Swift Actors Thread-Safe Persistence is a development claude skill built by Affaan M. Best for: iOS/macOS developers building offline-first apps need thread-safe local storage without manual synchronization overhead..
- What it does
- Build thread-safe data persistence layers in Swift using actors with in-memory caching and file-backed storage.
- Category
- development
- Created by
- Affaan M
- Last updated
Swift Actors Thread-Safe Persistence
Build thread-safe data persistence layers in Swift using actors with in-memory caching and file-backed storage.
Skill instructions
name: swift-actor-persistence description: Thread-safe data persistence in Swift using actors — in-memory cache with file-backed storage, eliminating data races by design. origin: ECC
Swift Actors for Thread-Safe Persistence
Patterns for building thread-safe data persistence layers using Swift actors. Combines in-memory caching with file-backed storage, leveraging the actor model to eliminate data races at compile time.
When to Activate
- Building a data persistence layer in Swift 5.5+
- Need thread-safe access to shared mutable state
- Want to eliminate manual synchronization (locks, DispatchQueues)
- Building offline-first apps with local storage
Core Pattern
Actor-Based Repository
The actor model guarantees serialized access — no data races, enforced by the compiler.
public actor LocalRepository<T: Codable & Identifiable> where T.ID == String {
private var cache: [String: T] = [:]
private let fileURL: URL
public init(directory: URL = .documentsDirectory, filename: String = "data.json") {
self.fileURL = directory.appendingPathComponent(filename)
// Synchronous load during init (actor isolation not yet active)
self.cache = Self.loadSynchronously(from: fileURL)
}
// MARK: - Public API
public func save(_ item: T) throws {
cache[item.id] = item
try persistToFile()
}
public func delete(_ id: String) throws {
cache[id] = nil
try persistToFile()
}
public func find(by id: String) -> T? {
cache[id]
}
public func loadAll() -> [T] {
Array(cache.values)
}
// MARK: - Private
private func persistToFile() throws {
let data = try JSONEncoder().encode(Array(cache.values))
try data.write(to: fileURL, options: .atomic)
}
private static func loadSynchronously(from url: URL) -> [String: T] {
guard let data = try? Data(contentsOf: url),
let items = try? JSONDecoder().decode([T].self, from: data) else {
return [:]
}
return Dictionary(uniqueKeysWithValues: items.map { ($0.id, $0) })
}
}
Usage
All calls are automatically async due to actor isolation:
let repository = LocalRepository<Question>()
// Read — fast O(1) lookup from in-memory cache
let question = await repository.find(by: "q-001")
let allQuestions = await repository.loadAll()
// Write — updates cache and persists to file atomically
try await repository.save(newQuestion)
try await repository.delete("q-001")
Combining with @Observable ViewModel
@Observable
final class QuestionListViewModel {
private(set) var questions: [Question] = []
private let repository: LocalRepository<Question>
init(repository: LocalRepository<Question> = LocalRepository()) {
self.repository = repository
}
func load() async {
questions = await repository.loadAll()
}
func add(_ question: Question) async throws {
try await repository.save(question)
questions = await repository.loadAll()
}
}
Key Design Decisions
| Decision | Rationale |
|----------|-----------|
| Actor (not class + lock) | Compiler-enforced thread safety, no manual synchronization |
| In-memory cache + file persistence | Fast reads from cache, durable writes to disk |
| Synchronous init loading | Avoids async initialization complexity |
| Dictionary keyed by ID | O(1) lookups by identifier |
| Generic over Codable & Identifiable | Reusable across any model type |
| Atomic file writes (.atomic) | Prevents partial writes on crash |
Best Practices
- Use
Sendabletypes for all data crossing actor boundaries - Keep the actor's public API minimal — only expose domain operations, not persistence details
- Use
.atomicwrites to prevent data corruption if the app crashes mid-write - Load synchronously in
init— async initializers add complexity with minimal benefit for local files - Combine with
@ObservableViewModels for reactive UI updates
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
- Using
DispatchQueueorNSLockinstead of actors for new Swift concurrency code - Exposing the internal cache dictionary to external callers
- Making the file URL configurable without validation
- Forgetting that all actor method calls are
await— callers must handle async context - Using
nonisolatedto bypass actor isolation (defeats the purpose)
When to Use
- Local data storage in iOS/macOS apps (user data, settings, cached content)
- Offline-first architectures that sync to a server later
- Any shared mutable state that multiple parts of the app access concurrently
- Replacing legacy
DispatchQueue-based thread safety with modern Swift concurrency
Use this skill
Most skills are portable instruction packages. Claude Code supports SKILL.md directly. Other agents can use adapted files like AGENTS.md, .cursorrules, and GEMINI.md.
Claude Code
Save SKILL.md into your Claude Skills folder, then restart Claude Code.
mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills/swift-actors-thread-safe-persistence && curl -L "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/affaan-m/everything-claude-code/HEAD/skills/swift-actor-persistence/SKILL.md" -o ~/.claude/skills/swift-actors-thread-safe-persistence/SKILL.mdInstalls to ~/.claude/skills/swift-actors-thread-safe-persistence/SKILL.md.
Use cases
iOS/macOS developers building offline-first apps need thread-safe local storage without manual synchronization overhead.
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Creator
AAffaan M
@affaan-m