Skip to main content

A lock-free ring buffer for Python and Cython.

Project description

ringbuf

A lock-free, single-producer, single-consumer, ring buffer for Python and Cython.

build_status

Installation

OS X: brew install boost

Ubuntu: apt-get install libboost-all-dev

Then:

pip install ringbuf

Motivation

When working with realtime DSP in Python, we might be wrapping some external C/C++ library (for instance, PortAudio) which runs some user-provided callback function in realtime. The callback function shouldn't allocate/deallocate memory, shouldn't contain any critical sections (mutexes), and so forth, to prevent priority inversion. If the callback were to contain Python objects, we'd likely be allocating and deallocating, and at the very least, acquiring and releasing the GIL. So, the callback cannot interact with Python objects if we expect realtime performance. As such, there's a need for buffering data in a non-locking way between a C/C++ callback and Python.

Enter ringbuf, Cython wrappers for boost::lockfree::spsc_queue. Our Python code can read from and write to a ringbuf.RingBuffer object, and our C++ code can read from and write to that buffer's underlying spsc_queue, no GIL required.

Usage

Any Python object which supports the buffer protocol can be stored in ringbuf.RingBuffer. This includes, but is not limited to: bytes, bytearray, array.array, and numpy.ndarray.

NumPy

import numpy as np
from ringbuf import RingBuffer

buffer = RingBuffer(format='f', capacity=100)

data = np.linspace(-1, 1, num=100, dtype='f')

buffer.push(data)

popped = buffer.pop(100)

assert np.array_equal(data, popped)

bytes

from ringbuf import RingBuffer

buffer = RingBuffer(format='B', capacity=11)

buffer.push(b'hello world')

popped = buffer.pop(11)

assert bytes(popped) == b'hello world'

Interfacing with C/C++

mymodule.pxd:

# distutils: language = c++

from ringbuf.boost cimport spsc_queue, void_ptr_to_spsc_queue_char_ptr

cdef void callback(void* q)

mymodule.pyx:

# distutils: language = c++

from array import array
from some_c_library cimport some_c_function

cdef void callback(void* q):
    cdef:
        # Cast the void* back to an spsc_queue.
        # The underlying queue always holds chars.
        spsc_queue[char] *queue = void_ptr_to_spsc_queue_char_ptr(q)
        double[5] to_push = [1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0]

    # Since the queue holds chars, you'll have to cast and adjust size accordingly.
    queue.push(<char*>to_push, sizeof(double) * 5)


def do_stuff():
    cdef:
        RingBuffer buffer = RingBuffer(format='d', capacity=100)
        void* queue = buffer.queue_void_ptr()

    # Pass our callback and a void* to the buffer's queue to some third party library.
    # Presumably, the C library schedules the callback and passes it the queue's void pointer.
    some_c_function(callback, queue)

    sleep(1)

    assert array.array('d', buffer.pop(5)) == array.array('d', range(1, 6))

Handling overflow & underflow

When RingBuffer.push() overflows, it returns the data that couldn't be pushed (or None, if all was pushed):

from ringbuf import RingBuffer

buffer = RingBuffer(format='B', capacity=10)
overflowed = buffer.push(b'spam eggs ham')
assert overflowed == b'ham'

When RingBuffer.pop() underflows, it returns whatever data could be popped:

from ringbuf import RingBuffer

buffer = RingBuffer(format='B', capacity=10)
overflowed = buffer.push(b'spam eggs ham')
assert overflowed == b'ham'

For additional usage see the tests.

Supported platforms

Travis CI tests with the following configurations:

  • Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver + [CPython3.6, CPython3.7, CPython3.8, PyPy7.3.0 (3.6.9)]
  • OS X + [CPython3.6, CPython3.7, CPython3.8, PyPy7.3.0 (3.6.9)]

Any platform with a C++11 compiler will probably work.

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome, please file any issues you encounter.

Changelog

v2.4.0 2020-03-23

  • Added RingBuffer.reset() method for .

v2.3.0 2020-03-22

  • Added concatenate function for joining multiple arbitrary Python objects that support the buffer protocol.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

ringbuf-2.4.0.tar.gz (150.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file ringbuf-2.4.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: ringbuf-2.4.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 150.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.1.1 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.23.0 setuptools/46.1.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.43.0 CPython/3.8.1

File hashes

Hashes for ringbuf-2.4.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 549d30d418ee8f66b20cce58d660fe3d6efc0e42bb6735b82235c881d54a10ab
MD5 1c53d28a119ffee34eb960aa5e25e277
BLAKE2b-256 b336cc79d3fcf9f42927f1152dd3f3f69e333a3bbb3018e9737f24e73146c153

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page