-Junction is a library of concurrent data structures in C++. It contains three hash map implementations:
+Junction is a library of concurrent data structures in C++. It contains several hash map implementations:
+ junction::ConcurrentMap_Crude
junction::ConcurrentMap_Linear
- junction::ConcurrentMap_LeapFrog
+ junction::ConcurrentMap_Leapfrog
junction::ConcurrentMap_Grampa
[CMake](https://cmake.org/) and [Turf](https://github.com/preshing/turf) are required. See the blog post [New Concurrent Hash Maps for C++](http://preshing.com/20160201/new-concurrent-hash-maps-for-cpp/) for more information.
## Configuration
-When you first run CMake on Junction, Turf will detect the capabilities of your compiler and write the results to a file in the build tree named `include/turf_config.h`. Similarly, Junction will write `include/junction_config.h` to the build tree. You can modify the contents of those files by setting variables when CMake runs. This can be done by passing additional options to `cmake`, or by using an interactive GUI such as `cmake-gui` or `ccmake`.
+When you first run CMake on Junction, Turf will detect the capabilities of your compiler and write the results to a file in the build tree named `turf/include/turf_config.h`. Similarly, Junction will write `include/junction_config.h` to the build tree. You can modify the contents of those files by setting variables when CMake runs. This can be done by passing additional options to `cmake`, or by using an interactive GUI such as `cmake-gui` or `ccmake`.
For example, to configure Turf to use the C++11 standard library, you can set the `TURF_PREFER_CPP11` variable on the command line:
## Rules and Behavior
-A Junction map is a lot like a big array of `std::atomic<>` variables, where the key is an index into the array, stores use `memory_order_release`, and loads use `memory_order_consume`.
+Currently, Junction maps only work with keys and values that are pointers or pointer-sized integers. The hash function must be invertible, so that every key has a unique hash. Otherwise, a Junction map is a lot like a big array of `std::atomic<>` variables, where the key is an index into the array. More precisely:
-More precisely, the following rules apply to Junction's Linear, LeapFrog and Grampa maps:
-
-* All of their member functions, together with their `Mutator` member functions, are atomic with respect to each other, so you can safely call them from any thread without mutual exclusion.
-* If an `insert` [happens before](http://preshing.com/20130702/the-happens-before-relation/) a `get` with the same key, the `get` will return the value it inserted, except if another operation changes the value in between. Any [synchronizing operation](http://preshing.com/20130823/the-synchronizes-with-relation/) will establish this relationship.
-* `insert` is a [release](http://preshing.com/20120913/acquire-and-release-semantics/) operation and `get` is a [consume](http://preshing.com/20140709/the-purpose-of-memory_order_consume-in-cpp11/) operation, so you can safely pass non-atomic information between threads using a pointer.
-* In the current version, you must not insert while concurrently using an `Iterator`.
+* All of a Junction map's member functions, together with its `Mutator` member functions, are atomic with respect to each other, so you can safely call them from any thread without mutual exclusion.
+* If an `assign` [happens before](http://preshing.com/20130702/the-happens-before-relation/) a `get` with the same key, the `get` will return the value it inserted, except if another operation changes the value in between. Any [synchronizing operation](http://preshing.com/20130823/the-synchronizes-with-relation/) will establish this relationship.
+* For Linear, Leapfrog and Grampa maps, `assign` is a [release](http://preshing.com/20120913/acquire-and-release-semantics/) operation and `get` is a [consume](http://preshing.com/20140709/the-purpose-of-memory_order_consume-in-cpp11/) operation, so you can safely pass non-atomic information between threads using a pointer. For Crude maps, all operations are relaxed.
+* In the current version, you must not `assign` while concurrently using an `Iterator`.
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