The logic around blocking_region_begin is confusing to me,
but the goal of this patch is to ensure rb_sigwait_fd_get
and rb_sigwait_fd_put are matched.
In other words, we don't want a thread to hold sigwait_fd
forever if an exception is raised while calling select()
or ppoll().
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64550 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
I updated the patch with documentation but forgot about it,
earlier :x
[ruby-core:88616] [Misc #15014]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64535 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Relying on "struct timespec" was too annoying API-wise and
used more stack space. "double" was a bit wacky w.r.t rounding
in the past, so now we'll switch to using a 64-bit type.
Unsigned 64-bit integer is able to give us over nearly 585
years of range with nanoseconds. This range is good enough
for the Linux kernel internal time representation, so it
ought to be good enough for us.
This reduces the stack usage of functions while GVL is held
(and thus subject to marking) on x86-64 Linux (with ppoll):
rb_wait_for_single_fd 120 => 104
do_select 120 => 88
[ruby-core:88582] [Misc #15014]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64533 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Based on r64478, any regular user creating more than 1024 pipes
on Linux will end up with tiny pipes with only a single page
capacity. So avoid wasting user resources and use lighter
eventfd on Linux.
[ruby-core:88563] [Misc #15011]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64527 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Line coverage was based on special instruction "tracecoverage".
Now, instead, it uses the mechanism of trace hook [Feature #14104].
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64509 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
When coverage measurement is enabled, the compiler makes each iseq have
a reference to the counter array of coverage.
Even after coverage measurement is disabled, the reference is kept.
And, if coverage measurement is restarted, a coverage hook will increase
the counter. This is completely meaningless; it brings just overhead.
To remove this meaninglessness, this change removes all the reference
when coverage measuement is stopped.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64504 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Following ko1's lead in r59192, this gets rid of non-obvious
assignments which happen inside macros.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64490 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
According to r52446, it is only necessary for the current item (@i),
not the `@nxt` parameter for list_for_each_safe.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64486 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
It's possible for the ubf_list_head to be populated with dead
threads at fork or the ubf_list_lock to be held, so reinitialize
both at startup.
And while we're at it, use a static initializer at startup
to save a library call and kill some ifdef.
[ruby-core:88578] [Bug #15013]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64485 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
select(2) needs the nfds argument to be one higher than the
largest FD in the sets :x
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64475 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
We do not want to risk switching threads before going to sleep
because it can cause unexpected wakeups and put us in an
unexpected state when used with ConditionVariable.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64464 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Having threads switch before we sleep can cause applications
to misread the state of the thread. Now, we are consistent
with blocking_region_begin behavior and change th->status
AFTER checking interrupts.
Maybe this can fix [Bug #15002]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64449 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Spurious interrupts from SIGCHLD cause Mutex#sleep (via
ConditionVariable#wait) to return early and breaks some use
cases. Since these are outside the programs's control with
MJIT, we will only consider pending interrupts (e.g. those
from Thread#run) and signals which cause a Ruby-level Signal.trap
handler to fire as "spurious" wakeups.
[ruby-core:88537] [Feature #15002]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64444 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Same reasoning as the disarm in rb_sigwait_fd_get, the current
thread is already processing signals, so we do not need
UBF_TIMER to continually kick the process, anymore.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
On a 64-bit system, this reduces rb_thread_t from 536 to 520 bytes.
Depending on the allocation, this can reduce cacheline access
for checking the abort_on_exception, report_on_exception and
pending_interrupt_queue_checked flags.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64376 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This reverts commit 194a6a2c68 (r64203).
Race conditions which caused the original reversion will be fixed
in the subsequent commit.
[ruby-core:88360] [Misc #14937]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64352 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Saves a syscall and slightly improves vm_thread_condvar1
benchmark slightly (more improvements on the way):
r64170 this patch
vm_thread_condvar1 0.917 1.065
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64185 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
We need to be able to perform periodic ubf_list wakeups when a
thread is sleeping and waiting on signals.
[ruby-core:88088] [Misc #14937] [Bug #5343]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64115 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
We can't always designate a timer thread, so any sleepers must
also perform ubf wakeups. Note: a similar change needs to be
made for rb_thread_fd_select and rb_wait_for_single_fd.
[ruby-core:88088] [Misc #14937] [Bug #5343]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64111 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
thread_pthread.c relies on ppoll for rb_sigwait_sleep, so ensure
the compatibility wrapper is available for it.
[Bug #14950]
Reported-by: SHIBATA Hiroshi <hsbt@ruby-lang.org>
Reported-by: Greg L <Greg.mpls@gmail.com>
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64110 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
thread_pthread.c relies on ppoll for rb_sigwait_sleep, so ensure
the compatibility wrapper is available for it.
Reported-by: SHIBATA Hiroshi <hsbt@ruby-lang.org>
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64109 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
To reduce resource use and reduce CI failure; remove
timer-thread. Single-threaded Ruby processes (including forked
children) will never see extra thread overhead. This prevents
glibc and jemalloc from going into multi-threaded mode and
initializing locks or causing fragmentation via arena explosion.
The GVL is implements its own wait-queue as a ccan/list to
permit controlling wakeup order. Timeslice under contention is
handled by a designated timer thread (similar to choosing a
"patrol_thread" for current deadlock checking).
There is only one self-pipe, now, as wakeups for timeslice are
done independently using condition variables. This reduces FD
pressure slightly.
Signal handling is handled directly by a Ruby Thread (instead
of timer-thread) by exposing signal self-pipe to callers of
rb_thread_fd_select, native_sleep, rb_wait_for_single_fd, etc...
Acquiring, using, and releasing the self-pipe is exposed via 4
new internal functions:
1) rb_sigwait_fd_get - exclusively acquire timer_thread_pipe.normal[0]
2) rb_sigwait_fd_sleep - sleep and wait for signal (and no other FDs)
3) rb_sigwait_fd_put - release acquired result from rb_sigwait_fd_get
4) rb_sigwait_fd_migrate - migrate signal handling to another thread
after calling rb_sigwait_fd_put.
rb_sigwait_fd_migrate is necessary for waitpid callers because
only one thread can wait on self-pipe at a time, otherwise a
deadlock will occur if threads fight over the self-pipe.
TRAP_INTERRUPT_MASK is now set for the main thread directly in
signal handler via rb_thread_wakeup_timer_thread.
Originally, I wanted to use POSIX timers
(timer_create/timer_settime) for this. Unfortunately, this
proved unfeasible as Mutex#sleep resumes on spurious wakeups and
test/thread/test_cv.rb::test_condvar_timed_wait failed. Using
pthread_sigmask to mask out SIGVTALRM fixed that test, but
test/fiddle/test_function.rb::test_nogvl_poll proved there'd be
some unavoidable (and frequent) incompatibilities from that
approach.
Finally, this allows us to drop thread_destruct_lock and
interrupt current ec directly.
We don't need to rely on vm->thread_destruct_lock or a coherent
vm->running_thread on any platform. Separate timer-thread for
time slice and signal handling is relegated to thread_win32.c,
now.
[ruby-core:88088] [Misc #14937]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64107 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
If we keep ubf set after unregistering, there is a window for
other threads (including timer thread) to put this thread back
on the ubf_list right away. Entering ubf_list unexpectedly
after GVL acquisition may cause spurious wakeup and trigger
unexpected behavior.
Finally, clear ubf before acquiring GVL, to since ubf is useless
during GVL acquisition anyways and we don't want to waste cycles
in other threads calling ubf for useless work.
