Commit graph

291 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
yui-knk
b481b673d7 [Feature #19719] Universal Parser
Introduce Universal Parser mode for the parser.
This commit includes these changes:

* Introduce `UNIVERSAL_PARSER` macro. All of CRuby related functions
  are passed via `struct rb_parser_config_struct` when this macro is enabled.
* Add CI task with 'cppflags=-DUNIVERSAL_PARSER' for ubuntu.
2023-06-12 18:23:48 +09:00
Samuel Williams
3fe09eba9d
Add deprecations for public struct rb_io members. (#7916)
* Add deprecations for public struct rb_io members.
2023-06-08 20:22:43 +09:00
eileencodes
40f090f433 Revert "Revert "Fix cvar caching when class is cloned""
This reverts commit 10621f7cb9.

This was reverted because the gc integrity build started failing. We
have figured out a fix so I'm reopening the PR.

Original commit message:

Fix cvar caching when class is cloned

The class variable cache that was added in
ruby#4544 changed the behavior of class
variables on cloned classes. As reported when a class is cloned AND a
class variable was set, and the class variable was read from the
original class, reading a class variable from the cloned class would
return the value from the original class.

This was happening because the IC (inline cache) is stored on the ISEQ
which is shared between the original and cloned class, therefore they
share the cache too.

To fix this we are now storing the `cref` in the cache so that we can
check if it's equal to the current `cref`. If it's different we don't
want to read from the cache. If it's the same we do. Cloned classes
don't share the same cref with their original class.

This will need to be backported to 3.1 in addition to 3.2 since the bug
exists in both versions.

We also added a marking function which was missing.

Fixes [Bug #19379]

Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
2023-06-05 11:11:12 -07:00
Aaron Patterson
10621f7cb9
Revert "Fix cvar caching when class is cloned"
This reverts commit 77d1b08247.
2023-06-01 14:55:36 -07:00
eileencodes
77d1b08247 Fix cvar caching when class is cloned
The class variable cache that was added in
https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/4544 changed the behavior of class
variables on cloned classes. As reported when a class is cloned AND a
class variable was set, and the class variable was read from the
original class, reading a class variable from the cloned class would
return the value from the original class.

This was happening because the IC (inline cache) is stored on the ISEQ
which is shared between the original and cloned class, therefore they
share the cache too.

To fix this we are now storing the `cref` in the cache so that we can
check if it's equal to the current `cref`. If it's different we don't
want to read from the cache. If it's the same we do. Cloned classes
don't share the same cref with their original class.

This will need to be backported to 3.1 in addition to 3.2 since the bug
exists in both versions.

We also added a marking function which was missing.

Fixes [Bug #19379]

Co-authored-by: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
2023-06-01 08:52:48 -07:00
NARUSE, Yui
85dcc4866d Revert "Hide most of the implementation of struct rb_io. (#6511)"
This reverts commit 18e55fc1e1.

fix [Bug #19704]
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/19704
This breaks compatibility for extension libraries. Such changes
need a discussion.
2023-06-01 08:43:22 +09:00
Samuel Williams
18e55fc1e1
Hide most of the implementation of struct rb_io. (#6511)
* Add rb_io_path and rb_io_open_descriptor.

* Use rb_io_open_descriptor to create PTY objects

* Rename FMODE_PREP -> FMODE_EXTERNAL and expose it

FMODE_PREP I believe refers to the concept of a "pre-prepared" file, but
FMODE_EXTERNAL is clearer about what the file descriptor represents and
aligns with language in the IO::Buffer module.

* Ensure that rb_io_open_descriptor closes the FD if it fails

If FMODE_EXTERNAL is not set, then it's guaranteed that Ruby will be
responsible for closing your file, eventually, if you pass it to
rb_io_open_descriptor, even if it raises an exception.

* Rename IS_EXTERNAL_FD -> RUBY_IO_EXTERNAL_P

* Expose `rb_io_closed_p`.

* Add `rb_io_mode` to get IO mode.

---------

Co-authored-by: KJ Tsanaktsidis <ktsanaktsidis@zendesk.com>
2023-05-30 10:02:40 +09:00
Matt Valentine-House
2a34bcaa10 Update VPATH for socket, & dependencies
The socket extensions rubysocket.h pulls in the "private" include/gc.h,
which now depends on vm_core.h. vm_core.h pulls in id.h

when tool/update-deps generates the dependencies for the makefiles, it
generates the line for id.h to be based on VPATH, which is configured in
the extconf.rb for each of the extensions. By default VPATH does not
include the actual source directory of the current Ruby so the
dependency fails to resolve and linking fails.

We need to append the topdir and top_srcdir to VPATH to have the
dependancy picked up correctly (and I believe we need both of these to
cope with in-tree and out-of-tree builds).

