<feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom'>
<title>ruby.git/lib/ruby_vm, branch v3_4_9</title>
<subtitle>The Ruby Programming Language</subtitle>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/'/>
<entry>
<title>Mark strings returned by Symbol#to_s as chilled  (#12065)</title>
<updated>2024-11-13T14:20:00+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Jean byroot Boussier</name>
<email>jean.boussier+github@shopify.com</email>
</author>
<published>2024-11-13T14:20:00+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=6deeec5d459ecff5ec4628523b14ac7379fd942e'/>
<id>6deeec5d459ecff5ec4628523b14ac7379fd942e</id>
<content type='text'>
* Use FL_USER0 for ELTS_SHARED

This makes space in RString for two bits for chilled strings.

* Mark strings returned by `Symbol#to_s` as chilled

[Feature #20350]

`STR_CHILLED` now spans on two user flags. If one bit is set it
marks a chilled string literal, if it's the other it marks a
`Symbol#to_s` chilled string.

Since it's not possible, and doesn't make much sense to include
debug info when `--debug-frozen-string-literal` is set, we can't
include allocation source, but we can safely include the symbol
name in the warning message, making it much easier to find the source
of the issue.

Co-Authored-By: Étienne Barrié &lt;etienne.barrie@gmail.com&gt;

---------

Co-authored-by: Étienne Barrié &lt;etienne.barrie@gmail.com&gt;
Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;jean.boussier@gmail.com&gt;</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
* Use FL_USER0 for ELTS_SHARED

This makes space in RString for two bits for chilled strings.

* Mark strings returned by `Symbol#to_s` as chilled

[Feature #20350]

`STR_CHILLED` now spans on two user flags. If one bit is set it
marks a chilled string literal, if it's the other it marks a
`Symbol#to_s` chilled string.

Since it's not possible, and doesn't make much sense to include
debug info when `--debug-frozen-string-literal` is set, we can't
include allocation source, but we can safely include the symbol
name in the warning message, making it much easier to find the source
of the issue.

Co-Authored-By: Étienne Barrié &lt;etienne.barrie@gmail.com&gt;

---------

Co-authored-by: Étienne Barrié &lt;etienne.barrie@gmail.com&gt;
Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;jean.boussier@gmail.com&gt;</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Optimized instruction for Hash#freeze</title>
<updated>2024-09-05T10:46:02+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Étienne Barrié</name>
<email>etienne.barrie@gmail.com</email>
</author>
<published>2024-08-05T10:31:24+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=bf9879791af11a20e50921551220c08d1c7f7f02'/>
<id>bf9879791af11a20e50921551220c08d1c7f7f02</id>
<content type='text'>
If a Hash which is empty or only using literals is frozen, we detect
this as a peephole optimization and change the instructions to be
`opt_hash_freeze`.

[Feature #20684]

Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;byroot@ruby-lang.org&gt;
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
If a Hash which is empty or only using literals is frozen, we detect
this as a peephole optimization and change the instructions to be
`opt_hash_freeze`.

[Feature #20684]

Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;byroot@ruby-lang.org&gt;
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Optimized instruction for Array#freeze</title>
<updated>2024-09-05T10:46:02+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Étienne Barrié</name>
<email>etienne.barrie@gmail.com</email>
</author>
<published>2024-07-29T10:15:02+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=a99707cd9c6a1d53cf8ebc883dc210219bd67a28'/>
<id>a99707cd9c6a1d53cf8ebc883dc210219bd67a28</id>
<content type='text'>
If an Array which is empty or only using literals is frozen, we detect
this as a peephole optimization and change the instructions to be
`opt_ary_freeze`.

[Feature #20684]

Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;byroot@ruby-lang.org&gt;
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
If an Array which is empty or only using literals is frozen, we detect
this as a peephole optimization and change the instructions to be
`opt_ary_freeze`.