[ruby-core:88141] [Bug #14945]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64083 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
There's no need to resize each rb_fdset_t to match the size of
the biggest one. This can allow some small memory savings if
watching several sets of FDs simultaneously.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64017 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
When do_select is interrupted and raise happens from
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS_BLOCKING, the original FD sets we copied
do not get freed, leading to a memory leak. Wrap up all the
FD sets into a Ruby object to ensure the GC can release an
allocations made for rb_fdset_t.
This leak existed since Ruby 2.0.0 (r36430)
[Bug #14929]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@64007 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
pthread_atfork is not idempotent and repeatedly calling it
causes it to register the same hook repeatedly; leading to
unbound memory growth.
Ruby already has a (confusing-named) internal API for to call
in the forked child process: rb_thread_atfork
Call the MJIT child_after_fork hook inside that to prevent
unbound growth with the following loop:
loop do
RubyVM::MJIT.pause
RubyVM::MJIT.resume
end
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63884 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Round up non-zero <1ms timeouts to 1ms and use INT_MAX instead
of infinite (-1) for extremely large timeouts. All of our
ppoll/select callers are able to handle spurious wakeups,
anyways.
This avoids excessive CPU usage and busy waits with short
timeouts to rb_wait_for_single_fd.
CPU usage with the following script is significantly reduced
for systems with "#undef HAVE_PPOLL":
require 'io/wait'
r, w = IO.pipe
Thread.new { loop { r.wait_readable(0.000001) } }.join(5)
exit!(0)
Low-resolution in poll(2) still sucks, though...
Note: I don't see the value in making a similar change to
time_timeval of a <1us sleep is attempted because of GVL
release and syscall latency.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63867 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Rename it to "ruby_ppoll" so it looks more obvious in debuggers.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63866 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Reading win32/win32.c waitpid implementation, maybe waitpid(-1, ...)
on that platform will never conflict with mjit use of waitpid.
In any case, I've added WAITPID_USE_SIGCHLD macro to vm_core.h
so it can be easy for Linux/BSD users to test (hopefully!)
win32-compatible code.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63855 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
The change is unstable on Windows. Please re-commit it when it correctly
supports Windows.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63852 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Use a global SIGCHLD handler to guard all callers of rb_waitpid.
To work safely with multi-threaded programs, we introduce a
VM-wide waitpid_lock to be acquired BEFORE fork/vfork spawns the
process. This is to be combined with the new ruby_waitpid_locked
function used by mjit.c in a non-Ruby thread.
Ruby-level SIGCHLD handlers registered with Signal.trap(:CHLD)
continues to work as before and there should be no regressions
in any existing use cases.
Splitting the wait queues for PID > 0 and groups (PID <= 0)
ensures we favor PID > 0 callers.
The disabling of SIGCHLD in rb_f_system is longer necessary,
as we use deferred signal handling and no longer make ANY
blocking waitpid syscalls in other threads which could "beat"
the waitpid call made by rb_f_system.
We prevent SIGCHLD from firing in normal Ruby Threads and only
enable it in the timer-thread, to prevent spurious wakeups
from in test/-ext-/gvl/test_last_thread.rb with MJIT enabled.
I've tried to guard as much of the code for RUBY_SIGCHLD==0
using C "if" statements rather than CPP "#if" so to reduce
the likelyhood of portability problems as the compiler will
see more code.
We also work to suppress false-positives from
Process.wait(-1, Process::WNOHANG) to quiets warnings from
spec/ruby/core/process/wait2_spec.rb with MJIT enabled.
Lastly, we must implement rb_grantpt for ext/pty. We need a
MJIT-compatible way of supporting grantpt(3) which may spawn
the `pt_chown' binary and call waitpid(2) on it.
[ruby-core:87605] [Ruby trunk Bug#14867]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63758 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
No point in wasting cycles updating the timespec when not
checking on spurious wakeups.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63719 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
I can't seem to reproduce the maybe-uninitialized warning on
gcc 7 or 8 on Debian sid (7.3.0-16 / 8-20180425-1 r259628),
so the guard from r62305 is dropped.
* thread.c (timeout_prepare): hoist out from do_select
(do_select): ditto
(rb_wait_for_single_fd): use timeout_prepare
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63672 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Same thing as https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14798
My easily-confused mind gets function call ordering confused
easily:
sleep_forever(..., TRUE, FALSE);
sleep_forever(..., FALSE, TRUE);
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63647 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
We must not leak EINTR to users in case a signal hits a
ppoll/select caller right when (or just before) the timeout
expires. In other words, the timeout should take precedence
over the -1 result from ppoll or select.
We also try one more time in case of EINTR with a zero timeout,
since technically the syscall finished before timing out if
it returns EINTR.
Regression appeared in r62457
("thread.c (update_timespec): use timespec_update_expire",
commit e6bf0128ad)
and is not in any stable release of Ruby.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63462 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This allows native_sleep to use less stack (80 -> 64 bytes on
x86-64) for GVL_UNLOCK_BEGIN/END. For future APIs, we will pass
`ec` or `th` around anyways, so the BLOCKING_REGION change
should be beneficial in the future.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63448 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
FreeBSD 11.0+ supports ppoll, so we may use it after accounting
for portability differences in how it treats POLLOUT vs POLLHUP
events as mutually exclusive (as documented in the FreeBSD
poll(2) manpage).
For waiting on high-numbered single FDs, this should put
FreeBSD on equal footing with Linux and should allow cheaper
FD readiness checking with sleepy GC in the future.
* thread.c (USE_POLL, POLLERR_SET): define for FreeBSD 11.0+
(rb_wait_for_single_fd): return all requested events on POLLERR_SET
io.c (USE_POLL): define for FreeBSD 11.0+
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63427 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
While we cannot use LIST_HEAD since r63312, we can at
least use list_head_init to make our code more readable.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63314 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Address of a variable whose storage duration is `auto` is _not_ a
compile time constant, according to ISO 9899 section 6.4.
LIST_HEAD takes such thing. You can't use it to declare local
variables.
Interestingly, address of a static variable _is_ a compile time
constant. So a declaration like `static LIST_HEAD..` is
completely legal even in C90.
In C99 and newer, this is not a constraint violation.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63312 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
It is unsafe to release GVL and call rb_notify_fd_close after
close(2) on any given FD. FDs (file descriptor) may be recycled
in other threads immediately after close() to point to a different
file description. Note the distinction between "file description"
and "file descriptor".
th-1 | th-2
-------------------------------+---------------------------------------
io_close_fptr |
rb_notify_fd_close(fd) |
fptr_finalize_flush |
close(fd) |
rb_thread_schedule |
| fd reused (via pipe/open/socket/etc)
rb_notify_fd_close(fd) |
| sees "stream closed" exception
| for DIFFERENT file description
* thread.c (rb_thread_io_blocking_region): adjust comment for list_del
* thread.c (rb_notify_fd_close): give busy list to caller
* thread.c (rb_thread_fd_close): loop on busy list
* io.c (io_close_fptr): do not call rb_thread_fd_close on invalid FD
* io.c (io_reopen): use rb_thread_fd_close
Fixes: r57422 ("io.c: close before wait")
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63216 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Instead of maintaining linked-lists to store all
rb_queue/rb_szqueue/rb_condvar structs; store only a fork_gen
serial number to simplify management of these items.
This reduces initialization costs and avoids the up-front cost
of resetting all Queue/SizedQueue/ConditionVariable objects at
fork while saving 8 bytes per-structure on 64-bit. There are no
savings on 32-bit.
