* process.c: Add Process._fork
This API is supposed for application monitoring libraries to hook fork
event.
[Feature #17795]
Co-authored-by: Nobuyoshi Nakada <nobu@ruby-lang.org>
`RubyVM.keep_script_lines` enables to keep script lines
for each ISeq and AST. This feature is for debugger/REPL
support.
```ruby
RubyVM.keep_script_lines = true
RubyVM::keep_script_lines = true
eval("def foo = nil\ndef bar = nil")
pp RubyVM::InstructionSequence.of(method(:foo)).script_lines
```
In an effort to simplify the logic YJIT generates for accessing instance
variable, YJIT ensures that a given name-to-index mapping exists at
compile time. In the case that the mapping doesn't exist, it was created
by using rb_ivar_set() with Qundef on the sample object we see at
compile time. This hack isn't fine if the sample object happens to be
frozen, in which case YJIT would raise a FrozenError unexpectedly.
To deal with this, make a new function that only reserves the mapping
but doesn't touch the object. This is rb_obj_ensure_iv_index_mapping().
This new function superceeds the functionality of rb_iv_index_tbl_lookup()
so it was removed.
Reported by and includes a test case from John Hawthorn <john@hawthorn.email>
Fixes: GH-282
When YJIT make calls to routines without reconstructing interpreter
state through jit_prepare_routine_call(), it relies on the routine to
never allocate, raise, and push/pop control frames. Comment about this
on the routines that YJTI calls.
This is probably something we should dynamically verify on debug builds.
It's hard to statically verify this as it requires verifying all
functions in the call tree. Maybe something to look at in the future.
This commits implements size classes in the GC for the Variable Width
Allocation feature. Unless `USE_RVARGC` compile flag is set, only a
single size class is created, maintaining current behaviour. See the
redmine ticket for more details.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
This commit removes T_PAYLOAD since the new VWA implementation no longer
requires T_PAYLOAD types.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
This commits implements size classes in the GC for the Variable Width
Allocation feature. Unless `USE_RVARGC` compile flag is set, only a
single size class is created, maintaining current behaviour. See the
redmine ticket for more details.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
This commit removes T_PAYLOAD since the new VWA implementation no longer
requires T_PAYLOAD types.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
... as per ko1's preference. He is preparing to extend this feature to
ISeq for his new debugger. He prefers "keep" to "save" for this wording.
This API is internal and not included in any released version, so I
change it in advance.
Make `RUBY_VERSION_SINCE` and `RUBY_VERSION_BEFORE` to take major
and minor numbers so usable also in preprocessor directives. Old
macros are renamed with "STRING".
ndigits higher than 14 can result in values that are slightly too
large due to floating point limitations. Converting to rational
for the calculation and then back to float fixes these issues.
Fixes [Bug #14635]
Fixes [Bug #17183]
Co-authored by: Yusuke Endoh <mame@ruby-lang.org>
When a Ractor is removed, the freelist in the Ractor cache is not
returned to the GC, leaving the freelist permanently lost. This commit
recycles the freelist when the Ractor is destroyed, preventing a memory
leak from occurring.
Redo of 34a2acdac788602c14bf05fb616215187badd504 and
931138b00696419945dc03e10f033b1f53cd50f3 which were reverted.
GitHub PR #4340.
This change implements a cache for class variables. Previously there was
no cache for cvars. Cvar access is slow due to needing to travel all the
way up th ancestor tree before returning the cvar value. The deeper the
ancestor tree the slower cvar access will be.
The benefits of the cache are more visible with a higher number of
included modules due to the way Ruby looks up class variables. The
benchmark here includes 26 modules and shows with the cache, this branch
is 6.5x faster when accessing class variables.
