The timing-wheel implementation uses an array of "levels", where level i
is an
array of length 2^b_i
, where the b_i
are the "level bits" specified via
Level_bits.create_exn [b_0, b_1; ...]
.
A timing wheel can handle approximately 2 ** num_bits t
intervals/keys beyond
the current minimum time/key, where num_bits t = b_0 + b_1 + ...
.
One can use a Level_bits.t
to trade off run time and space usage of a timing
wheel. For a fixed num_bits
, as the number of levels increases, the length of
the levels decreases and the timing wheel uses less space, but the constant factor
for the running time of add
and increase_min_allowed_key
increases.
max_num_bits
is how many bits in a key the timing wheel can use, i.e. 61. We
subtract 3 for the bits in the word that we won't use:
In create_exn bits
, it is an error if any of the b_i
in bits
has b_i <= 0
,
or if the sum of the b_i
in bits
is greater than max_num_bits
.
default
returns the default value of level_bits
used by Timing_wheel.create
and Timing_wheel.Priority_queue.create
.
default = [11; 10; 10; 10; 10; 10]
This default uses 61 bits, i.e. max_num_bits
, and less than 10k words of memory.
num_bits t
is the sum of the b_i
in t
.