* thread.c (rb_thread_atfork_internal): remove rb_thread_sync_reset_all call
* thread_sync.c (rb_thread_sync_reset_all): remove
* thread_sync.c (queue_live): remove
* thread_sync.c (queue_free): remove
* thread_sync.c (struct rb_queue): s/live/fork_gen/
* thread_sync.c (queue_data_type): use default free
* thread_sync.c (queue_alloc): remove list_add
* thread_sync.c (queue_fork_check): new function
* thread_sync.c (queue_ptr): call queue_fork_check
* thread_sync.c (szqueue_free): remove
* thread_sync.c (szqueue_data_type): use default free
* thread_sync.c (szqueue_alloc): remove list_add
* thread_sync.c (szqueue_ptr): check fork_gen via queue_fork_check
* thread_sync.c (struct rb_condvar): s/live/fork_gen/
* thread_sync.c (condvar_free): remove
* thread_sync.c (cv_data_type): use default free
* thread_sync.c (condvar_ptr): check fork_gen
* thread_sync.c (condvar_alloc): remove list_add
[ruby-core:86316] [Bug #14634]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63215 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Instead of allocating and registering the altstack in different
places, do it together to reduce code and improve readability.
When thread cache is enabled, storing altstack in rb_thread_t
is wasteful and we may reuse altstack in the same pthread.
This also lets us clearly allow use of xmalloc to allow GC to
recover from ENOMEM.
[ruby-core:85621] [Feature #14487]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63213 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This is fairly non-intrusive bugfix to prevent children
from trying to reach into thread stacks of the parent.
I will probably reuse this idea and redo r62934, too
(same bug).
* vm_core.h (typedef struct rb_vm_struct): add fork_gen counter
* thread.c (rb_thread_atfork_internal): increment fork_gen
* variable.c (struct autoload_data_i): store fork_gen
* variable.c (check_autoload_data): remove (replaced with get_...)
* variable.c (get_autoload_data): check fork_gen when retrieving
* variable.c (check_autoload_required): use get_autoload_data
* variable.c (rb_autoloading_value): ditto
* variable.c (rb_autoload_p): ditto
* variable.c (current_autoload_data): ditto
* variable.c (autoload_reset): reset fork_gen, adjust indent
* variable.c (rb_autoload_load): set fork_gen when setting state
* test/ruby/test_autoload.rb (test_autoload_fork): new test
[ruby-core:86410] [Bug #14634]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63210 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* cont.c (root_fiber_alloc): call `ConvertThreadToFiber()` here.
`rb_fiber_t` for root_fiber is allocated before running Threads.
Fiber objects wrapping this rb_fiber_t for root_fiber are created
when root Fiber object is required explicitly (for example, Fiber
switching and so on). We can put calling `ConvertThreadToFiber()`.
In other words, we can pending `ConvertThreadToFiber()`
until Fiber objects are created.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63090 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* cont.c (rb_threadptr_root_fiber_setup): divide into two functions:
* rb_threadptr_root_fiber_setup_by_parent(): called by the parent thread.
* rb_threadptr_root_fiber_setup_by_child(): called by the created thread.
`rb_threadptr_root_fiber_setup()` is called by the parent thread and
set fib->fib_handle by ConvertThreadToFiber() on the parent thread on
Windows enveironment.
This means that root_fib->fib_handle of child thread is initialized
with parent thread's Fiber handle. Furthermore, second call of
`ConvertThreadToFiber()` for the same thread fails.
This patch solves this weird situateion. However, maybe we can make more
clean code.
* thread.c (thread_start_func_2): call
`rb_threadptr_root_fiber_setup_by_child()` at thread initialize routine.
* vm.c (th_init): call `rb_threadptr_root_fiber_setup_by_parent()`.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@63073 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
rb_ensure is insufficient cleanup for fork and we must
reinitialize all waitqueues in the child process.
Unfortunately this increases the footprint of ConditionVariable,
Queue and SizedQueue by 8 bytes on 32-bit (16 bytes on 64-bit).
[ruby-core:86316] [Bug #14634]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62934 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (unblock_function_set): check interrupts just once
during raising exceptions, as they are deferred since r16651.
[ruby-core:85939] [Bug #14577]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62673 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
We must not maintain references to threads in the parent process
in any mutexes held by the child process.
* thread_sync.c (rb_mutex_cleanup_keeping_mutexes): new function
* thread.c (rb_thread_atfork): cleanup keeping mutexes
[ruby-core:85940] [Bug #14578]
Fixes: r58604 (commit 3586c9e087)
("reduce rb_mutex_t size from 160 to 80 bytes on 64-bit")
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62668 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
thread.c already includes vm_core.h where USE_SIGALTSTACK is
defined, #include it explicitly (eval_intern.h already includes
it)
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62473 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Users may subtract and round into negative values when using
Thread#join, so clamp the timeout to zero to avoid infinite/long
timeouts.
Note: other methods such as Kernel#sleep and IO.select will
raise on negative values, but Thread#join is an outlier *shrug*
This restores Ruby 2.5 (and earlier) behavior.
Fixes: r62182 (commit c915390b95)
("thread.c: avoid FP for Thread#join")
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62462 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Using:
strace ruby -e 'Thread.new { sleep }.join(Float::INFINITY)'
Will show a difference in futex() syscall args (not that I'd
ever advocate Float::INFINITY as a Thread#join arg :P)
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62461 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
No need to waste cycles updating timespecs if there's no expiry.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62458 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This hopefully improves readability when comparing timespecs.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62456 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Naming the constant timespec as "end" should make it more
apparent is is an absolute time. Update callers, too.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62455 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (timeval_for): cast to int32_t instead of suseconds_t,
which is not defined non-POSIX platforms.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62276 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (timeval_for): tv_usec is suseconds_t which may be
smaller than long.
* thread_pthread.c (native_cond_timeout): ret is now used in
CLOCK_MONOTONIC case only.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62275 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This results in fewer conversion on common modern systems with
support for clock_gettime, pthread_cond_timedwait and ppoll.
gettimeofday is declared obsolete by POSIX.1-2008, so it is yet
another reason to move away from it. This also appears to result
in the reduction of compatibility code required for dealing
with inconsistent implementations of "struct timeval".tv_sec
In the future, this will also result in fewer conversions for
kqueue and pselect if we elect to use them.
[ruby-core:85416] [Feature #14452]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62272 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
which has been developed by Takashi Kokubun <takashikkbn@gmail> as
YARV-MJIT. Many of its bugs are fixed by wanabe <s.wanabe@gmail.com>.
This JIT compiler is designed to be a safe migration path to introduce
JIT compiler to MRI. So this commit does not include any bytecode
changes or dynamic instruction modifications, which are done in original
MJIT.
This commit even strips off some aggressive optimizations from
YARV-MJIT, and thus it's slower than YARV-MJIT too. But it's still
fairly faster than Ruby 2.5 in some benchmarks (attached below).
Note that this JIT compiler passes `make test`, `make test-all`, `make
test-spec` without JIT, and even with JIT. Not only it's perfectly safe
with JIT disabled because it does not replace VM instructions unlike
MJIT, but also with JIT enabled it stably runs Ruby applications
including Rails applications.