I copied this from the approach taken in
https://github.com/ruby/ruby/blob/master/ext/objspace/extconf.rb#L3
2023-04-06 11:07:16 +01:00
Matt Valentine-House
5e4b80177e Update the depend files 2023-02-28 09:09:00 -08:00
Matt Valentine-House
f38c6552f9 Remove intern/gc.h from Make deps 2023-02-27 10:11:56 -08:00
zverok
e1b447a323 [DOC] Improve ObjectSpace#dump_XXX method docs
* remove false call-seq (output from Ruby parsing is cleaner)
* explain output: argument in plain words
* change parameter name in docs of #dump_shapes (typo)
2023-02-19 22:32:52 +02:00
Jean Boussier
7413079dae Encapsulate RCLASS_ATTACHED_OBJECT
Right now the attached object is stored as an instance variable
and all the call sites that either get or set it have to know how it's
stored.

It's preferable to hide this implementation detail behind accessors
so that it is easier to change how it's stored.
2023-02-15 15:24:22 +01:00
Matt Valentine-House
72aba64fff Merge gc.h and internal/gc.h
[Feature #19425]
2023-02-09 10:32:29 -05:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
899ea35035
Extract include/ruby/internal/attr/packed_struct.h
Split `PACKED_STRUCT` and `PACKED_STRUCT_UNALIGNED` macros into the
macros bellow:
* `RBIMPL_ATTR_PACKED_STRUCT_BEGIN`
* `RBIMPL_ATTR_PACKED_STRUCT_END`
* `RBIMPL_ATTR_PACKED_STRUCT_UNALIGNED_BEGIN`
* `RBIMPL_ATTR_PACKED_STRUCT_UNALIGNED_END`
2023-02-08 12:34:13 +09:00
Peter Zhu
2056c0a7c6 Add embedded status to dumps of T_OBJECT
This commit adds `"embedded":true` in ObjectSpace.dump for T_OBJECTs
that are embedded.
2023-01-05 16:00:36 -05:00
Peter Zhu
b8a3f1bd45 Fix crash in tracing object allocations
ObjectSpace.trace_object_allocations_start could crash since it adds a
TracePoint for when objects are freed. However, TracePoint could crash
since it modifies st tables while inside the GC that is trying to free
the object. This could cause a memory allocation to happen which would
crash if it triggers another GC.

See a crash log: http://ci.rvm.jp/results/trunk@ruby-sp1/4373707
2023-01-04 09:10:58 -05:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
f527a0911d
[DOC] [Bug #19290] fix formatting 2023-01-01 14:50:39 +09:00
Jemma Issroff
e9ba3042e1 Indicate if a shape is too_complex in ObjectSpace#dump 2022-12-15 13:41:47 -08:00
Jemma Issroff
c1ab6ddc9a Transition complex objects to "too complex" shape
When an object becomes "too complex" (in other words it has too many
variations in the shape tree), we transition it to use a "too complex"
shape and use a hash for storing instance variables.

Without this patch, there were rare cases where shape tree growth could
"explode" and cause performance degradation on what would otherwise have
been cached fast paths.

This patch puts a limit on shape tree growth, and gracefully degrades in
the rare case where there could be a factorial growth in the shape tree.

For example:

```ruby
class NG; end

HUGE_NUMBER.times do
  NG.new.instance_variable_set(:"@unique_ivar_#{_1}", 1)
end
```

We consider objects to be "too complex" when the object's class has more
than SHAPE_MAX_VARIATIONS (currently 8) leaf nodes in the shape tree and
the object introduces a new variation (a new leaf node) associated with
that class.

For example, new variations on instances of the following class would be
considered "too complex" because those instances create more than 8
leaves in the shape tree:

```ruby
class Foo; end
9.times { Foo.new.instance_variable_set(":@uniq_#{_1}", 1) }
```

However, the following class is *not* too complex because it only has
one leaf in the shape tree:

```ruby
class Foo
  def initialize
    @a = @b = @c = @d = @e = @f = @g = @h = @i = nil
  end
end
9.times { Foo.new }
``

This case is rare, so we don't expect this change to impact performance
of most applications, but it needs to be handled.

Co-Authored-By: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
2022-12-15 10:06:04 -08:00
Jemma Issroff
a3d552aedd Add variation_count on classes
Count how many "variations" each class creates. A "variation" is a a
unique ordering of instance variables on a particular class. This can
also be thought of as a branch in the shape tree.

For example, the following Foo class will have 2 variations:

```ruby
class Foo ; end

Foo.new.instance_variable_set(:@a, 1) # case 1: creates one variation
Foo.new.instance_variable_set(:@b, 1) # case 2: creates another variation

foo = Foo.new
foo.instance_variable_set(:@a, 1) # does not create a new variation
foo.instance_variable_set(:@b, 1) # does not create a new variation (a continuation of the variation in case 1)
```

We will use this number to limit the amount of shapes that a class can
create and fallback to using a hash iv lookup.

Co-Authored-By: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
2022-12-15 10:06:04 -08:00
Jean Boussier
1df6d0e578 objspace_dump.c: don't dump class of T_IMEMO
They don't actually have a class.
2022-12-14 15:53:41 +01:00
Peter Zhu
5302d04e5a [DOC] Fix format in ObjectSpace.dump_all 2022-12-12 10:16:38 -05:00
Peter Zhu
be710c1bf7 [DOC] Fix format for ObjectSpace.dump_shapes 2022-12-12 10:15:24 -05:00
Peter Zhu
a9c3dc8d2e [DOC] Fix call-seq for ObjectSpace methods 2022-12-12 09:58:39 -05:00
Peter Zhu
58e3ce5de6 [DOC] Fix typo in docs for ObjectSpace.dump_all 2022-12-12 09:56:44 -05:00
Peter Zhu
87d5470873 [DOC] Fix indentation for ObjectSpace.dump_all 2022-12-12 09:51:12 -05:00
Peter Zhu
0b4fda11ec [DOC] Don't document private methods in objspace 2022-12-12 09:48:06 -05:00
Jean Boussier
d7812d1949 objspace_dump.c: dump the capacity field for INITIAL_CAPACITY shapes
We forgot about that one, it's quite useful to see which capacity
we started from.
2022-12-09 17:06:21 +01:00
Jean Boussier
73771e4b19 ObjectSpace.dump_all: dump shapes as well
I see several arguments in doing so.

First they use a non trivial amount of memory, so for various memory
profiling/mapping tools it is relevant to have visibility of the space
occupied by shapes.

Then, some pathological code can create a tons of shape, so it is
valuable to have a way to have a way to observe shapes without having
to compile Ruby with `SHAPE_DEBUG=1`.

And additionally it's likely much faster to dump then this way than
to use `RubyVM::Shape`.

There are however a few open questions:

- Shapes can't respect the `since:` argument. Not sure what to do when
  it is provided. Would probably make sense to not dump them.
- Maybe it would make more sense to have a separate `ObjectSpace.dump_shapes`?
- Maybe instead `dump_all` should take a `shapes: false` argument?

Additionally, `ObjectSpace.dump_shapes` is added for the use case of
debugging the evolution of the shape tree.
2022-12-08 18:46:16 +01:00
Daniel Colson
64cdf8bae7 Update dependencies 2022-12-06 12:37:23 -08:00
Jemma Issroff
e4aba8f519 Add shape_id to heap dump 2022-12-05 14:33:16 -08:00
Jemma Issroff
c726c48a3d Remove numiv from RObject
Since object shapes store the capacity of an object, we no longer
need the numiv field on RObjects. This gives us one extra slot which
we can use to give embedded objects one more instance variable (for a
total of 3 ivs). This commit removes the concept of numiv from RObject.
2022-11-10 10:11:34 -05:00
Peter Zhu
4a8cd9e8bc Use shared flags of the type
The ELTS_SHARED flag is generic, so we should prefer to use the flags
specific of the type (STR_SHARED for strings and RARRAY_SHARED_FLAG
for arrays).
2022-11-02 11:03:21 -04:00
Jemma Issroff
ad63b668e2
Revert "Revert "This commit implements the Object Shapes technique in CRuby.""
This reverts commit 9a6803c90b.
2022-10-11 08:40:56 -07:00
yui-knk
4bfdf6d06d Move error from top_stmts and top_stmt to stmt
By this change, syntax error is recovered smaller units.
In the case below, "DEFN :bar" is same level with "CLASS :Foo"
now.

```
module Z
  class Foo
    foo.
  end

  def bar
  end
end
```

[Feature #19013]
2022-10-08 17:59:11 +09:00
Aaron Patterson
9a6803c90b
Revert "This commit implements the Object Shapes technique in CRuby."
This reverts commit 68bc9e2e97d12f80df0d113e284864e225f771c2.
2022-09-30 16:01:50 -07:00
Jemma Issroff
d594a5a8bd
This commit implements the Object Shapes technique in CRuby.
Object Shapes is used for accessing instance variables and representing the
"frozenness" of objects.  Object instances have a "shape" and the shape
represents some attributes of the object (currently which instance variables are
set and the "frozenness").  Shapes form a tree data structure, and when a new
instance variable is set on an object, that object "transitions" to a new shape
in the shape tree.  Each shape has an ID that is used for caching. The shape
structure is independent of class, so objects of different types can have the
same shape.

For example:

