A simple C implementation for a circular (ring) buffer. Thread-safe with a single producer and a single consumer, using OSAtomic.h primitives, and avoids any need for buffer wrapping logic by using a virtual memory map technique to place a virtual copy of the buffer straight after the end of the real buffer.
Initialisation and cleanup: TPCircularBufferInit
and TPCircularBufferCleanup
to allocate and free resources.
Producing: Use TPCircularBufferHead
to get a pointer to write to the buffer, followed by TPCircularBufferProduce
to submit the written data. TPCircularBufferProduceBytes
is a convenience routine for writing data straight to the buffer.
Consuming: Use TPCircularBufferTail
to get a pointer to the next data to read, followed by TPCircularBufferConsume
to free up the space once processed.
TPCircularBuffer+AudioBufferList.(c,h) contain helper functions to queue and dequeue AudioBufferList structures. These will automatically adjust the mData fields of each buffer to point to 16-byte aligned regions within the circular buffer.
As long as you restrict multithreaded access to just one producer, and just one consumer, this utility should be thread safe.
Only one shared variable is used (the buffer fill count), and OSAtomic primitives are used to write to this value to ensure atomicity.
Copyright (C) 2012-2013 A Tasty Pixel
This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied warranty. In no event will the authors be held liable for any damages arising from the use of this software.
Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose, including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it freely, subject to the following restrictions:
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The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be appreciated but is not required.
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Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be misrepresented as being the original software.
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This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
Virtual memory technique originally proposed by Philip Howard, and adapted to Darwin by Kurt Revis
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