```
compare-ruby: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-03-15T06:22:34Z master 9e5105c) [x86_64-darwin19]
built-ruby: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-03-15T12:12:44Z add-cache-for-clas.. c6be009) [x86_64-darwin19]
| |compare-ruby|built-ruby|
|:--------|-----------:|---------:|
|vm_cvar | 5.681M| 36.980M|
| | -| 6.51x|
```
Benchmark.ips calling `ActiveRecord::Base.logger` from within a Rails
application. ActiveRecord::Base.logger has 71 ancestors. The more
ancestors a tree has, the more clear the speed increase. IE if Base had
only one ancestor we'd see no improvement. This benchmark is run on a
vanilla Rails application.
Benchmark code:
```ruby
require "benchmark/ips"
require_relative "config/environment"
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report "logger" do
ActiveRecord::Base.logger
end
end
```
Ruby 3.0 master / Rails 6.1:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
logger 155.251k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
```
Ruby 3.0 with cvar cache / Rails 6.1:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
logger 1.546M i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
logger 14.857M (± 4.8%) i/s - 74.198M in 5.006202s
```
Lastly we ran a benchmark to demonstate the difference between master
and our cache when the number of modules increases. This benchmark
measures 1 ancestor, 30 ancestors, and 100 ancestors.
Ruby 3.0 master:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
1 module 1.231M i/100ms
30 modules 432.020k i/100ms
100 modules 145.399k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
1 module 12.210M (± 2.1%) i/s - 61.553M in 5.043400s
30 modules 4.354M (± 2.7%) i/s - 22.033M in 5.063839s
100 modules 1.434M (± 2.9%) i/s - 7.270M in 5.072531s
Comparison:
1 module: 12209958.3 i/s
30 modules: 4354217.8 i/s - 2.80x (± 0.00) slower
100 modules: 1434447.3 i/s - 8.51x (± 0.00) slower
```
Ruby 3.0 with cvar cache:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
1 module 1.641M i/100ms
30 modules 1.655M i/100ms
100 modules 1.620M i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
1 module 16.279M (± 3.8%) i/s - 82.038M in 5.046923s
30 modules 15.891M (± 3.9%) i/s - 79.459M in 5.007958s
100 modules 16.087M (± 3.6%) i/s - 81.005M in 5.041931s
Comparison:
1 module: 16279458.0 i/s
100 modules: 16087484.6 i/s - same-ish: difference falls within error
30 modules: 15891406.2 i/s - same-ish: difference falls within error
```
Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
RubyVM::AST.of(Thread::Backtrace::Location) returns a node that
corresponds to the location. Typically, the node is a method call, but
not always.
This change also includes iseq's dump/load support of node_ids for each
instructions.
This option makes the parser keep the original source as an array of
the original code lines. This feature exploits the mechanism of
`SCRIPT_LINES__` but records only the specified code that is passed to
RubyVM::AST.of or .parse, instead of recording all parsed program texts.
Rational literals are those integers suffixed with `r`. They tend to
be a part of more complex expressions like `123/456r`, but in theory
they can live alone. When such "bare" rational literals are passed to
case-when branch, we have to take care of them. Fixes [Bug #17854]
This change implements a cache for class variables. Previously there was
no cache for cvars. Cvar access is slow due to needing to travel all the
way up th ancestor tree before returning the cvar value. The deeper the
ancestor tree the slower cvar access will be.
The benefits of the cache are more visible with a higher number of
included modules due to the way Ruby looks up class variables. The
benchmark here includes 26 modules and shows with the cache, this branch
is 6.5x faster when accessing class variables.
```
compare-ruby: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-03-15T06:22:34Z master 9e5105ca45) [x86_64-darwin19]
built-ruby: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-03-15T12:12:44Z add-cache-for-clas.. c6be0093ae) [x86_64-darwin19]
| |compare-ruby|built-ruby|
|:--------|-----------:|---------:|
|vm_cvar | 5.681M| 36.980M|
| | -| 6.51x|
```
Benchmark.ips calling `ActiveRecord::Base.logger` from within a Rails
application. ActiveRecord::Base.logger has 71 ancestors. The more
ancestors a tree has, the more clear the speed increase. IE if Base had
only one ancestor we'd see no improvement. This benchmark is run on a
vanilla Rails application.