I'm expecting this version as just "initial" JIT compiler. I have many
optimization ideas which are skipped for initial merging, and you may
easily replace this JIT compiler with a faster one by just replacing
mjit_compile.c. `mjit_compile` interface is designed for the purpose.
common.mk: update dependencies for mjit_compile.c.
internal.h: declare `rb_vm_insn_addr2insn` for MJIT.
vm.c: exclude some definitions if `-DMJIT_HEADER` is provided to
compiler. This avoids to include some functions which take a long time
to compile, e.g. vm_exec_core. Some of the purpose is achieved in
transform_mjit_header.rb (see `IGNORED_FUNCTIONS`) but others are
manually resolved for now. Load mjit_helper.h for MJIT header.
mjit_helper.h: New. This is a file used only by JIT-ed code. I'll
refactor `mjit_call_cfunc` later.
vm_eval.c: add some #ifdef switches to skip compiling some functions
like Init_vm_eval.
win32/mkexports.rb: export thread/ec functions, which are used by MJIT.
include/ruby/defines.h: add MJIT_FUNC_EXPORTED macro alis to clarify
that a function is exported only for MJIT.
array.c: export a function used by MJIT.
bignum.c: ditto.
class.c: ditto.
compile.c: ditto.
error.c: ditto.
gc.c: ditto.
hash.c: ditto.
iseq.c: ditto.
numeric.c: ditto.
object.c: ditto.
proc.c: ditto.
re.c: ditto.
st.c: ditto.
string.c: ditto.
thread.c: ditto.
variable.c: ditto.
vm_backtrace.c: ditto.
vm_insnhelper.c: ditto.
vm_method.c: ditto.
I would like to improve maintainability of function exports, but I
believe this way is acceptable as initial merging if we clarify the
new exports are for MJIT (so that we can use them as TODO list to fix)
and add unit tests to detect unresolved symbols.
I'll add unit tests of JIT compilations in succeeding commits.
Author: Takashi Kokubun <takashikkbn@gmail.com>
Contributor: wanabe <s.wanabe@gmail.com>
Part of [Feature #14235]
---
* Known issues
* Code generated by gcc is faster than clang. The benchmark may be worse
in macOS. Following benchmark result is provided by gcc w/ Linux.
* Performance is decreased when Google Chrome is running
* JIT can work on MinGW, but it doesn't improve performance at least
in short running benchmark.
* Currently it doesn't perform well with Rails. We'll try to fix this
before release.
---
* Benchmark reslts
Benchmarked with:
Intel 4.0GHz i7-4790K with 16GB memory under x86-64 Ubuntu 8 Cores
- 2.0.0-p0: Ruby 2.0.0-p0
- r62186: Ruby trunk (early 2.6.0), before MJIT changes
- JIT off: On this commit, but without `--jit` option
- JIT on: On this commit, and with `--jit` option
** Optcarrot fps
Benchmark: https://github.com/mame/optcarrot
| |2.0.0-p0 |r62186 |JIT off |JIT on |
|:--------|:--------|:--------|:--------|:--------|
|fps |37.32 |51.46 |51.31 |58.88 |
|vs 2.0.0 |1.00x |1.38x |1.37x |1.58x |
** MJIT benchmarks
Benchmark: https://github.com/benchmark-driver/mjit-benchmarks
(Original: https://github.com/vnmakarov/ruby/tree/rtl_mjit_branch/MJIT-benchmarks)
| |2.0.0-p0 |r62186 |JIT off |JIT on |
|:----------|:--------|:--------|:--------|:--------|
|aread |1.00 |1.09 |1.07 |2.19 |
|aref |1.00 |1.13 |1.11 |2.22 |
|aset |1.00 |1.50 |1.45 |2.64 |
|awrite |1.00 |1.17 |1.13 |2.20 |
|call |1.00 |1.29 |1.26 |2.02 |
|const2 |1.00 |1.10 |1.10 |2.19 |
|const |1.00 |1.11 |1.10 |2.19 |
|fannk |1.00 |1.04 |1.02 |1.00 |
|fib |1.00 |1.32 |1.31 |1.84 |
|ivread |1.00 |1.13 |1.12 |2.43 |
|ivwrite |1.00 |1.23 |1.21 |2.40 |
|mandelbrot |1.00 |1.13 |1.16 |1.28 |
|meteor |1.00 |2.97 |2.92 |3.17 |
|nbody |1.00 |1.17 |1.15 |1.49 |
|nest-ntimes|1.00 |1.22 |1.20 |1.39 |
|nest-while |1.00 |1.10 |1.10 |1.37 |
|norm |1.00 |1.18 |1.16 |1.24 |
|nsvb |1.00 |1.16 |1.16 |1.17 |
|red-black |1.00 |1.02 |0.99 |1.12 |
|sieve |1.00 |1.30 |1.28 |1.62 |
|trees |1.00 |1.14 |1.13 |1.19 |
|while |1.00 |1.12 |1.11 |2.41 |
** Discourse's script/bench.rb
Benchmark: https://github.com/discourse/discourse/blob/v1.8.7/script/bench.rb
NOTE: Rails performance was somehow a little degraded with JIT for now.
We should fix this.
(At least I know opt_aref is performing badly in JIT and I have an idea
to fix it. Please wait for the fix.)
*** JIT off
Your Results: (note for timings- percentile is first, duration is second in millisecs)
categories_admin:
50: 17
75: 18
90: 22
99: 29
home_admin:
50: 21
75: 21
90: 27
99: 40
topic_admin:
50: 17
75: 18
90: 22
99: 32
categories:
50: 35
75: 41
90: 43
99: 77
home:
50: 39
75: 46
90: 49
99: 95
topic:
50: 46
75: 52
90: 56
99: 101
*** JIT on
Your Results: (note for timings- percentile is first, duration is second in millisecs)
categories_admin:
50: 19
75: 21
90: 25
99: 33
home_admin:
50: 24
75: 26
90: 30
99: 35
topic_admin:
50: 19
75: 20
90: 25
99: 30
categories:
50: 40
75: 44
90: 48
99: 76
home:
50: 42
75: 48
90: 51
99: 89
topic:
50: 49
75: 55
90: 58
99: 99
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62197 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
that allows to JIT-compile Ruby methods by generating C code and
using C compiler. See the first comment of mjit.c to know what this
file does.
mjit.c is authored by Vladimir Makarov <vmakarov@redhat.com>.
After he invented great method JIT infrastructure for MRI as MJIT,
Lars Kanis <lars@greiz-reinsdorf.de> sent the patch to support MinGW
in MJIT. In addition to merging it, I ported pthread to Windows native
threads. Now this MJIT infrastructure can be compiled on Visual Studio.
This commit simplifies mjit.c to decrease code at initial merge. For
example, this commit does not provide multiple JIT threads support.
We can resurrect them later if we really want them, but I wanted to minimize
diff to make it easier to review this patch.
`/tmp/_mjitXXX` file is renamed to `/tmp/_ruby_mjitXXX` because non-Ruby
developers may not know the name "mjit" and the file name should make
sure it's from Ruby and not from some harmful programs. TODO: it may be
better to store this to some temporary directory which Ruby is already using
by Tempfile, if it's not bad for performance.
mjit.h: New. It has `mjit_exec` interface similar to `vm_exec`, which is
for triggering MJIT. This drops interface for AOT compared to the original
MJIT.
Makefile.in: define macros to let MJIT know the path of MJIT header.
Probably we can refactor this to reduce the number of macros (TODO).
win32/Makefile.sub: ditto.
common.mk: compile mjit.o and mjit_compile.o. Unlike original MJIT, this
commit separates MJIT infrastructure and JIT compiler code as independent
object files. As initial patch is NOT going to have ultra-fast JIT compiler,
it's likely to replace JIT compiler, e.g. original MJIT's compiler or some
future JIT impelementations which are not public now.
inits.c: define MJIT module. This is added because `MJIT.enabled?` was
necessary for testing.
test/lib/zombie_hunter.rb: skip if `MJIT.enabled?`. Obviously this
wouldn't work with current code when JIT is enabled.
test/ruby/test_io.rb: skip this too. This would make no sense with MJIT.
ruby.c: define MJIT CLI options. As major difference from original MJIT,
"-j:l"/"--jit:llvm" are renamed to "--jit-cc" because I want to support
not only gcc/clang but also cl.exe (Visual Studio) in the future. But it
takes only "--jit-cc=gcc", "--jit-cc=clang" for now. And only long "--jit"
options are allowed since some Ruby committers preferred it at Ruby
developers Meeting on January, and some of options are renamed.
