Teach getblockparamproxy to handle the no-block case without exiting
Co-authored-by: John Hawthorn <john@hawthorn.email>
Co-authored-by: John Hawthorn <john@hawthorn.email>
The test in [1] was removed because it stopped working when we limited
the power of Kernel#binding in [2]. However, the underlying issue could
still be reproduced using blocks. Add back a regression test.
I tested the test by commenting out the fix from [1].
[1]: 54c91042ed
[2]: 343ea9967e
In December 2021, we opened an [issue] to solicit feedback regarding the
porting of the YJIT codebase from C99 to Rust. There were some
reservations, but this project was given the go ahead by Ruby core
developers and Matz. Since then, we have successfully completed the port
of YJIT to Rust.
The new Rust version of YJIT has reached parity with the C version, in
that it passes all the CRuby tests, is able to run all of the YJIT
benchmarks, and performs similarly to the C version (because it works
the same way and largely generates the same machine code). We've even
incorporated some design improvements, such as a more fine-grained
constant invalidation mechanism which we expect will make a big
difference in Ruby on Rails applications.
Because we want to be careful, YJIT is guarded behind a configure
option:
```shell
./configure --enable-yjit # Build YJIT in release mode
./configure --enable-yjit=dev # Build YJIT in dev/debug mode
```
By default, YJIT does not get compiled and cargo/rustc is not required.
If YJIT is built in dev mode, then `cargo` is used to fetch development
dependencies, but when building in release, `cargo` is not required,
only `rustc`. At the moment YJIT requires Rust 1.60.0 or newer.
The YJIT command-line options remain mostly unchanged, and more details
about the build process are documented in `doc/yjit/yjit.md`.
The CI tests have been updated and do not take any more resources than
before.
The development history of the Rust port is available at the following
commit for interested parties:
1fd9573d8b
Our hope is that Rust YJIT will be compiled and included as a part of
system packages and compiled binaries of the Ruby 3.2 release. We do not
anticipate any major problems as Rust is well supported on every
platform which YJIT supports, but to make sure that this process works
smoothly, we would like to reach out to those who take care of building
systems packages before the 3.2 release is shipped and resolve any
issues that may come up.
[issue]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18481
Co-authored-by: Maxime Chevalier-Boisvert <maximechevalierb@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Noah Gibbs <the.codefolio.guy@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kevin Newton <kddnewton@gmail.com>
Check whether the current or previous frame is a Ruby frame in
call_trace_func and rb_tracearg_binding before attempting to
create a binding for the frame.
Fixes [Bug #18487]
Co-authored-by: Alan Wu <XrXr@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit reintroduces finer-grained constant cache invalidation.
After 8008fb7 got merged, it was causing issues on token-threaded
builds (such as on Windows).
The issue was that when you're iterating through instruction sequences
and using the translator functions to get back the instruction structs,
you're either using `rb_vm_insn_null_translator` or
`rb_vm_insn_addr2insn2` depending if it's a direct-threading build.
`rb_vm_insn_addr2insn2` does some normalization to always return to
you the non-trace version of whatever instruction you're looking at.
`rb_vm_insn_null_translator` does not do that normalization.
This means that when you're looping through the instructions if you're
trying to do an opcode comparison, it can change depending on the type
of threading that you're using. This can be very confusing. So, this
commit creates a new translator function
`rb_vm_insn_normalizing_translator` to always return the non-trace
version so that opcode comparisons don't have to worry about different
configurations.
[Feature #18589]
This reverts commits for [Feature #18589]:
* 8008fb7352
"Update formatting per feedback"
* 8f6eaca2e1
"Delete ID from constant cache table if it becomes empty on ISEQ free"
* 629908586b
"Finer-grained inline constant cache invalidation"
MSWin builds on AppVeyor have been crashing since the merger.
Check whether the current or previous frame is a Ruby frame in
call_trace_func before attempting to create a binding for the frame.
Fixes [Bug #18487]
Co-authored-by: Alan Wu <XrXr@users.noreply.github.com>
Current behavior - caches depend on a global counter. All constant mutations cause caches to be invalidated.
```ruby
class A
B = 1
end
def foo
A::B # inline cache depends on global counter
end
foo # populate inline cache
foo # hit inline cache
C = 1 # global counter increments, all caches are invalidated
foo # misses inline cache due to `C = 1`
```
Proposed behavior - caches depend on name components. Only constant mutations with corresponding names will invalidate the cache.
```ruby
class A
B = 1
end
def foo
A::B # inline cache depends constants named "A" and "B"
end
foo # populate inline cache
foo # hit inline cache
C = 1 # caches that depend on the name "C" are invalidated
foo # hits inline cache because IC only depends on "A" and "B"
```
Examples of breaking the new cache:
```ruby
module C
# Breaks `foo` cache because "A" constant is set and the cache in foo depends
# on "A" and "B"
class A; end
end
B = 1
```
We expect the new cache scheme to be invalidated less often because names aren't frequently reused. With the cache being invalidated less, we can rely on its stability more to keep our constant references fast and reduce the need to throw away generated code in YJIT.