Benchmark code:
```ruby
require "benchmark/ips"
require_relative "config/environment"
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report "logger" do
ActiveRecord::Base.logger
end
end
```
Ruby 3.0 master / Rails 6.1:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
logger 155.251k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
```
Ruby 3.0 with cvar cache / Rails 6.1:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
logger 1.546M i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
logger 14.857M (± 4.8%) i/s - 74.198M in 5.006202s
```
Lastly we ran a benchmark to demonstate the difference between master
and our cache when the number of modules increases. This benchmark
measures 1 ancestor, 30 ancestors, and 100 ancestors.
Ruby 3.0 master:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
1 module 1.231M i/100ms
30 modules 432.020k i/100ms
100 modules 145.399k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
1 module 12.210M (± 2.1%) i/s - 61.553M in 5.043400s
30 modules 4.354M (± 2.7%) i/s - 22.033M in 5.063839s
100 modules 1.434M (± 2.9%) i/s - 7.270M in 5.072531s
Comparison:
1 module: 12209958.3 i/s
30 modules: 4354217.8 i/s - 2.80x (± 0.00) slower
100 modules: 1434447.3 i/s - 8.51x (± 0.00) slower
```
Ruby 3.0 with cvar cache:
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
1 module 1.641M i/100ms
30 modules 1.655M i/100ms
100 modules 1.620M i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
1 module 16.279M (± 3.8%) i/s - 82.038M in 5.046923s
30 modules 15.891M (± 3.9%) i/s - 79.459M in 5.007958s
100 modules 16.087M (± 3.6%) i/s - 81.005M in 5.041931s
Comparison:
1 module: 16279458.0 i/s
100 modules: 16087484.6 i/s - same-ish: difference falls within error
30 modules: 15891406.2 i/s - same-ish: difference falls within error
```
Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
Previously imemo_ast was handled as WB-protected which caused a segfault
of the following code:
# shareable_constant_value: literal
M0 = {}
M1 = {}
...
M100000 = {}
My analysis is here: `shareable_constant_value: literal` creates many
Hash instances during parsing, and add them to node_buffer of imemo_ast.
However, the contents are missed because imemo_ast is incorrectly
WB-protected.
This changeset makes imemo_ast as WB-unprotected.
Instead of rather euphemistic struct cast, just reomve the const
qualifier and assign directly. According to ISO/IEC 9899:2018 section
6.5 paragraph 7, `VALUE` and `const VALUE` are allowed to alias (but two
distinct structs are not, even when their structures are the same).
[Bug #17540]
* Rename `rb_scheduler` to `rb_fiber_scheduler`.
* Use public interface if available.
* Use `rb_check_funcall` where possible.
* Don't use `unblock` unless the fiber was non-blocking.
constant cache `IC` is accessed by non-atomic manner and there are
thread-safety issues, so Ruby 3.0 disables to use const cache on
non-main ractors.
This patch enables it by introducing `imemo_constcache` and allocates
it by every re-fill of const cache like `imemo_callcache`.
[Bug #17510]
Now `IC` only has one entry `IC::entry` and it points to
`iseq_inline_constant_cache_entry`, managed by T_IMEMO object.
`IC` is atomic data structure so `rb_mjit_before_vm_ic_update()` and
`rb_mjit_after_vm_ic_update()` is not needed.
Since we decided to only allowing specific warning categories,
there is no reason to have an API that accepts a general string,
as it is more error-prone. Switch to only allowing the specific
warning categories.
As rb_category_warn{,ing} are public API, this requires making
rb_warning_category_t public API as well.
`cd` is passed to method call functions to method invocation
functions, but `cd` can be manipulated by other ractors simultaneously
so it contains thread-safety issue.
To solve this issue, this patch stores `ci` and found `cc` to `calling`
and stops to pass `cd`.
ractor_copy() used rb_ary_modify() to make sure this array is not
sharing anything, but it also checks frozen flag. So frozen arrays
raises an error. To solve this issue, this patch introduces new
function rb_ary_cancel_sharing() which makes sure the array does not
share another array and it doesn't check frozen flag.