This file also triggers to initialize MJIT thread and variables.
eval.c: finalize MJIT worker thread and variables.
test/ruby/test_rubyoptions.rb: fix number of CLI options for --jit.
thread_pthread.c: change for pthread abstraction in MJIT. Prefix rb_ for
functions which are used by other files.
thread_win32.c: ditto, for Windows. Those pthread porting is one of major
works that YARV-MJIT created, which is my fork of MJIT, in Feature 14235.
thread.c: follow rb_ prefix changes
vm.c: trigger MJIT call on VM invocation. Also trigger `mjit_mark` to avoid
SEGV by race between JIT and GC of ISeq. The improvement was provided by
wanabe <s.wanabe@gmail.com>.
In JIT compiler I created and am going to add in my next commit, I found
that having `mjit_exec` after `vm_loop_start:` is harmful because the
JIT-ed function doesn't proceed other ISeqs on RESTORE_REGS of leave insn.
Executing non-FINISH frame is unexpected for my JIT compiler and
`exception_handler` triggers executions of such ISeqs. So `mjit_exec`
here should be executed only when it directly comes from `vm_exec` call.
`RubyVM::MJIT` module and `.enabled?` method is added so that we can skip
some tests which don't expect JIT threads or compiler file descriptors.
vm_insnhelper.h: trigger MJIT on method calls during VM execution.
vm_core.h: add fields required for mjit.c. `bp` must be `cfp[6]` because
rb_control_frame_struct is likely to be casted to another struct. The
last position is the safest place to add the new field.
vm_insnhelper.c: save initial value of cfp->ep as cfp->bp. This is an
optimization which are done in both MJIT and YARV-MJIT. So this change
is added in this commit. Calculating bp from ep is a little heavy work,
so bp is kind of cache for it.
iseq.c: notify ISeq GC to MJIT. We should know which iseq in MJIT queue
is GCed to avoid SEGV. TODO: unload some GCed units in some safe way.
gc.c: add hooks so that MJIT can wait GC, and vice versa. Simultaneous
JIT and GC executions may cause SEGV and so we should synchronize them.
cont.c: save continuation information in MJIT worker. As MJIT shouldn't
unload JIT-ed code which is being used, MJIT wants to know full list of
saved execution contexts for continuation and detect ISeqs in use.
mjit_compile.c: added empty JIT compiler so that you can reuse this commit
to build your own JIT compiler. This commit tries to compile ISeqs but
all of them are considered as not supported in this commit. So you can't
use JIT compiler in this commit yet while we added --jit option now.
Patch author: Vladimir Makarov <vmakarov@redhat.com>.
Contributors:
Takashi Kokubun <takashikkbn@gmail.com>.
wanabe <s.wanabe@gmail.com>.
Lars Kanis <lars@greiz-reinsdorf.de>.
Part of Feature 12589 and 14235.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62189 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
FP arithmetic can lose precision in some cases leading to
premature wakeup and wasting CPU cycles.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62183 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
FP arithmetic can lose precision in some cases leading to
premature wakeup and wasting CPU cycles.
Convert to use timeval_* functions for now.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62182 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
No point for a fixed 1s value, and I plan on eliminating double
timeouts from internal API.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62179 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This change follows commit 837fd5e494
in '#ifdef __ia64' branches.
Noticed as a build failure by John Paul Adrian Glaubitz:
```
cont.c:502:50: error: 'rb_thread_t {aka struct rb_thread_struct}'
has no member named 'machine'
size = cont->machine.register_stack_size =
th->machine.register_stack_end - th->machine.register_stack_start;
^~
```
The change is trivial: update 'th->machine' usage to 'th->ec->machine'.
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyfox@gentoo.org>
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62106 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
We treat this as "int" through the vm_living_thread_num API
anyways, and "pid_t" is still 32-bits with glibc on 64-bit
platforms. I expect it'll be a long time before anybody needs
more than 2 billion native threads. For now, let's save one
cacheline on x86-64 (as reported by pahole(1)):
before: size: 1288, cachelines: 21, members: 45
after: size: 1280, cachelines: 20, members: 45
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@62075 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
It's minor, I haven't analyzed how fixable it is, but we should
at least note it, here.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61779 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Because the name "code_range" is ambiguous with encoding's.
Abbreviations ("crange", and "cr") are also renamed to "loc".
The traditional "code_location" (a pair of lineno and column) is
renamed to "code_position". Abbreviations are also renamed
(first_loc to beg_pos, and last_loc to end_pos).
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61721 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
These functions take variadic arguments so no automatic type
promotion is expected. You have to do it by hand.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61542 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_core.h (rb_vm_t): move `rb_execution_context_t::safe_level` to
`rb_vm_t::safe_level_` because `$SAFE` is a process (VM) global state.
* vm_core.h (rb_proc_t): remove `rb_proc_t::safe_level` because `Proc`
objects don't need to keep `$SAFE` at the creation.
Also make `is_from_method` and `is_lambda` as 1 bit fields.
* cont.c (cont_restore_thread): no need to keep `$SAFE` for Continuation.
* eval.c (ruby_cleanup): use `rb_set_safe_level_force()` instead of access
`vm->safe_level_` directly.
* eval_jump.c: End procs `END{}` doesn't keep `$SAFE`.
* proc.c (proc_dup): removed and introduce `rb_proc_dup` in vm.c.
* safe.c (rb_set_safe_level): don't check `$SAFE` 1 -> 0 changes.
* safe.c (safe_setter): use `rb_set_safe_level()`.
* thread.c (rb_thread_safe_level): `Thread#safe_level` returns `$SAFE`.
It should be obsolete.
* transcode.c (load_transcoder_entry): `rb_safe_level()` only returns
0 or 1 so that this check is not needed.
* vm.c (vm_proc_create_from_captured): don't need to keep `$SAFE` for Proc.
* vm.c (rb_proc_create): renamed to `proc_create`.
* vm.c (rb_proc_dup): moved from proc.c.
* vm.c (vm_invoke_proc): do not need to set and restore `$SAFE`
for `Proc#call`.
* vm_eval.c (rb_eval_cmd): rename a local variable to represent clearer
meaning.
* lib/drb/drb.rb: restore `$SAFE`.
* lib/erb.rb: restore `$SAFE`, too.
* test/lib/leakchecker.rb: check `$SAFE == 0` at the end of tests.
* test/rubygems/test_gem.rb: do not set `$SAFE = 1`.
* bootstraptest/test_proc.rb: catch up this change.
* spec/ruby/optional/capi/string_spec.rb: ditto.
* test/bigdecimal/test_bigdecimal.rb: ditto.
* test/fiddle/test_func.rb: ditto.
* test/fiddle/test_handle.rb: ditto.
* test/net/imap/test_imap_response_parser.rb: ditto.
* test/pathname/test_pathname.rb: ditto.
* test/readline/test_readline.rb: ditto.
* test/ruby/test_file.rb: ditto.
* test/ruby/test_optimization.rb: ditto.
* test/ruby/test_proc.rb: ditto.
* test/ruby/test_require.rb: ditto.
* test/ruby/test_thread.rb: ditto.