[Feature #20684]

Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;byroot@ruby-lang.org&gt;
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Delete newarraykwsplat</title>
<updated>2024-08-13T20:56:35+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Alan Wu</name>
<email>XrXr@users.noreply.github.com</email>
</author>
<published>2024-08-13T20:56:35+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=525008cd7879a047e3c310eb63dcef901b23be56'/>
<id>525008cd7879a047e3c310eb63dcef901b23be56</id>
<content type='text'>
The pushtoarraykwsplat instruction was designed to replace newarraykwsplat,
and we now meet the condition for deletion mentioned in
77c1233f79a0f96a081b70da533fbbde4f3037fa.</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
The pushtoarraykwsplat instruction was designed to replace newarraykwsplat,
and we now meet the condition for deletion mentioned in
77c1233f79a0f96a081b70da533fbbde4f3037fa.</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Optimized forwarding callers and callees</title>
<updated>2024-06-18T16:28:25+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Aaron Patterson</name>
<email>tenderlove@ruby-lang.org</email>
</author>
<published>2024-04-15T17:48:53+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=cdf33ed5f37f9649c482c3ba1d245f0d80ac01ce'/>
<id>cdf33ed5f37f9649c482c3ba1d245f0d80ac01ce</id>
<content type='text'>
This patch optimizes forwarding callers and callees. It only optimizes methods that only take `...` as their parameter, and then pass `...` to other calls.

Calls it optimizes look like this:

```ruby
def bar(a) = a
def foo(...) = bar(...) # optimized
foo(123)
```

```ruby
def bar(a) = a
def foo(...) = bar(1, 2, ...) # optimized
foo(123)
```

```ruby
def bar(*a) = a

def foo(...)
  list = [1, 2]
  bar(*list, ...) # optimized
end
foo(123)
```

All variants of the above but using `super` are also optimized, including a bare super like this:

```ruby
def foo(...)
  super
end
```

This patch eliminates intermediate allocations made when calling methods that accept `...`.
We can observe allocation elimination like this:

```ruby
def m
  x = GC.stat(:total_allocated_objects)
  yield
  GC.stat(:total_allocated_objects) - x
end

def bar(a) = a
def foo(...) = bar(...)

def test
  m { foo(123) }
end

test
p test # allocates 1 object on master, but 0 objects with this patch
```

```ruby
def bar(a, b:) = a + b
def foo(...) = bar(...)

def test
  m { foo(1, b: 2) }
end

test
p test # allocates 2 objects on master, but 0 objects with this patch
```

How does it work?
-----------------

This patch works by using a dynamic stack size when passing forwarded parameters to callees.
The caller's info object (known as the "CI") contains the stack size of the
parameters, so we pass the CI object itself as a parameter to the callee.
When forwarding parameters, the forwarding ISeq uses the caller's CI to determine how much stack to copy, then copies the caller's stack before calling the callee.
The CI at the forwarded call site is adjusted using information from the caller's CI.

I think this description is kind of confusing, so let's walk through an example with code.

```ruby
def delegatee(a, b) = a + b

def delegator(...)
  delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)
end

def caller
  delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)
end
```

Before we call the delegator method, the stack looks like this:

```
Executing Line | Code                                  | Stack
---------------+---------------------------------------+--------
              1| def delegatee(a, b) = a + b           | self
              2|                                       | 1
              3| def delegator(...)                    | 2
              4|   #                                   |
              5|   delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)  |
              6| end                                   |
              7|                                       |
              8| def caller                            |
          -&gt;  9|   delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)     |
             10| end                                   |
```

The ISeq for `delegator` is tagged as "forwardable", so when `caller` calls in
to `delegator`, it writes `CI1` on to the stack as a local variable for the
`delegator` method.  The `delegator` method has a special local called `...`
that holds the caller's CI object.

Here is the ISeq disasm fo `delegator`:

```
== disasm: #&lt;ISeq:delegator@-e:1 (1,0)-(1,39)&gt;
local table (size: 1, argc: 0 [opts: 0, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: -1@-1, kwrest: -1])
[ 1] "..."@0
0000 putself                                                          (   1)[LiCa]
0001 getlocal_WC_0                          "..."@0
0003 send                                   &lt;calldata!mid:delegatee, argc:0, FCALL|FORWARDING&gt;, nil
0006 leave                                  [Re]
```

The local called `...` will contain the caller's CI: CI1.

Here is the stack when we enter `delegator`:

```
Executing Line | Code                                  | Stack
---------------+---------------------------------------+--------
              1| def delegatee(a, b) = a + b           | self
              2|                                       | 1
              3| def delegator(...)                    | 2
           -&gt; 4|   #                                   | CI1 (argc: 2)
              5|   delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)  | cref_or_me
              6| end                                   | specval
              7|                                       | type
              8| def caller                            |
              9|   delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)     |
             10| end                                   |
```

The CI at `delegatee` on line 5 is tagged as "FORWARDING", so it knows to
memcopy the caller's stack before calling `delegatee`.  In this case, it will
memcopy self, 1, and 2 to the stack before calling `delegatee`.  It knows how much
memory to copy from the caller because `CI1` contains stack size information
(argc: 2).