[Bug #17343]
A test is quoted from https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/3817
When the inline cache is written, the iv table will contain an entry for
the instance variable. If we get an inline cache hit, then we know the
iv table must contain a value for the index written to the inline cache.
If the index in the inline cache is larger than the list on the object,
but *smaller* than the iv index table on the class, then we can just
eagerly allocate the iv list to be the same size as the iv index table.
This avoids duplicate work of checking frozen as well as looking up the
index for the particular instance variable name.
* `GC.auto_compact=`, `GC.auto_compact` can be used to control when
compaction runs. Setting `auto_compact=` to true will cause
compaction to occurr duing major collections. At the moment,
compaction adds significant overhead to major collections, so please
test first!
[Feature #17176]
Introduce new method Ractor.make_shareable(obj) which tries to make
obj shareable object. Protocol is here.
(1) If obj is shareable, it is shareable.
(2) If obj is not a shareable object and if obj can be shareable
object if it is frozen, then freeze obj. If obj has reachable
objects (rs), do rs.each{|o| Ractor.make_shareable(o)}
recursively (recursion is not Ruby-level, but C-level).
(3) Otherwise, raise Ractor::Error. Now T_DATA is not a shareable
object even if the object is frozen.
If the method finished without error, given obj is marked as
a sharable object.
To allow makng a shareable frozen T_DATA object, then set
`RUBY_TYPED_FROZEN_SHAREABLE` as type->flags. On default,
this flag is not set. It means user defined T_DATA objects are
not allowed to become shareable objects when it is frozen.
You can make any object shareable by setting FL_SHAREABLE flag,
so if you know that the T_DATA object is shareable (== thread-safe),
set this flag, at creation time for example. `Ractor` object is one
example, which is not a frozen, but a shareable object.
* Support ArithmeticSequence in Array#slice
* Extract rb_range_component_beg_len
* Use rb_range_values to check Range object
* Fix ary_make_partial_step
* Fix for negative step cases
* range.c: Describe the role of err argument in rb_range_component_beg_len
* Raise a RangeError when an arithmetic sequence refers the outside of an array
[Feature #16812]
iv_index_tbl manages instance variable indexes (ID -> index).
This data structure should be synchronized with other ractors
so introduce some VM locks.
This patch also introduced atomic ivar cache used by
set/getinlinecache instructions. To make updating ivar cache (IVC),
we changed iv_index_tbl data structure to manage (ID -> entry)
and an entry points serial and index. IVC points to this entry so
that cache update becomes atomically.
* Enables Mutex to be used as synchronization between multiple Fibers
of the same Thread.
* With a Fiber scheduler we can yield to another Fiber on contended
Mutex#lock instead of blocking the entire thread.
* This also makes the behavior of Mutex consistent across CRuby, JRuby and TruffleRuby.
* [Feature #16792]
This commit introduces Ractor mechanism to run Ruby program in
parallel. See doc/ractor.md for more details about Ractor.
See ticket [Feature #17100] to see the implementation details
and discussions.
[Feature #17100]
This commit does not complete the implementation. You can find
many bugs on using Ractor. Also the specification will be changed
so that this feature is experimental. You will see a warning when
you make the first Ractor with `Ractor.new`.
I hope this feature can help programmers from thread-safety issues.
Previously, when an object is first initialized, ROBJECT_EMBED isn't
set. This means that for brand new objects, ROBJECT_NUMIV(obj) is 0 and
ROBJECT_IV_INDEX_TBL(obj) is NULL.
Previously, this combination meant that the inline cache would never be
initialized when setting an ivar on an object for the first time since
iv_index_tbl was NULL, and if it were it would never be used because
ROBJECT_NUMIV was 0. Both cases always fell through to the generic
rb_ivar_set which would then set the ROBJECT_EMBED flag and initialize
the ivar array.