* test/rubygems/test_gem_specification.rb: ditto.
* test/test_tempfile.rb: ditto.
* test/test_tmpdir.rb: ditto.
* test/win32ole/test_win32ole.rb: ditto.
* test/win32ole/test_win32ole_event.rb: ditto.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61510 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2.5's line coverage measurement was about two times slower than 2.4
because of two reasons; (1) vm_trace uses rb_iseq_event_flags (which
takes O(n) currently where n is the length of iseq) to get an event
type, and (2) RUBY_EVENT_LINE uses setjmp to call an event hook.
This change adds a special event for line coverage,
RUBY_EVENT_COVERAGE_LINE, and adds `tracecoverage` instructions where
the event occurs in iseq.
`tracecoverage` instruction calls an event hook without vm_trace.
And, RUBY_EVENT_COVERAGE_LINE is an internal event which does not
use setjmp.
This change also cancells lineno change due to the deletion of trace
instructions [Feature #14104]. So fixes [Bug #14191].
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61350 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* test/ruby/test_thread.rb (test_signal_at_join): test with timeout
* thread.c (sleep_wait_for_interrupt): remove
(thread_join_sleep): use native_sleep directly to avoid extra
missing thread status change
[Bug #14181]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61302 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
timeval arithmetic may be reused in other places and this
makes sleep_timeval easier-to-read.
* thread.c (timeval_add): hoist out of sleep_timeval
(timeval_update_expire): ditto
(sleep_timeval): use new functions
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61301 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (thread_join_sleep): the target thread may exit during
`RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS_BLOCKING`, but `sleep_forever` does not
consider the condition change to wait.
[ruby-core:84248] [Bug #14181]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61274 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (terminate_all): fix funtion name in debug messages.
* thread.c (terminate_all, thread_join_sleep, thread_join): show
the status of the target thread in debug messages.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61268 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* Adapt test and add specs.
* See [Feature #14143] [ruby-core:84227]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61237 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* Improve and clarify the documentation of Thread.report_on_exception
and related methods.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61216 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* [Feature #14143] [ruby-core:83979]
* vm.c (vm_init2): Set Thread.report_on_exception to true.
* thread.c (thread_start_func_2): Add indication the message is caused
by report_on_exception = true.
* spec/ruby: Specify the new behavior.
* test/ruby/test_thread.rb: Adapt and improve tests for
Thread.report_on_exception and Thread#report_on_exception.
* test/ruby/test_thread.rb, test/ruby/test_exception.rb: Unset
report_on_exception for tests expecting no extra output.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61183 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This change moves RUBY_EVENT_COVERAGE from include/ruby/ruby.h to
vm_core.h and renames it to RUBY_EVENT_COVERAGE_BRANCH.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61049 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Now this function only deals with branch events, so this change renames
it and remove complexity that is no longer needed.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61046 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This change makes coverage use the general event type RUBY_EVENT_LINE
instead of a special event type RUBY_EVENT_COVERAGE.
Just a refactoring.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61043 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This change makes each ISeq keep NODE's code range. This information is
needed for method coverage.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61025 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Traditionally, method coverage measurement was implemented by inserting
`trace2` instruction to the head of method iseq. So, it just measured
methods defined by `def` keyword.
This commit drastically changes the measuring mechanism of method
coverage; at `RUBY_EVENT_CALL`, it keeps a hash from rb_method_entry_t*
to runs (i.e., it counts the runs per method entry), and at
`Coverage.result`, it creates the result hash by enumerating all
`rb_method_entry_t*` objects (by `ObjectSpace.each_object`).
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@61023 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_default_coverage): Update documents of internal
data structures for branch coverage.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60885 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_core.h (rb_thread_t): remove rb_thread_t::event_hooks.
* vm_trace.c: all hooks are connected to vm->event_hooks and
add rb_event_hook_t::filter::th to filter invoke thread.
It will simplify invoking hooks code.
* thread.c (thread_start_func_2): clear thread specific trace_func.
* test/ruby/test_settracefunc.rb: add a test for Thread#add_trace_func.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60776 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Under uncertain condition, `rb_thread_terminate_all` gets stuck. `make
test-all TESTOPTS="test/ruby/test_gc.rb -n test_interrupt_in_finalizer`
fails very rarely (only once every thousand runs). This IS a bug, but
seems difficult to fix it soon.
This commit makes `rb_thread_terminate_all` wake up every one second,
instead of waiting forever, which mitigates the unuseful freeze.
This is not an essential solution for the bug, though. I'll create a
ticket with how to reproduce the original issue.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60694 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_core.h (rb_execution_context_t): renmae ec::fiber to
ec::fiber_ptr make consistent with ec::thread_ptr.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60670 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* eval_error.c (rb_threadptr_error_print): renamed to
rb_ec_error_print() and it accepts `ec`.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60545 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
to represent execution context [Feature #14038]
* vm_core.h (rb_thread_t): rb_thread_t::ec is now a pointer.
There are many code using `th` to represent execution context
(such as cfp, VM stack and so on). To access `ec`, they need to
use `th->ec->...` (adding one indirection) so that we need to
replace them by passing `ec` instead of `th`.
* vm_core.h (GET_EC()): introduced to access current ec. Also
remove `ruby_current_thread` global variable.
* cont.c (rb_context_t): introduce rb_context_t::thread_ptr instead of
rb_context_t::thread_value.
* cont.c (ec_set_vm_stack): added to update vm_stack explicitly.
* cont.c (ec_switch): added to switch ec explicitly.
* cont.c (rb_fiber_close): added to terminate fibers explicitly.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60440 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* array.c (rb_to_array_type): make public to share common code
internally.
* hash.c (rb_to_hash_type): make public to share common code
internally.
* symbol.c (rb_to_symbol_type): make public to share common code
internally.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60438 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Because NaCl and PNaCl are already sunset status.
see https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=239656#c160
configure.ac: Patch for this file was provided by @nobu.
[Feature #14041][ruby-core:83497][fix GH-1726]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@60374 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (thread_start_func_2): report then abort on exception,
if both are set. [ruby-core:79280] [Bug #13163]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59963 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (reset_coverage_i): Clear an
array for method coverage just like
line coverage and branch coverage.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59952 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This is needed for passing to the hook function the measuring target
type (line/branch/method) and the site of coverage event fired.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59871 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
To prepare new measuring targets: branch and method coverages.
So far, iseq->coverage was an array of counts executed for line coverage.
Now, it is a three-element array for each measuring target,
whose first element is an array for line coverage.
The second element is planned for branch coverage, and the third will be
for method coverage.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59738 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_core.h: Ruby processes run with two stacks, a machine stack and a
VM stack. To make it clear, this fix renames
rb_execution_context_t::stack(_size) to vm_stack(_size).
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59563 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c: "Thread#to_s" is not defined without any reason. So this fix
define "Thread#to_s" which returns a string with some thread information.
Also this fix makes alias "inspect" which refers "to_s". This manner is
same as other objects.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59560 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* cont.c: r55766 change the handling method of Fiber's VM stack.
Resumed Fiber points NULL as VM stack and running Thread has
responsibility to manage it (marking and releasing).
However, thread_start_func_2()@thread.c and thread_free()@vm.c
doesn't free the VM stack if corresponding root Fiber is exist.
This causes memory leak. [Bug #13772]
* cont.c (root_fiber_alloc): fib->cont.saved_thread.ec.stack should be NULL
because running thread has responsibility to manage this stack.
* vm.c (rb_thread_recycle_stack_release): assert given stack is not NULL
(callers should care it).
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59462 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_core.h (rb_thread_ptr): added to replace GetThreadPtr() macro.
