On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 4:16 PM Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hmm? Have you seen the email I replied to John, a broader Rust community > seems doesn't appreciate the idea of generic atomics. I don't think we can easily draw that conclusion from those download numbers / dependent crates. portable-atomic may be more popular simply because it provides features for platforms the standard library does not. The interface being generic or not may have nothing to do with it. Or perhaps because it has a 1.x version, while the other doesn't, etc. In fact, the atomic crate is essentially about providing `Atomic<T>`, so one could argue that all those downloads are precisely from people that want a generic atomic. Moreover, I noticed portable-atomic's issue #1 in GitHub is, precisely, adding `Atomic<T>` support. The maintainer has a PR for that updated over time, most recently a few hours ago. There is also `AtomicCell<T>` from crossbeam, which is the first feature listed in its docs. Anyway... The way I see it, both approaches seem similar (i.e. for what we are going to use them for today, at least) and neither apparently has a major downside today for those use cases (apart from needed refactors later to go to another approach). (By the "generic approach", by the way, I mean just providing `Atomic<{i32,i64}>`, not a complex design) So it is up to you on what you send for the non-RFC patches, of course, and if nobody has the time / wants to do the work for the "simple" generic approach, then we can just go ahead with this for the moment. But I think it would be nice to at least consider the "simple" generic approach to see how much worse it would be. Other bits to consider, that perhaps give you arguments for one or the other: consequences on the compilation time, on inlining, on the error messages for new users, on the generated documentation, on how easy to grep they are, etc. Cheers, Miguel