This commit changes rb_class_allocate_instance to set the ROBJECT_EMBED
flag on the object initially and to initialize all members of the
embedded array to Qundef. This allows the inline cache to be set
correctly on first use and to be used on future uses.
This moves rb_class_allocate_instance to gc.c, so that it has access to
newobj_of. This seems appropriate given that there are other allocating
methods in this file (ex. rb_data_object_wrap, rb_imemo_new).
Former ROBJECT_IV_INDEX_TBL macro included RCLASS_IV_INDEX_TBL, which is
not disclosed to extension libraies. The macro was kind of broken. Why
not just deprecate it, and convert the internal use into an inline
function.
Before this commit, iclasses were "shady", or not protected by write
barriers. Because of that, the GC needs to spend more time marking these
objects than otherwise.
Applications that make heavy use of modules should see reduction in GC
time as they have a significant number of live iclasses on the heap.
- Put logic for iclass method table ownership into a function
- Remove calls to WB_UNPROTECT and insert write barriers for iclasses
This commit relies on the following invariant: for any non oirigin
iclass `I`, `RCLASS_M_TBL(I) == RCLASS_M_TBL(RBasic(I)->klass)`. This
invariant did not hold prior to 98286e9 for classes and modules that
have prepended modules.
[Feature #16984]
RARRAY_AREF has been a macro for reasons. We might not be able to
change that for public APIs, but why not relax the situation internally
to make it an inline function.
98286e9850 made it so that
`Module#include` allocates an origin iclass on each use. Since `include`
is widely used, the extra allocation can contribute significantly to
memory usage.
Instead of always allocating in anticipation of prepend, this change
takes a different approach. The new setup inserts a origin iclass into
the super chains of all the children of the module when prepend happens
for the first time.
rb_ensure_origin is made static again since now that adding an origin
now means walking over all usages, we want to limit the number of places
where we do it.
imemo_callcache and imemo_callinfo were not handled by the `objspace`
module and were showing up as "unknown" in the dump. Extract the code for
naming imemos and use that in both the GC and the `objspace` module.
Use ID instead of GENTRY for gvars.
Global variables are compiled into GENTRY (a pointer to struct
rb_global_entry). This patch replace this GENTRY to ID and
make the code simple.
We need to search GENTRY from ID every time (st_lookup), so
additional overhead will be introduced.
However, the performance of accessing global variables is not
important now a day and this simplicity helps Ractor development.
This fixes various issues when a module is included in or prepended
to a module or class, and then refined, or refined and then included
or prepended to a module or class.
Implement by renaming ensure_origin to rb_ensure_origin, making it
non-static, and calling it when refining a module.
Fix Module#initialize_copy to handle origins correctly. Previously,
Module#initialize_copy did not handle origins correctly. For example,
this code:
```ruby
module B; end
class A
def b; 2 end
prepend B
end
a = A.dup.new
class A
def b; 1 end
end
p a.b
```
Printed 1 instead of 2. This is because the super chain for
a.singleton_class was:
```
a.singleton_class
A.dup
B(iclass)
B(iclass origin)
A(origin) # not A.dup(origin)
```
The B iclasses would not be modified, so the includer entry would be
still be set to A and not A.dup.
This modifies things so that if the class/module has an origin,
all iclasses between the class/module and the origin are duplicated
and have the correct includer entry set, and the correct origin
is created.
This requires other changes to make sure all tests still pass:
* rb_undef_methods_from doesn't automatically handle classes with
origins, so pass it the origin for Comparable when undefing
methods in Complex. This fixed a failure in the Complex tests.
* When adding a method, the method cache was not cleared
correctly if klass has an origin. Clear the method cache for
the klass before switching to the origin of klass. This fixed
failures in the autoload tests related to overridding require,
without breaking the optimization tests. Also clear the method
cache for both the module and origin when removing a method.
* Module#include? is fixed to skip origin iclasses.
* Refinements are fixed to use the origin class of the module that
has an origin.
* RCLASS_REFINED_BY_ANY is removed as it was only used in a single
place and is no longer needed.
