stable-maps-0.0.3.2: Heterogeneous maps keyed by StableNames

PortabilityGHC only
Stabilityexperimental
Maintainerekmett@gmail.com
Safe HaskellSafe-Infered

System.Mem.StableName.Dynamic

Description

Dynamic stable names are a way of performing fast (O(1)), not-quite-exact comparison between objects.

Dynamic stable names solve the following problem: suppose you want to build a hash table with Haskell objects as keys, but you want to use pointer equality for comparison; maybe because the keys are large and hashing would be slow, or perhaps because the keys are infinite in size. We can't build a hash table using the address of the object as the key, because objects get moved around by the garbage collector, meaning a re-hash would be necessary after every garbage collection.

Synopsis

Documentation

newtype DynamicStableName Source

An abstract name for an object, that supports equality and hashing.

Dynamic stable names have the following property:

  • If sn1 :: DynamicStableName and sn2 :: DynamicStableName and sn1 == sn2 then sn1 and sn2 were created by calls to makeStableName on the same object.

The reverse is not necessarily true: if two dynamic stable names are not equal, then the objects they name may still be equal. Note in particular that makeDynamicStableName may return a different DynamicStableName after an object is evaluated.

Dynamic Stable Names are similar to Stable Pointers (Foreign.StablePtr), but differ in the following ways:

  • There is no freeDynamicStableName operation, unlike Foreign.StablePtrs. Dynamic Stable Names are reclaimed by the runtime system when they are no longer needed.
  • There is no deRefDynamicStableName operation. You can't get back from a dynamic stable name to the original Haskell object. The reason for this is that the existence of a stable name for an object does not guarantee the existence of the object itself; it can still be garbage collected.

hashDynamicStableName :: DynamicStableName -> IntSource

Convert a DynamicStableName to an Int. The Int returned is not necessarily unique; several DynamicStableNames may map to the same Int (in practice however, the chances of this are small, so the result of hashDynamicStableName makes a good hash key).

makeDynamicStableName :: t -> IO DynamicStableNameSource

Makes a DynamicStableName for an arbitrary object. The object passed as the first argument is not evaluated by makeDynamicStableName.