mem_clock.go

 1/*
 2
 3	This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
 4	License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file,
 5	You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
 6
 7	Copyright (c) 2013, Armon Dadgar armon.dadgar@gmail.com
 8	Copyright (c) 2013, Mitchell Hashimoto mitchell.hashimoto@gmail.com
 9
10	Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms
11	of the GNU General Public License Version 3 or later, as described below:
12
13	This file is free software: you may copy, redistribute and/or modify
14	it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
15	Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your
16	option) any later version.
17
18	This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
19	WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
20	MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General
21	Public License for more details.
22
23	You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
24	along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
25
26*/
27
28// Note: this code originally originate from Hashicorp's Serf but has been changed since to fit git-bug's need.
29
30// Note: this Lamport clock implementation is different than the algorithms you can find, notably Wikipedia or the
31//       original Serf implementation. The reason is lie to what constitute an event in this distributed system.
32//       Commonly, events happen when messages are sent or received, whereas in git-bug events happen when some data is
33//       written, but *not* when read. This is why Witness set the time to the max seen value instead of max seen value +1.
34//       See https://cs.stackexchange.com/a/133730/129795
35
36package lamport
37
38import (
39	"sync/atomic"
40)
41
42var _ Clock = &MemClock{}
43
44// MemClock is a thread safe implementation of a lamport clock. It
45// uses efficient atomic operations for all of its functions, falling back
46// to a heavy lock only if there are enough CAS failures.
47type MemClock struct {
48	counter uint64
49}
50
51// NewMemClock create a new clock with the value 1.
52// Value 0 is considered as invalid.
53func NewMemClock() *MemClock {
54	return &MemClock{
55		counter: 1,
56	}
57}
58
59// NewMemClockWithTime create a new clock with a value.
60func NewMemClockWithTime(time uint64) *MemClock {
61	return &MemClock{
62		counter: time,
63	}
64}
65
66// Time is used to return the current value of the lamport clock
67func (mc *MemClock) Time() Time {
68	return Time(atomic.LoadUint64(&mc.counter))
69}
70
71// Increment is used to return the value of the lamport clock and increment it afterwards
72func (mc *MemClock) Increment() (Time, error) {
73	return Time(atomic.AddUint64(&mc.counter, 1)), nil
74}
75
76// Witness is called to update our local clock if necessary after
77// witnessing a clock value received from another process
78func (mc *MemClock) Witness(v Time) error {
79WITNESS:
80	// If the other value is old, we do not need to do anything
81	cur := atomic.LoadUint64(&mc.counter)
82	other := uint64(v)
83	if other <= cur {
84		return nil
85	}
86
87	// Ensure that our local clock is at least one ahead.
88	if !atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&mc.counter, cur, other) {
89		// CAS: CompareAndSwap
90		// The CAS failed, so we just retry. Eventually our CAS should
91		// succeed or a future witness will pass us by and our witness
92		// will end.
93		goto WITNESS
94	}
95
96	return nil
97}