* Marshal#dump is fixed to skip iclass origins.
* rb_method_entry_make is fixed to handled overridden optimized
methods for modules that have origins.
Fixes [Bug #16852]
Allow the 'Dir.home' method to reliably locate the user's home directory when
all three of the following are true at the same time:
1. Ruby is running on a Unix-like OS
2. The $HOME environment variable is not set
3. The process is not a descendant of login(1) (or a work-alike)
The prior behavior was that the lookup could only work for login-descended
processes.
This is accomplished by looking up the user's record in the password database
by uid (getpwuid_r(3)) as a fallback to the lookup by name (getpwname_r(3))
which is still attempted first (based on the name, if any, returned by
getlogin_r(3)).
If getlogin_r(3), getpwnam_r(3), and/or getpwuid_r(3) is not available at
compile time, will fallback on using their respective non-*_r() variants:
getlogin(3), getpwnam(3), and/or getpwuid(3).
The rationale for attempting to do the lookup by name prior to doing it by uid
is to accommodate the possibility of multiple login names (each with its own
record in the password database, so each with a potentially different home
directory) being mapped to the same uid (as is explicitly allowed for by
POSIX; see getlogin(3posix)).
Preserves the existing behavior for login-descended processes, and adds the
new capability of having Dir.home being able to find the user's home directory
for non-login-descended processes.
Fixes [Bug #16787]
Related discussion:
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16787https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/3034
If a module has an origin, and that module is included in another
module or class, previously the iclass created for the module had
an origin pointer to the module's origin instead of the iclass's
origin.
Setting the origin pointer correctly requires using a stack, since
the origin iclass is not created until after the iclass itself.
Use a hidden ruby array to implement that stack.
Correctly assigning the origin pointers in the iclass caused a
use-after-free in GC. If a module with an origin is included
in a class, the iclass shares a method table with the module
and the iclass origin shares a method table with module origin.
Mark iclass origin with a flag that notes that even though the
iclass is an origin, it shares a method table, so the method table
should not be garbage collected. The shared method table will be
garbage collected when the module origin is garbage collected.
I've tested that this does not introduce a memory leak.
This change caused a VM assertion failure, which was traced to callable
method entries using the incorrect defined_class. Update
rb_vm_check_redefinition_opt_method and find_defined_class_by_owner
to treat iclass origins different than class origins to avoid this
issue.
This also includes a fix for Module#included_modules to skip
iclasses with origins.
Fixes [Bug #16736]
If a module has an origin, and that module is included in another
module or class, previously the iclass created for the module had
an origin pointer to the module's origin instead of the iclass's
origin.
Setting the origin pointer correctly requires using a stack, since
the origin iclass is not created until after the iclass itself.
Use a hidden ruby array to implement that stack.
Correctly assigning the origin pointers in the iclass caused a
use-after-free in GC. If a module with an origin is included
in a class, the iclass shares a method table with the module
and the iclass origin shares a method table with module origin.
Mark iclass origin with a flag that notes that even though the
iclass is an origin, it shares a method table, so the method table
should not be garbage collected. The shared method table will be
garbage collected when the module origin is garbage collected.
I've tested that this does not introduce a memory leak.
This also includes a fix for Module#included_modules to skip
iclasses with origins.
Fixes [Bug #16736]
This patch allows global variables that have been assigned in Ruby to
move. I added a new function for the GC to call that will update
global references and introduced a new callback in the global variable
struct for updating references.
Only pure Ruby global variables are supported right now, other
references will be pinned.
As fork(2) is deprecated, its calls must be guarded by
`COMPILER_WARNING_IGNORED(-Wdeprecated-declarations)`.
All usages of fork(2) in process have been alread guarded. A new call
to fork(2) was added in ruby.c with f22c4ff359.
This caused a build failure on Solaris 11.
It may hide a bug to guard big code unnecessarily, so this change
introduces a simple wrapper "rb_fork" whose definition is guarded, and
replaces all calls to fork(2) with the wrapper function.