* thread.c (in some functions: use "target_th" instead of "th" to make clear
that it is not a current thread.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59192 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_core.h (rb_thread_t): move several fields which are copied at cont.c
to rb_execution_context_t.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59177 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (exec_recursive): rb_catch_protect() uses `int*` as
well as rb_protect.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59156 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Return value of EXEC_TAG() is saved by "int state".
Instead of "int", use "enum ruby_tag_type". First EXEC_TAG()
value should be 0, so that define TAG_NONE (= 0) and use it.
Some code used "status" instead of "state". To make them clear,
rename them to state.
We can change variable name from "state" to "tag_state", but this
ticket doesn't contain it.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59155 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_blocking_region_buffer): remove oldubf because ubf should be
NULL just before ubf setting.
* thread.c (set_unblock_function, reset_unblock_function): rename to
unblock_function_set() and unblock_function_clear() respectively.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59068 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rbuy_kill): removed. This function is used
with SIGSEGV, SIGBUS, SIGKILL, SIGILL, SIGFPE and SIGSTOP
and these signals are affect immediately. So that `kill(2)'
is enough for them.
* signal.c (rb_f_kill): ditto.
* vm_core.h (rb_thread_t::interrupt_cond): removed because
only `ruby_kill()' uses this field.
* test/ruby/test_signal.rb: Without this patch sending SIGSTOP to own
process wait another interrupt even if another process sends SIGCONT.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59066 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Without this hack, pthread_join() in rb_thread_stop_timer_thread()
segfaults.
ProductName: Mac OS X
ProductVersion: 10.11.6
BuildVersion: 15G1510
valgrind-3.12.0
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59053 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
We no longer use it this function, but extensions do, and
we need to ensure it continues to work for them.
* thread.c (rb_thread_fd_close): schedule other threads in loop
* ext/-test-/thread_fd_close/thread_fd_close.c: new file
* ext/-test-/thread_fd_close/depend: ditto
* ext/-test-/thread_fd_close/extconf.rb: ditto
* test/-ext-/thread_fd_close/test_thread_fd_close.rb: new test
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59030 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Enqueuing multiple errors for one event causes spurious errors
down the line, as reported by Nikolay Vashchenko in
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13632
This should fix bad interactions with test_race_gets_and_close
in test/ruby/test_io.rb since we ensure rb_notify_fd_close
continues returning the busy flag after enqueuing the interrupt.
Backporting changes to 2.4 and earlier releases will be more
challenging...
* thread.c (rb_notify_fd_close): do not enqueue multiple interrupts
[ruby-core:81581] [Bug #13632]
* test/ruby/test_io.rb (test_single_exception_on_close):
new test based on script from Nikolay
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59028 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Enqueuing multiple errors for one event causes spurious errors
down the line, as reported by Nikolay Vashchenko in
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13632
* thread.c (rb_notify_fd_close): do not enqueue multiple interrupts
[ruby-core:81581] [Bug #13632]
* test/ruby/test_io.rb (test_single_exception_on_close):
new test based on script from Nikolay
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@59020 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
To convert the object implicitly, it has had two parts in convert_type() which are
1. lookink up the method's id
2. calling the method
Seems that strncmp() and strcmp() in convert_type() are slightly heavy to look up
the method's id for type conversion.
This patch will add and use internal APIs (rb_convert_type_with_id, rb_check_convert_type_with_id)
to call the method without looking up the method's id when convert the object.
Array#flatten -> 19 % up
Array#+ -> 3 % up
[ruby-dev:50024] [Bug #13341] [Fix GH-1537]
### Before
Array#flatten 104.119k (± 1.1%) i/s - 525.690k in 5.049517s
Array#+ 1.993M (± 1.8%) i/s - 10.010M in 5.024258s
### After
Array#flatten 124.005k (± 1.0%) i/s - 624.240k in 5.034477s
Array#+ 2.058M (± 4.8%) i/s - 10.302M in 5.019328s
### Test Code
require 'benchmark/ips'
class Foo
def to_ary
[1,2,3]
end
end
Benchmark.ips do |x|
ary = []
100.times { |i| ary << i }
array = [ary]
x.report "Array#flatten" do |i|
i.times { array.flatten }
end
x.report "Array#+" do |i|
obj = Foo.new
i.times { array + obj }
end
end
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58978 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Instead, match the poll() implementation used on Linux for now;
as the Linux poll(2) manpage describes using negative FD to
easily ignore an FD in a larger FD set while (sleeping the given
timeout). I'm not entirely sure if matching poll() behavior
is a good idea for a single FD, but it's better than segfaulting
or NoMemoryError.
* thread.c (init_set_fd): ignore negative FD
* test/-ext-/wait_for_single_fd/test_wait_for_single_fd.rb
(test_wait_for_invalid_fd): check values which may trigger
segfaults or OOM
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58925 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Today, it increases IO#close performance with many threads:
Execution time (sec)
name trunk after
vm_thread_close 4.276 3.018
Speedup ratio: compare with the result of `trunk' (greater is better)
name after
vm_thread_close 1.417
This speedup comes because rb_notify_fd_close only scans threads
inside rb_thread_io_blocking_region, not all threads in the VM.
In the future, this type data structure may allow us to notify
waiters of multiple FDs on a single thread (when using
Fibers).
* thread.c (struct waiting_fd): declare
(rb_thread_io_blocking_region): use on-stack list waiter
(rb_notify_fd_close): walk vm->waiting_fds instead
(call_without_gvl): remove old field setting
(th_init): ditto
* vm_core.h (typedef struct rb_vm_struct): add waiting_fds list
* (typedef struct rb_thread_struct): remove waiting_fd field
(rb_vm_living_threads_init): initialize waiting_fds list
I am now kicking myself for not thinking about this 3 years ago
when I introduced ccan/list in [Feature #9632] to optimize this
same function :<
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58812 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
The goal is to reduce rb_context_t and rb_fiber_t size
by removing the need to store the entire rb_thread_t in
there.
[ruby-core:81045] Work-in-progress: soon, we will move more fields here.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58614 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Instead of relying on a native condition variable and mutex for
every Ruby Mutex object, use a doubly linked-list to implement a
waiter queue in the Mutex. The immediate benefit of this is
reducing the size of every Mutex object, as some projects have
many objects requiring synchronization.
In the future, this technique using a linked-list and on-stack
list node (struct mutex_waiter) should allow us to easily
transition to M:N threading model, as we can avoid the native
thread dependency to implement Mutex.
We already do something similar for autoload in variable.c,
and this was inspired by the Linux kernel wait queue (as
ccan/list is inspired by the Linux kernel linked-list).
