Avoid deadlocks in your mutexes by acquiring them in a consistent order, or else.
In any code that uses mutexes or locks, you quickly run into the possibility of deadlock. With just
two mutexes Foo
and Bar
you can already deadlock, assuming one thread first locks Foo
then
attempts to get Bar
and another first gets Bar
then tries to get Foo
. Now both threads are
waiting for each other to release the lock they already have.
One simple way to get around this is by ensuring that, when you need both Foo
and Bar
, you
should first acquire Foo
then you can never deadlock. Of course, with just two mutexes, this is
easy to keep track of, but once your code starts to grow you might lose track of all these
dependencies. That's where this crate comes in.
This crate tracks the order in which you acquire locks in your code, tries to build a dependency tree out of it, and panics if your dependencies would create a cycle. It provides replacements for existing synchronization primitives with an identical API, and should be a drop-in replacement.
Inspired by this blogpost, which references a similar behaviour implemented by Abseil for their mutexes. This article goes into more depth on the exact implementation.
Add this dependency to your Cargo.lock
file like any other:
[dependencies]
tracing-mutex = "0.2"
Then use the locks provided by this library instead of the ones you would use otherwise.
Replacements for the synchronization primitives in std::sync
can be found in the stdsync
module.
Support for other synchronization primitives is planned.
use tracing_mutex::stdsync::Mutex;
let some_mutex = Mutex::new(42);
*some_mutex.lock().unwrap() += 1;
println!("{:?}", some_mutex);
The interdependencies between locks are automatically tracked. If any locking operation would introduce a cyclic dependency between your locks, the operation panics instead. This allows you to immediately notice the cyclic dependency rather than be eventually surprised by it in production.
Mutex tracing is efficient, but it is not completely overhead-free. If you cannot spare the
performance penalty in your production environment, this library also offers debug-only tracing. The
type aliases in tracing_mutex::stdsync
correspond to tracing primitives from
tracing_mutex::stdsync::tracing
when debug assertions are enabled, and to primitives from
std::sync::Mutex
when they are not. A similar structure exists for other
The minimum supported Rust version is 1.70. Increasing this is not considered a breaking change, but will be avoided within semver-compatible releases if possible.
- Dependency-tracking wrappers for all locking primitives
- Optional opt-out for release mode code
- Optional backtrace capture to aid with reproducing cyclic mutex chains
- Support for primitives from:
std::sync
parking_lot
- Any library that implements the
lock_api
traits
- Improve performance in lock tracing
- Better and configurable error handling when detecting cyclic dependencies
- Support for other locking libraries
- Support for async locking libraries
- Support for
Send
mutex guards
Note: parking_lot
has already began work on its own deadlock detection mechanism, which works
in a different way. Both can be complimentary.
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.