As fork(2) is deprecated, its calls must be guarded by
`COMPILER_WARNING_IGNORED(-Wdeprecated-declarations)`.
All usages of fork(2) in process have been alread guarded. A new call
to fork(2) was added in ruby.c with f22c4ff359.
This caused a build failure on Solaris 11.
It may hide a bug to guard big code unnecessarily, so this change
introduces a simple wrapper "rb_fork" whose definition is guarded, and
replaces all calls to fork(2) with the wrapper function.
Saves comitters' daily life by avoid #include-ing everything from
internal.h to make each file do so instead. This would significantly
speed up incremental builds.
We take the following inclusion order in this changeset:
1. "ruby/config.h", where _GNU_SOURCE is defined (must be the very
first thing among everything).
2. RUBY_EXTCONF_H if any.
3. Standard C headers, sorted alphabetically.
4. Other system headers, maybe guarded by #ifdef
5. Everything else, sorted alphabetically.
Exceptions are those win32-related headers, which tend not be self-
containing (headers have inclusion order dependencies).
This removes the security features added by $SAFE = 1, and warns for access
or modification of $SAFE from Ruby-level, as well as warning when calling
all public C functions related to $SAFE.
This modifies some internal functions that took a safe level argument
to no longer take the argument.
rb_require_safe now warns, rb_require_string has been added as a
version that takes a VALUE and does not warn.
One public C function that still takes a safe level argument and that
this doesn't warn for is rb_eval_cmd. We may want to consider
adding an alternative method that does not take a safe level argument,
and warn for rb_eval_cmd.
This function has been used wrongly always at first, "allocate a
buffer then wrap it with tmpbuf". This order can cause a memory
leak, as tmpbuf creation also can raise a NoMemoryError exception.
The right order is "create a tmpbuf then allocate&wrap a buffer".
So the argument of this function is rather harmful than just
useless.
TODO:
* Rename this function to more proper name, as it is not used
"temporary" (function local) purpose.
* Allocate and wrap at once safely, like `ALLOCV`.
We can check the function pointer passed to rb_define_global_function
like we do so in rb_define_method. It turns out that almost anybody
is misunderstanding the API.
We can check the function pointer passed to rb_define_module_function
like how we do so in rb_define_method. The difference is that this
changeset reveales lots of atiry mismatches.
After 5e86b005c0, I now think ANYARGS is
dangerous and should be extinct. This commit uses rb_gvar_getter_t /
rb_gvar_setter_t for rb_define_hooked_variable /
rb_define_virtual_variable which revealed lots of function prototype
inconsistencies. Some of them were literally decades old, going back
to dda5dc00cf.
Often uid / gid are 16 bit or 32 bit integers, while VALUE are 32
to 64 bits. They tend to differ in size. Because rb_ensure expects
its callbacks to take VALUE arguments, narrowing must be done by
hand, otherwise data corruption can happen depending on machine ABI.
* process.c (rb_clock_getres): fix code markups, as `+` can not
include parentheses.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@67369 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
and functions to clarify the intention and make sure it's not used in a
surprising way (like using 2, 3, ... other than 0, 1 even while it seems
to be a boolean).
This is a retry of r66775. It included some typos...
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@66778 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This reverts commit bb1a1aeab0.
We hit something on ci.rvm.jp, reverting until investigation is done.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@66776 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
and functions to clarify the intention and make sure it's not used in a
surprising way (like using 2, 3, ... other than 0, 1 even while it seems
to be a boolean).
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@66775 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This affects test/ruby/test_process.rb (test_execopt_env_path).
Since MJIT uses vfork+execve in a separate thread, there can be
small window in-between vfork and execve where tmp_script.cmd is
held open by the vforked child. vfork only pauses the MJIT
thread, not any Ruby Threads, so our call to Process.spawn will
hit ETXTBUSY in that window unless we fork.
main thread | MJIT thread
----------------------------------------------------
fd = open(tmp) | |
| vfork for CC | CC running
write | | ---------------
fchmod | | sees "fd" here
close(fd) | |
Process.spawn called | |
vfork (spawn)| (new process) | |
| execve => TXTBUSY | |
| | | execve (FD_CLOEXEC on fd)
| | vfork returns |
Holding the waitpid_lock whenever we intend to spawn a process
prevents the MJIT thread from spawning a process while we are
spawning in Ruby-land.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@66171 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
io.c has not used it since r36229, and we can re-export
it if we need it at another time.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@66157 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
TypedData_* macros hide assignments and are confusing and too
long for users of giant fonts.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@66156 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e