Finaly, there are big performance improvements for Mutex
benchmarks, especially in contended cases:
measure target: real
name |trunk |built
----------------|------:|------:
loop_whileloop2 | 0.149| 0.148
vm2_mutex* | 0.893| 0.651
vm_thread_mutex1| 0.809| 0.624
vm_thread_mutex2| 2.608| 0.628
vm_thread_mutex3| 28.227| 0.881
Speedup ratio: compare with the result of `trunk' (greater is better)
name |built
----------------|------:
loop_whileloop2 | 1.002
vm2_mutex* | 1.372
vm_thread_mutex1| 1.297
vm_thread_mutex2| 4.149
vm_thread_mutex3| 32.044
Tested on AMD FX-8320 8-core at 3.5GHz
* thread_sync.c (struct mutex_waiter): new on-stack struct
(struct rb_mutex_struct): remove native lock/cond, use ccan/list
(rb_mutex_num_waiting): new function for debug_deadlock_check
(mutex_free): remove native_*_destroy
(mutex_alloc): initialize waitq, remove native_*_initialize
(rb_mutex_trylock): remove native_mutex_{lock,unlock}
(lock_func): remove
(lock_interrupt): remove
(rb_mutex_lock): rewrite waiting path to use native_sleep + ccan/list
(rb_mutex_unlock_th): rewrite to wake up from native_sleep
using rb_threadptr_interrupt
(rb_mutex_abandon_all): empty waitq
* thread.c (debug_deadlock_check): update for new struct
(rb_check_deadlock): ditto
[ruby-core:80913] [Feature #13517]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58604 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
The current range based current values of:
TIME_QUANTUM_USEC=100000
RUBY_THREAD_PRIORITY_MAX=3
RUBY_THREAD_PRIORITY_MIN=-3
Gives a range of 12500..800000, plenty enough for a 32-bit
integer. Clamping this also reduces potential implementation
bugs between 32-bit and 64-bit platforms.
I may consider a further reduction to uint16_t in the future
for M:N threading, but some users may want slightly larger
time quantums.
* vm_core.h (rb_thread_t): use 32-bit running_time_us
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58591 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (fill_thread_id_string): cast to void pointer to
suppress warnings when pthread_t is not pointer type.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58532 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* eval.c (setup_exception): consider if the exception is frozen,
but not one of special exception objects.
* gc.c (rb_memerror): copy minimum objects.
* thread.c (rb_threadptr_execute_interrupts): prepare special
exception queued by another thread to be raised.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58380 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_insnhelper.c (rb_threadptr_stack_overflow): move from
thread.c and integrate with vm_stackoverflow.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58379 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_backtrace.c (rb_threadptr_backtrace_object): rename and
extern.
* vm_backtrace.c (rb_threadptr_backtrace_str_ary): rename as
threadptr since the parameter is rb_thread_t*.
* vm_backtrace.c (rb_threadptr_backtrace_location_ary): ditto.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58377 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm.c (hook_before_rewind): skip rewind hooks if err is SystemStackError
because rewind hooks can cause stack overflow again and again.
* thread.c (ruby_thread_stack_overflow): do not disable all hooks.
Additionally, clearing ruby_vm_event_flags is not suitable way
to disable hooks.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58349 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (ruby_thread_stack_overflow): disable VM events when
stack overflow occurred; it causes another stack overflow again
in making backtrace object, and crashes.
[ruby-core:80662] [Bug #13425]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58334 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (ruby_thread_stack_overflow): check if the given thread
is during GC.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58328 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (Init_Thread): [EXPERIMENTAL] refine the "stream
closed" special exception message, by explicating that it is
caused by threading. [ruby-core:80583] [Bug #13405]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58286 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* vm_core.h (ruby_special_exceptions): renamed
ruby_error_closed_stream as ruby_error_stream_closed, like the
message.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58284 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
I may experiment with M:N threading in coming months. Often I
find myself yearning for the old 1.8 days when spawning threads
was really cheap for network operations. But I also like to use
native blocking recv_io and accept calls for round-robin load
distribution and accessing files on systems with dozens of slow
rotational disks.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58236 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (thread_do_start): fix segfault at start with Symbol.
proc created by Symbol#to_proc does not have environment unless
using refinements. [ruby-core:80147] [Bug #13313]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57969 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (thread_do_start): extract from a macro in
thread_start_func_2 for debugger.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57968 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_thread_fd_close): remove deprecated. a couple of
external libraries used it. [ruby-core:80078] [Bug #13304]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57950 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_fd_no_init): make void same as rb_fd_init_copy.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57633 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* string.c (rb_str_enumerate_lines): hint to suppress a
maybe-uninitialized warning by gcc.
* thread.c (rb_fd_no_init): ditto.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57618 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c, thread_sync.c: define new function
rb_thread_sleep_deadly_allow_spurious_wakeup() and use it instead of
using sleep_forever() directly.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57478 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* io.c (io_close_fptr): notify then close, and wait for other
threads before free fptr. [ruby-core:79262] [Bug #13158]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57422 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_threadptr_pending_interrupt_check_mask): traverse
the super class chain instead of making ancestors array.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57294 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_thread_fd_close): wait until all threads using the
fd finish the operation, not to free the buffer in use.
[ruby-core:78845] [Bug #13076]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57202 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Do not check for the value of rb_iseq_constant_body::line_info_table as
it is no longer related. The checks seem to be the remains from the day
before the dedicated 'first_lineno' field was introduced. Remove them.
Note, rb_iseq_constant_body::line_info_table can be NULL only when the
iseq does not contain any instructions that originate from Ruby code,
for example, an iseq created with 'proc {}' under a non-default compile
options where trace instructions are disabled.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57118 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
Use volatile instead of optnone to avoid optimization which causes
segmentation faults.
Patch by Dimitry Andric. [ruby-core:78531] [Bug #13014]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@57020 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_thread_s_abort_exc, rb_thread_s_abort_exc_set):
[DOC] the raised exception will be re-raised in the main thread,
and then follows the ordinary exception sequence, exit status is
not 0. [ruby-core:78415] [Bug #12991]
* thread.c (rb_thread_abort_exc_set): ditto.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@56928 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
actually check its availability rather to check GCC's version.
* configure.in (WARN_UNUSED_RESULT): moved to here.
* configure.in (RUBY_FUNC_ATTRIBUTE): change function declaration
to return int rather than void, because it makes no sense for a
warn_unused_result attributed function to return void.
Funny thing however is that it also makes no sense for noreturn
attributed function to return int. So there is a fundamental
conflict between them. While I tested this, I confirmed both
GCC 6 and Clang 3.8 prefers int over void to correctly detect
necessary attributes under this setup. Maybe subject to change
in future.
* internal.h (UNINITIALIZED_VAR): renamed to MAYBE_UNUSED, then
moved to configure.in for the same reason we move
WARN_UNUSED_RESULT.
* configure.in (MAYBE_UNUSED): moved to here.
* internal.h (__has_attribute): deleted, because it has no use now.
* string.c (rb_str_enumerate_lines): refactor macro rename.
* string.c (rb_str_enumerate_bytes): ditto.
* string.c (rb_str_enumerate_chars): ditto.
* string.c (rb_str_enumerate_codepoints): ditto.
* thread.c (do_select): ditto.
* vm_backtrace.c (rb_debug_inspector_open): ditto.
* vsnprintf.c (BSD_vfprintf): ditto.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@56169 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_threadptr_raise): set cause from the called thread,
but not from the thread to be interrupted.
[ruby-core:77222] [Bug #12741]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@56125 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
[Bug #12628]
This patch introduce many changes.
* Introduce concept of "Block Handler (BH)" to represent
passed blocks.
* move rb_control_frame_t::flag to ep[0] (as a special local
variable). This flags represents not only frame type, but also
env flags such as escaped.
* rename `rb_block_t` to `struct rb_block`.
* Make Proc, Binding and RubyVM::Env objects wb-protected.
Check [Bug #12628] for more details.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@55766 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (debug_deadlock_check): fix format specifier for
thread_id, which may not be a pointer, nor even a scalar value.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@55419 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
backtrace [Feature #8214] [ruby-dev:47217]
* thread.c (thread_status_name): show "sleep_forever" instead of
"sleep" if called from inspect.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@55397 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
the list must be a objhash, instead of a identhash.
this fixes many test errors on mswin64 CI.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@55063 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
* thread.c (rb_thread_atfork_internal): move th to an argument.
* thread.c (rb_thread_atfork): do not repeat GET_THREAD().
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@54961 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e