According to MSVC manual (*1), cl.exe can skip including a header file
when that:
- contains #pragma once, or
- starts with #ifndef, or
- starts with #if ! defined.
GCC has a similar trick (*2), but it acts more stricter (e. g. there
must be _no tokens_ outside of #ifndef...#endif).
Sun C lacked #pragma once for a looong time. Oracle Developer Studio
12.5 finally implemented it, but we cannot assume such recent version.
This changeset modifies header files so that each of them include
strictly one #ifndef...#endif. I believe this is the most portable way
to trigger compiler optimizations. [Bug #16770]
*1: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/preprocessor/once
*2: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/cppinternals/Guard-Macros.html
As a semantics, Hash#each yields a 2-element array (pairs of keys and
values). So, `{ a: 1 }.each(&->(k, v) { })` should raise an exception
due to lambda's arity check.
However, the optimization that avoids Array allocation by using
rb_yield_values for blocks whose arity is more than 1 (introduced at
b9d2960337 and some commits), seemed to
overlook the lambda case, and wrongly allowed the code above to work.
This change experimentally attempts to make it strict; now the code
above raises an ArgumentError. This is an incompatible change; if the
compatibility issue is bigger than our expectation, it may be reverted
(until Ruby 3.0 release).
[Bug #12706]
This patch contains several ideas:
(1) Disposable inline method cache (IMC) for race-free inline method cache
* Making call-cache (CC) as a RVALUE (GC target object) and allocate new
CC on cache miss.
* This technique allows race-free access from parallel processing
elements like RCU.
(2) Introduce per-Class method cache (pCMC)
* Instead of fixed-size global method cache (GMC), pCMC allows flexible
cache size.
* Caching CCs reduces CC allocation and allow sharing CC's fast-path
between same call-info (CI) call-sites.
(3) Invalidate an inline method cache by invalidating corresponding method
entries (MEs)
* Instead of using class serials, we set "invalidated" flag for method
entry itself to represent cache invalidation.
* Compare with using class serials, the impact of method modification
(add/overwrite/delete) is small.
* Updating class serials invalidate all method caches of the class and
sub-classes.
* Proposed approach only invalidate the method cache of only one ME.
See [Feature #16614] for more details.
Now, rb_call_info contains how to call the method with tuple of
(mid, orig_argc, flags, kwarg). Most of cases, kwarg == NULL and
mid+argc+flags only requires 64bits. So this patch packed
rb_call_info to VALUE (1 word) on such cases. If we can not
represent it in VALUE, then use imemo_callinfo which contains
conventional callinfo (rb_callinfo, renamed from rb_call_info).
iseq->body->ci_kw_size is removed because all of callinfo is VALUE
size (packed ci or a pointer to imemo_callinfo).
To access ci information, we need to use these functions:
vm_ci_mid(ci), _flag(ci), _argc(ci), _kwarg(ci).
struct rb_call_info_kw_arg is renamed to rb_callinfo_kwarg.
rb_funcallv_with_cc() and rb_method_basic_definition_p_with_cc()
is temporary removed because cd->ci should be marked.
ISO/IEC 9899:1999 section 6.5.7 states that "If the value of the right
operand is negative or is greater than or equal to the width of the
promoted left operand, the behavior is undefined". So we have to take
care of such situations.
This has not been a problem because contemporary C compilers are
extraordinary smart to compile the series of shifts into a single
ROTLQ/ROTRQ machine instruction. In contrast to what C says those
instructions have fully defined behaviour for all possible inputs.
Hence it has been quite difficult to observe the undefined-ness of such
situations. But undefined is undefined. We should not rely on such
target-specific assumptions.
We are fixing the situation by carefully avoiding shifts with out-of-
range values. At least GCC since 4.6.3 and Clang since 8.0 can issue
the exact same instructions like before the changeset.
Also in case of Intel processors, there supposedly be intrinsics named
_rotr/_rotl that do exactly what we need. They, in practice, are absent
on Clang before 9.x so we cannot blindly use. But we can at least save
MSVC.