Backticks method invokes `/bin/sh` when the command contains
quotes, and `sh` clears some environment variables set in
runruby.rb to search the built shared library.
* `-j` option for concurrent test with threads
* `-jN` uses N threads
* `-j` uses nproc/2 threads
* Introduce `BT` struct to manage configurations
* Introduce `Assertion` to manage all assertions
* Remove all toplevel instance variables
* Show elapsed seconds at last
```
$ time make btest
...
real 0m37.319s
user 0m26.221s
sys 0m16.534s
$ time make btest TESTOPTS=-j
...
real 0m11.812s
user 0m36.667s
sys 0m21.872s
```
This adds support for passing keyword arguments to cfuncs. This is done
by calling a helper method to create the hash from the top N values on
the stack (determined by the callinfo) and then moving that value onto
the stack.
Routines that are called from YJIT's output code can call methods, and
calling methods mean they can capture and change the environment of the
calling frame.
Discard type info whenever we perform routine calls. This is more
conservative than strictly necessary as some routines need to perform GC
allocation but can never call methods and so should never be able to
change local variables. However, manually analyzing C functions for
whether they have code paths that call methods is error prone and can go
out of date as changes land in the codebase.
Closes: shopify/yjit#300
Previously when we were calling a method with an optional argument and
multiple keywords arguments which weren't in the order the receiver
expected we would use the wrong SP index to rearrange them.
Fixes Bug #18453
Previously, YJIT would not check that all the required keywords were
specified in the case that there were optional arguments specified. In
this case YJIT would incorrectly call the method with invalid arguments.
Previously we mirrored the fast paths the interpreter had for having
only one of kwargs or optional args. This commit aims to combine the
cases and reduce complexity.
Though this allows calling iseqs which have have both optional and
keyword arguments, it requires that all optional arguments are specified
when there are keyword arguments, since unspecified optional arguments
appear before the kwargs. Support for this can be added a in a future
PR.
`IO#reopen` internally uses dup syscall but some platforms don't support
the syscall. re-assigning `$stderr` is enough to capture the interpreter's
errors and warnings.
Previously, YJIT incorrectly discarded the upper 32 bits of the object
pointer when writing out VALUEs to setup default keyword arguments.
In addition to incorrectly truncating, the output pointers were not
properly tracked for handling GC compaction moving the referenced
objects.
YJIT previously attempted to encode a mov instruction with a memory
destination and a 64 bit immediate when there is no such encoding
possible in the ISA. Add an assert to mitigate not being able to
catch this at build time.
It's superseded by functionality added to jit_guard_known_klass().
In weird situations such as the ones in the included test,
guard_self_is_heap() triggered assertions.
Co-authored-by: Jemma Issroff <jemmaissroff@gmail.com>
As part of YJIT's strategy for promoting Ruby constant expressions into
constants in the output native code, the interpreter calls
rb_yjit_constant_ic_update() from opt_setinlinecache.
The block invalidation loop indirectly calls rb_darray_remove_unordered(),
which does a shuffle remove. Because of this, looping with an
incrementing counter like done previously can miss some elements in the
array. Repeatedly invalidate the first element instead.
The bug this commit resolves does not seem to cause crashes or divergent
behaviors.
Co-authored-by: Jemma Issroff <jemmaissroff@gmail.com>
As of [1] and [2], YJIT has enough support for out of memory conditions
to pass these two basic tests.
OOM code paths are prone to bugs since they are rarely exercised in
common workloads. We might want to add CI runs that stress test these
code paths. Maybe outside of GitHub Actions for capacity reasons.
[1]: f41b4d44f9
[2]: b5b6ab4194
* Lazily create singletons on instance_{exec,eval}
Previously when instance_exec or instance_eval was called on an object,
that object would be given a singleton class so that method
definitions inside the block would be added to the object rather than
its class.
This commit aims to improve performance by delaying the creation of the
singleton class unless/until one is needed for method definition. Most
of the time instance_eval is used without any method definition.
This was implemented by adding a flag to the cref indicating that it
represents a singleton of the object rather than a class itself. In this
case CREF_CLASS returns the object's existing class, but in cases that
we are defining a method (either via definemethod or
VM_SPECIAL_OBJECT_CBASE which is used for undef and alias).
This also happens to fix what I believe is a bug. Previously
instance_eval behaved differently with regards to constant access for
true/false/nil than for all other objects. I don't think this was
intentional.
String::Foo = "foo"
"".instance_eval("Foo") # => "foo"
Integer::Foo = "foo"
123.instance_eval("Foo") # => "foo"
TrueClass::Foo = "foo"
true.instance_eval("Foo") # NameError: uninitialized constant Foo
This also slightly changes the error message when trying to define a method
through instance_eval on an object which can't have a singleton class.
