ruby/.gitignore

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*-*-*.def
*-*-*.exp
*-*-*.lib
*.a
*.bak
*.bc
*.bundle
*.dSYM
*.dmyh
*.dylib
*.elc
*.i
*.ii
*.inc
*.log
*.o
*.obj
*.old
*.orig
*.pch
*.pdb
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*.rbinc
*.rej
*.s
*.sav
*.sl
*.so
*.swp
*.yarb
*~
.*.list
.*.time
.DS_Store
.bundle
.ccmalloc
.ext
.pc
.ppack
.svn
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.time
.ruby-version
Makefile
cygruby*.def
extconf.h
y.output
y.tab.c
*.gcda
*.gcno
*.gcov
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*.vscode
lcov*.info
# /
/*-fake.rb
/*.dll
/*.exe
/*.res
/*.pc
/*.rc
/*_prelude.c
/.downloaded-cache
/.top-enc.mk
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/build*/
/COPYING.LIB
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/ChangeLog
/Doxyfile
/GNUmakefile
/README.atheos
/README.fat-patch
/README.v6
/TAGS
/archive
/autom4te*.cache
/automake
benchmark: introduce benchmark_driver.gem Makefile.in: Clone benchmark-driver repository in benchmark/benchmark-driver `make update-benchmark-driver`, like simplecov. win32/Makefile.sub: Roughly do the same thing. .gitignore: Ignore the cloned repository. common.mk: Trigger `make update-benchmark-driver` to run `make benchmark` and adjust arguments for benchmark_driver.gem. benchmark/require.yml: renamed from benchmark/bm_require.rb, benchmark/prepare_require.rb benchmark/require_thread.yml: renamed from benchmark/bm_require_thread.rb, benchmark/prepare_require_thread.rb benchmark/so_count_words.yml: renamed from benchmark/bm_so_count_words.rb, benchmark/prepare_so_count_words.rb, benchmark/wc.input.base benchmark/so_k_nucleotide.yml: renamed from benchmark/bm_so_k_nucleotide.rb, benchmark/prepare_so_k_nucleotide.rb, benchmark/make_fasta_output.rb benchmark/so_reverse_complement.yml: renamed from benchmark/bm_so_reverse_complement.rb, benchmark/prepare_so_reverse_complement.rb, benchmark/make_fasta_output.rb I'm sorry but I made some duplications between benchmark/require.yml and benchmark/require_thread.yml, and between benchmark/so_k_nucleotide.yml and benchmark/so_reverse_complement.yml. If you're not comfortable with it, please combine these YAMLs to share the same prelude. One YAML file can have multiple benchmark definitions sharing prelude. benchmark/driver.rb: Replace its core feature with benchmark_driver.gem. Some old features are gone for now, but I'll add them again later. [Misc #14902] git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63888 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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/benchmark/benchmark-driver
/beos
/bmlog-*
/breakpoints.gdb
/config.cache
/config.h
/config.h.in
/config.status
/config.status.lineno
/configure
/coverage/simplecov
/coverage/simplecov-html
/coverage/doclie
/coverage/.last_run.json
/coverage/.resultset.json*
/coverage/assets
/coverage/index.html
/doc/capi
/enc.mk
/encdb.h
/exts.mk
/goruby
/id.[ch]
/largefile.h
/lcov-c-out
/lcov-rb-out
/lcov-out
/lex.c
/libruby*.*
/miniprelude.c
/miniruby
/newdate.rb
/newline.c
/newver.rb
/parse.c
/parse.h
/patches
/patches-master
/pitest.rb
/ppack
/prelude.c
/preview
/probes.dmyh
/probes.h
/rbconfig.rb
/rename2.h
/repack
/revision.h
/revision.tmp
/riscos
/rubicon
/ruby
/ruby-runner
/ruby-runner.h
/ruby-man.rd.gz
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/rubyspec_temp
/run.gdb
/sizes.c
/static-ruby
/test.rb
/test-coverage.dat
/tmp
/transdb.h
/uncommon.mk
/verconf.h
/verconf.mk
/web
/yasmdata.rb
# /bin/
/bin/*.exe
/bin/*.dll
# /benchmark/
/benchmark/bm_require.data
/benchmark/bmx_*.rb
/benchmark/fasta.output.*
/benchmark/wc.input
/enc/*.def
/enc/*.exp
/enc/*.lib
/enc/jis/props.h
/enc/unicode/data
# /coroutine/
!/coroutine/**/*.s
# /enc/trans/
/enc/trans/*.c
/enc/trans/*.def
/enc/trans/*.exp
/enc/trans/*.lib
# /exe/
/exe/goruby
/exe/ruby
# /ext/
/ext/extinit.c
/ext/configure-ext.mk
/ext/*/exts.mk
# /ext/-test-/cxxanyargs
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/ext/-test-/cxxanyargs/failure*.failed
# /ext/-test-/win32/dln/
/ext/-test-/win32/dln/dlntest.dll
/ext/-test-/win32/dln/dlntest.exp
/ext/-test-/win32/dln/dlntest.lib
# /ext/-test-/gems
/ext/-test-/gems
# /ext/etc/
/ext/etc/constdefs.h
# /ext/fiddle/
/ext/fiddle/libffi-*
# /ext/rbconfig/
/ext/rbconfig/sizeof/sizes.c
/ext/rbconfig/sizeof/limits.c
# /ext/ripper/
/ext/ripper/eventids1.c
/ext/ripper/.eventids2-check
/ext/ripper/eventids2table.c
/ext/ripper/ripper.*
/ext/ripper/ids1
/ext/ripper/ids2
# /ext/socket/
/ext/socket/constants.h
/ext/socket/constdefs.h
/ext/socket/constdefs.c
# /gems
/gems/*.gem
/gems/src
/gems/*-*
# /lib/
/lib/ruby/[1-9]*.*
/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby
[ci-skip][Feature #18910][lldb] Provide class framework for lldb commands `lldb_cruby.py` manages lldb custom commands using functions. The file is a large list of Python functions, and an init handler to map some of the Python functions into the debugger, to enable execution of custom logic during a debugging session. Since LLDB 3.7 (September 2015) there has also been support for using python classes rather than bare functions, as long as those classes implement a specific interface. This PR Introduces some more defined structure to the LLDB helper functions by switching from the function based implementation to the class based one, and providing an auto-loading mechanism by which new functions can be loaded. The intention behind this change is to make working with the LLDB helpers easier, by reducing code duplication, providing a consistent structure and a clearer API for developers. The current function based approach has some advantages and disadvantages Advantages: - Adding new code is easy. - All the code is self contained and searchable. Disadvantages: - No visible organisation of the file contents. This means - Hard to tell which functions are utility functions and which are available to you in a debugging session - Lots of code duplication within lldb functions - Large files quickly become intimidating to work with - for example, `lldb_disasm.py` was implemented as a seperate Python module because it was easier to start with a clean slate than add significant amounts of code to `lldb_cruby.py` This PR attempts, to fix the disadvantages of the current approach and maintain, or enhance, the benefits. The new structure of a command looks like this; ``` class TestCommand(RbBaseCommand): # program is the keyword the user will type in lldb to execute this command program = "test" # help_string will be displayed in lldb when the user uses the help functions help_string = "This is a test command to show how to implement lldb commands" # call is where our command logic will be implemented def call(self, debugger, command, exe_ctx, result): pass ``` If the command fulfils the following criteria it will then be auto-loaded when an lldb session is started: - The package file must exist inside the `commands` directory and the filename must end in `_command.py` - The package must implement a class whose name ends in `Command` - The class inherits from `RbBaseCommand` or at minimum a class that shares the same interface as `RbBaseCommand` (at minimum this means defining `__init__` and `__call__`, and using `__call__` to call `call` which is defined in the subclasses). - The class must have a class variable `package` that is a String. This is the name of the command you'll call in the `lldb` debugger.
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# /misc/
/misc/**/__pycache__
# /spec/bundler
/.rspec_status
# /tool/
/tool/config.guess
/tool/config.sub
# /win32/
/win32/*.ico
common.mk: install a single header file for JIT compilation which is created by transforming a preprocessed vm.c. This file will be used by JIT compiler's generated code which we are going to have from succeeding commits. Makefile.in: generate MJIT header for UNIX environments. win32/Makefile.sub: generate MJIT header for mswin environments. At initial merge, we're going to support only MinGW for Windows. So the header installed by this file won't be used for short term, but we'll add mswin support in a half year or so, for sure. tool/transform_mjit_header.rb: New. This script was originally written as minimize_mjit_header.rb by Vladimir N. Makarov <vmakarov@redhat.com> for Feature 12589. Then I refactored a little so that it can conform CodeClimate CI which is currently set for Ruby's GitHub repository, and fixed some bugs and ported it to work on Windows. Also, as original minimize_mjit_header.rb takes too long time to run, this is modified to skip minimization step because having *static* unused definitions does not waste compilation time on -O2 since compiler can skip to compile unused static functions. So this does no longer "minimize" the header and is renamed. This header installation does NOT include a header to automatically export symbols used by MJIT. That's because original MJIT code was failing to export symbols in the import header in macOS environment. But I would like to have the functionality for maintainability in the future. I'll manually export things but it would be just an intemediate solution. Patch by: Vladimir N. Makarov <vmakarov@redhat.com> Part of: Feature 12589 and 14235. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62187 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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# MJIT
/rb_mjit_header.h
/mjit_config.h
/include/ruby-*/*/rb_mjit_min_header-*.h
# /wasm/
/wasm/tests/*.wasm