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107 строки
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
107 строки
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
= Caveats for implementing Signal.trap callbacks
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As with implementing signal handlers in C or most other languages,
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all code passed to Signal.trap must be reentrant. If you are not
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familiar with reentrancy, you need to read up on it at
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{Wikipedia}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reentrancy_(computing)] or
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elsewhere before reading the rest of this document.
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Most importantly, "thread-safety" does not guarantee reentrancy;
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and methods such as Mutex#lock and Mutex#synchronize which are
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commonly used for thread-safety even prevent reentrancy.
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== An implementation detail of the Ruby VM
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The Ruby VM defers Signal.trap callbacks from running until it is safe
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for its internal data structures, but it does not know when it is safe
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for data structures in YOUR code. Ruby implements deferred signal
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handling by registering short C functions with only
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{async-signal-safe functions}[http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal-safety.7.html] as
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signal handlers. These short C functions only do enough tell the VM to
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run callbacks registered via Signal.trap later in the main Ruby Thread.
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== Unsafe methods to call in Signal.trap blocks
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When in doubt, consider anything not listed as safe below as being
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unsafe.
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* Mutex#lock, Mutex#synchronize and any code using them are explicitly
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unsafe. This includes Monitor in the standard library which uses
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Mutex to provide reentrancy.
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* Dir.chdir with block
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* any IO write operations when IO#sync is false;
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including IO#write, IO#write_nonblock, IO#puts.
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Pipes and sockets default to `IO#sync = true', so it is safe to
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write to them unless IO#sync was disabled.
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* File#flock, as the underlying flock(2) call is not specified by POSIX
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== Commonly safe operations inside Signal.trap blocks
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* Assignment and retrieval of local, instance, and class variables
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* Most object allocations and initializations of common types
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including Array, Hash, String, Struct, Time.
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* Common Array, Hash, String, Struct operations which do not execute a block
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are generally safe; but beware if iteration is occurring elsewhere.
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* Hash#[], Hash#[]= (unless Hash.new was given an unsafe block)
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* Thread::Queue#push and Thread::SizedQueue#push (since Ruby 2.1)
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* Creating a new Thread via Thread.new/Thread.start can used to get
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around the unusability of Mutexes inside a signal handler
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* Signal.trap is safe to use inside blocks passed to Signal.trap
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* arithmetic on Integer and Float (`+', `-', '%', '*', '/')
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Additionally, signal handlers do not run between two successive
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local variable accesses, so shortcuts such as `+=' and `-=' will
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not trigger a data race when used on Integer and Float classes in
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signal handlers.
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== System call wrapper methods which are safe inside Signal.trap
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Since Ruby has wrappers around many
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{async-signal-safe C functions}[http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal-safety.7.html]
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the corresponding wrappers for many IO, File, Dir, and Socket methods
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are safe.
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(Incomplete list)
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* Dir.chdir (without block arg)
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* Dir.mkdir
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* Dir.open
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* File#truncate
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* File.link
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* File.open
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* File.readlink
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* File.rename
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* File.stat
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* File.symlink
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* File.truncate
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* File.unlink
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* File.utime
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* IO#close
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* IO#dup
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* IO#fsync
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* IO#read
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* IO#read_nonblock
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* IO#stat
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* IO#sysread
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* IO#syswrite
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* IO.select
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* IO.pipe
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* Process.clock_gettime
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* Process.exit!
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* Process.fork
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* Process.kill
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* Process.pid
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* Process.ppid
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* Process.waitpid
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...
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