Before:
$ ruby -e '123.instance_eval { def foo; end }'
-e:1:in `block in <main>': no class/module to add method (TypeError)
After:
$ ./ruby -e '123.instance_eval { def foo; end }'
-e:1:in `block in <main>': can't define singleton (TypeError)
IMO this error is a small improvement on the original and better matches
the (both old and new) message when definging a method using `def self.`
$ ruby -e '123.instance_eval{ def self.foo; end }'
-e:1:in `block in <main>': can't define singleton (TypeError)
Co-authored-by: Matthew Draper <matthew@trebex.net>
* Remove "under" argument from yield_under
* Move CREF_SINGLETON_SET into vm_cref_new
* Simplify vm_get_const_base
* Fix leaf VM_SPECIAL_OBJECT_CONST_BASE
Co-authored-by: Matthew Draper <matthew@trebex.net>
Previously, YJIT crashes with rb_bug() when asked to compile new methods
while out of executable memory.
To handle this situation gracefully, this change keeps track of all the
blocks compiled each invocation in case YJIT runs out of memory in the
middle of a compliation sequence. The list is used to free all blocks in
case compilation fails.
yjit_gen_block() is renamed to gen_single_block() to make it distinct from
gen_block_version(). Call to limit_block_version() and block_t
allocation is moved into the function to help tidy error checking in the
outer loop.
limit_block_version() now returns by value. I feel that an out parameter
with conditional mutation is unnecessarily hard to read in code that
does not need to go for last drop performance. There is a good chance
that the optimizer is able to output identical code anyways.
Previously, YJIT assumed that it's always possible to generate a new
basic block when servicing a stub in branch_stub_hit(). When YJIT is out
of executable memory, for example, this assumption doesn't hold up.
Add handling to branch_stub_hit() for servicing stubs without consuming
more executable memory by adding a code path that exits to the
interpreter at the location the branch stub represents. The new code
path reconstructs interpreter state in branch_stub_hit() and then exits
with a new snippet called `code_for_exit_from_stub` that returns
`Qundef` from the YJIT native stack frame.
As this change adds another place where we regenerate code from
`branch_t`, extract the logic for it into a new function and call it
regenerate_branch(). While we are at it, make the branch shrinking code
path in branch_stub_hit() more explicit.
This new functionality is hard to test without full support for out of
memory conditions. To verify this change, I ran
`RUBY_YJIT_ENABLE=1 make check -j12` with the following patch to stress
test the new code path:
```diff
diff --git a/yjit_core.c b/yjit_core.c
index 4ab63d9806..5788b8c5ed 100644
--- a/yjit_core.c
+++ b/yjit_core.c
@@ -878,8 +878,12 @@ branch_stub_hit(branch_t *branch, const uint32_t target_idx, rb_execution_contex
cb_set_write_ptr(cb, branch->end_addr);
}
+if (rand() < RAND_MAX/2) {
// Compile the new block version
p_block = gen_block_version(target, target_ctx, ec);
+}else{
+ p_block = NULL;
+}
if (!p_block && branch_modified) {
// We couldn't generate a new block for the branch, but we modified the branch.
```
We can enable the new test along with other OOM tests once full support
lands.
Other small changes:
* yjit_utils.c (print_str): Update to work with new native frame shape.
Follow up for 8fa0ee4d40.
* yjit_iface.c (rb_yjit_init): Run yjit_init_core() after
yjit_init_codegen() so `cb` and `ocb` are available.
* YJIT: Implement optimized_method_struct_aref
* YJIT: Implement struct_aref without method call
Struct member reads can be compiled directly into a memory read (with
either one or two levels of indirection).
* YJIT: Implement optimized struct aset
* YJIT: Update tests for struct access
* YJIT: Add counters for remaining optimized methods
* Check for INT32_MAX overflow
It only takes a struct with 0x7fffffff/8+1 members. Also add some
cheap compile time checks.
* Add tests for non-embedded struct aref/aset
Co-authored-by: Alan Wu <XrXr@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit adds an entry_exit field to block_t for use in
invalidate_block_version(). By patching the start of the block while
invalidating it, invalidate_block_version() can function correctly
while there is no executable memory left for new branch stubs.
This change additionally fixes correctness for situations where we
cannot patch incoming jumps to the invalidated block. In situations
such as Shopify/yjit#226, the address to the start of the block
is saved and used later, possibly after the block is invalidated.
The assume_* family of function now generate block->entry_exit before
remembering blocks for invalidation.
RubyVM::YJIT.simulate_oom! is introduced for testing out of memory
conditions. The test for it is disabled for now because OOM triggers
other failure conditions not addressed by this commit.
FixesShopify/yjit#226
This is the minimal correct objtostring implementation in YJIT.
For correctness, it is important that to_string not get called on strings or subclasses of string.
There is a new test for this behavior.
A follow up should implement an optimized version for other types as performed in `vm_objtostring`.
Co-authored-by: John Hawthorn <jhawthorn@github.com>
Co-authored-by: John Hawthorn <jhawthorn@github.com>