```ruby
class Foo
  def initialize
    # Starts with shape id 0
    @a = 1 # transitions to shape id 1
    @b = 1 # transitions to shape id 2
  end
end

class Bar
  def initialize
    # Starts with shape id 0
    @a = 1 # transitions to shape id 1
    @b = 1 # transitions to shape id 2
  end
end

foo = Foo.new # `foo` has shape id 2
bar = Bar.new # `bar` has shape id 2
```

Both `foo` and `bar` instances have the same shape because they both set
instance variables of the same name in the same order.

This technique can help to improve inline cache hits as well as generate more
efficient machine code in JIT compilers.

This commit also adds some methods for debugging shapes on objects.  See
`RubyVM::Shape` for more details.

For more context on Object Shapes, see [Feature: #18776]

Co-Authored-By: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
Co-Authored-By: Eileen M. Uchitelle <eileencodes@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: John Hawthorn <john@hawthorn.email>
2022-09-28 08:26:21 -07:00
Aaron Patterson
06abfa5be6
Revert this until we can figure out WB issues or remove shapes from GC
Revert "* expand tabs. [ci skip]"

This reverts commit 830b5b5c35.

Revert "This commit implements the Object Shapes technique in CRuby."

This reverts commit 9ddfd2ca00.
2022-09-26 16:10:11 -07:00
Jemma Issroff
9ddfd2ca00 This commit implements the Object Shapes technique in CRuby.
Object Shapes is used for accessing instance variables and representing the
"frozenness" of objects.  Object instances have a "shape" and the shape
represents some attributes of the object (currently which instance variables are
set and the "frozenness").  Shapes form a tree data structure, and when a new
instance variable is set on an object, that object "transitions" to a new shape
in the shape tree.  Each shape has an ID that is used for caching. The shape
structure is independent of class, so objects of different types can have the
same shape.

For example:

```ruby
class Foo
  def initialize
    # Starts with shape id 0
    @a = 1 # transitions to shape id 1
    @b = 1 # transitions to shape id 2
  end
end

class Bar
  def initialize
    # Starts with shape id 0
    @a = 1 # transitions to shape id 1
    @b = 1 # transitions to shape id 2
  end
end

foo = Foo.new # `foo` has shape id 2
bar = Bar.new # `bar` has shape id 2
```

Both `foo` and `bar` instances have the same shape because they both set
instance variables of the same name in the same order.

This technique can help to improve inline cache hits as well as generate more
efficient machine code in JIT compilers.

This commit also adds some methods for debugging shapes on objects.  See
`RubyVM::Shape` for more details.

For more context on Object Shapes, see [Feature: #18776]

Co-Authored-By: Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@ruby-lang.org>
Co-Authored-By: Eileen M. Uchitelle <eileencodes@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: John Hawthorn <john@hawthorn.email>
2022-09-26 09:21:30 -07:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
92c7417d73
Adjust indents [ci skip] 2022-07-22 21:59:27 +09:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
c6aa65430f
Get rid of magic numbers 2022-07-22 10:41:44 +09:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
cf7d07570f
Dump non-ASCII char as unsigned
Non-ASCII code may be negative on platforms plain char is signed.
2022-07-22 09:56:48 +09:00
Jean byroot Boussier
f0ae583a3d Revert "objspace_dump.c: skip dumping method name if not pure ASCII"
This reverts commit 79406e3600.
2022-07-21 19:56:08 +02:00
Jean Boussier
79406e3600 objspace_dump.c: skip dumping method name if not pure ASCII
Sidekiq has a method named `❨╯°□°❩╯︵┻━┻`which corrupts
heap dumps.

Normally we could just dump is as is since it's valid UTF-8 and need
no escaping. But our code to escape control characters isn't UTF-8
aware so it's more complicated than it seems.

Ultimately since the overwhelming majority of method names are
pure ASCII, it's not a big loss to just skip it.
2022-07-21 18:43:45 +02:00
Takashi Kokubun
5b21e94beb Expand tabs [ci skip]
[Misc #18891]
2022-07-21 09:42:04 -07:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
a070d4cceb
Local functions should be static 2022-07-05 09:30:05 +09:00
Jean Boussier
890df5f812 ObjectSpace.dump: Include string coderange
I suspect that some shared pages are invalidated because
some static string don't have their coderange set eagerly.

So the first time they are scanned, the entire memory page is
invalidated.

Being able to see the coderange in `ObjectSpace` would help debug
this.

And in addition `dump` currently call `is_broken_string()`  and `is_ascii_string()`
which both end up scanning the string and assigning coderange. I think it's
undesirable as `dump` should be read only.
2022-07-04 20:04:59 +02:00
Alan Wu
f90549cd38 Rust YJIT
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>
2022-04-27 11:00:22 -04:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
be52c72889
Get rid of doubly caching 2022-04-17 18:57:26 +09:00
Nobuyoshi Nakada
2c6876f811
Get rid of magic numbers 2022-04-17 18:53:29 +09:00