: u8, new: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
fn compare_and_swap(&self, current: u8, new: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
compare_exchange or compare_exchange_weak insteadcurrent value. Read moresource§fn compare_exchange(
&self,
current: u8,
new: u8,
success: Ordering,
failure: Ordering
) -> Result<u8, u8>
fn compare_exchange( &self, current: u8, new: u8, success: Ordering, failure: Ordering ) -> Result<u8, u8>
current value. Read moresource§fn compare_exchange_weak(
&self,
current: u8,
new: u8,
success: Ordering,
failure: Ordering
) -> Result<u8, u8>
fn compare_exchange_weak( &self, current: u8, new: u8, success: Ordering, failure: Ordering ) -> Result<u8, u8>
current value. Read moresource§fn fetch_update<F>(
&self,
set_order: Ordering,
fetch_order: Ordering,
f: F
) -> Result<u8, u8>where
F: FnMut(u8) -> Option<u8>,
fn fetch_update<F>( &self, set_order: Ordering, fetch_order: Ordering, f: F ) -> Result<u8, u8>where F: FnMut(u8) -> Option<u8>,
source§fn fetch_and(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
fn fetch_and(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
value, and stores the result in self. Read moresource§fn fetch_nand(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
fn fetch_nand(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
value, and stores the result in self. Read moresource§fn fetch_or(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
fn fetch_or(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
value, and stores the result in self. Read moresource§fn fetch_xor(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
fn fetch_xor(&self, value: u8, order: Ordering) -> u8
value, and stores the result in self. Read moresource§impl Serialize for AtomicU8
impl Serialize for AtomicU8
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