See also:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=57157https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=17332
Replaces `#ifdef _MSC_VER` with more accurate version checks. Also,
`defined(_WIN64) && defined(__AVX2__)` is redundant because there is no
such tihng like a 32bit AVX2 machine.
This removes the warnings added in 2.7, and changes the behavior
so that a final positional hash is not treated as keywords or
vice-versa.
To handle the arg_setup_block splat case correctly with keyword
arguments, we need to check if we are taking a keyword hash.
That case didn't have a test, but it affects real-world code,
so add a test for it.
This removes rb_empty_keyword_given_p() and related code, as
that is not needed in Ruby 3. The empty keyword case is the
same as the no keyword case in Ruby 3.
This changes rb_scan_args to implement keyword argument
separation for C functions when the : character is used.
For backwards compatibility, it returns a duped hash.
This is a bad idea for performance, but not duping the hash
breaks at least Enumerator::ArithmeticSequence#inspect.
Instead of having RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS be a number,
simplify the code by just making it be rb_keyword_given_p().
Noticed that internal/stdbool.h and addr2line.c are the only two place
where missing/stdbool.h is included. Why not delete the file so that
we can merge internal/stdbool.h and missing/stdbool.h into one.
Saves comitters' daily life by avoid #include-ing everything from
internal.h to make each file do so instead. This would significantly
speed up incremental builds.
We take the following inclusion order in this changeset:
1. "ruby/config.h", where _GNU_SOURCE is defined (must be the very
first thing among everything).
2. RUBY_EXTCONF_H if any.
3. Standard C headers, sorted alphabetically.
4. Other system headers, maybe guarded by #ifdef
5. Everything else, sorted alphabetically.
Exceptions are those win32-related headers, which tend not be self-
containing (headers have inclusion order dependencies).
These headers need no rewrite. Just add some minor tweaks, like
addition of #include lines. Mainly cosmetic.
TIMET_MAX_PLUS_ONE was deleted because the macro was used from only
one place (directly write expression there).
Annotated MJIT_FUNC_EXPORTED functions as such. Declaration of
rb_sym_to_proc is moved into this file because the function is defined
in proc.c rather than string.c.
Improved readability by reducing the use of macros. Also moved some
part of internal/compilers.h into this file, because it seems to be the
right place for them.
This file containes other materials than in compile.c. I could perhaps
split them into files, but felt overkill. Just add comments that
describe the situations.
This file has almost nothing to do. Added some #ifdef lines and
rearranged file contents.
Those macros are unable to translate into inline functions, because they
are used as lvalues of assignments.
Reduce macros to make them inline functions, as well as mark
MJIT_FUNC_EXPORTED functions explicitly as such.
Definition of ar_hint_t is simplified. This has been the only possible
definition so far.
Improving readability by converting some macros into inline functions.
Also improved support for recent x86_64 processors, which have better
instructions for the purposes.
With these macros implemented we can write codes just like we can assume
the compiler being clang. MSC_VERSION_SINCE is defined to implement
those macros, but turned out to be handy for other places. The -fdeclspec
compiler flag is necessary for clang to properly handle __has_declspec().
Now that we no longer support old compilers, we can safely delete
several obsolete #ifdef gurads. Also because (as of writing) it is
impossible to compile the program using C++ compilers, lets just
entirely prohibit __cplusplus to reduce # of LOCs.
Note however that we still cannot eliminate __STDC_VERSION__ checks,
because MSVC does not define it, saying its C99 support is partial.
See also https://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/vstudio/en-US/53a4fd75-9f97-48b2-aa63-2e2e5a15efa3
One day, I could not resist the way it was written. I finally started
to make the code clean. This changeset is the beginning of a series of
housekeeping commits. It is a simple refactoring; split internal.h into
files, so that we can divide and concur in the upcoming commits. No
lines of codes are either added or removed, except the obvious file
headers/footers. The generated binary is identical to the one before.