Before executing the `send` instruction, we push `...` on the stack.  The
`send` instruction pops `...`, and because it is tagged with `FORWARDING`, it
knows to memcopy (using the information in the CI it just popped):

```
== disasm: #&lt;ISeq:delegator@-e:1 (1,0)-(1,39)&gt;
local table (size: 1, argc: 0 [opts: 0, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: -1@-1, kwrest: -1])
[ 1] "..."@0
0000 putself                                                          (   1)[LiCa]
0001 getlocal_WC_0                          "..."@0
0003 send                                   &lt;calldata!mid:delegatee, argc:0, FCALL|FORWARDING&gt;, nil
0006 leave                                  [Re]
```

Instruction 001 puts the caller's CI on the stack.  `send` is tagged with
FORWARDING, so it reads the CI and _copies_ the callers stack to this stack:

```
Executing Line | Code                                  | Stack
---------------+---------------------------------------+--------
              1| def delegatee(a, b) = a + b           | self
              2|                                       | 1
              3| def delegator(...)                    | 2
              4|   #                                   | CI1 (argc: 2)
           -&gt; 5|   delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)  | cref_or_me
              6| end                                   | specval
              7|                                       | type
              8| def caller                            | self
              9|   delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)     | 1
             10| end                                   | 2
```

The "FORWARDING" call site combines information from CI1 with CI2 in order
to support passing other values in addition to the `...` value, as well as
perfectly forward splat args, kwargs, etc.

Since we're able to copy the stack from `caller` in to `delegator`'s stack, we
can avoid allocating objects.

I want to do this to eliminate object allocations for delegate methods.
My long term goal is to implement `Class#new` in Ruby and it uses `...`.

I was able to implement `Class#new` in Ruby
[here](https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/9289).
If we adopt the technique in this patch, then we can optimize allocating
objects that take keyword parameters for `initialize`.

For example, this code will allocate 2 objects: one for `SomeObject`, and one
for the kwargs:

```ruby
SomeObject.new(foo: 1)
```

If we combine this technique, plus implement `Class#new` in Ruby, then we can
reduce allocations for this common operation.

Co-Authored-By: John Hawthorn &lt;john@hawthorn.email&gt;
Co-Authored-By: Alan Wu &lt;XrXr@users.noreply.github.com&gt;
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This patch optimizes forwarding callers and callees. It only optimizes methods that only take `...` as their parameter, and then pass `...` to other calls.

Calls it optimizes look like this:

```ruby
def bar(a) = a
def foo(...) = bar(...) # optimized
foo(123)
```

```ruby
def bar(a) = a
def foo(...) = bar(1, 2, ...) # optimized
foo(123)
```

```ruby
def bar(*a) = a

def foo(...)
  list = [1, 2]
  bar(*list, ...) # optimized
end
foo(123)
```

All variants of the above but using `super` are also optimized, including a bare super like this:

```ruby
def foo(...)
  super
end
```

This patch eliminates intermediate allocations made when calling methods that accept `...`.
We can observe allocation elimination like this:

```ruby
def m
  x = GC.stat(:total_allocated_objects)
  yield
  GC.stat(:total_allocated_objects) - x
end

def bar(a) = a
def foo(...) = bar(...)

def test
  m { foo(123) }
end

test
p test # allocates 1 object on master, but 0 objects with this patch
```

```ruby
def bar(a, b:) = a + b
def foo(...) = bar(...)

def test
  m { foo(1, b: 2) }
end

test
p test # allocates 2 objects on master, but 0 objects with this patch
```

How does it work?
-----------------

This patch works by using a dynamic stack size when passing forwarded parameters to callees.
The caller's info object (known as the "CI") contains the stack size of the
parameters, so we pass the CI object itself as a parameter to the callee.
When forwarding parameters, the forwarding ISeq uses the caller's CI to determine how much stack to copy, then copies the caller's stack before calling the callee.
The CI at the forwarded call site is adjusted using information from the caller's CI.

I think this description is kind of confusing, so let's walk through an example with code.

```ruby
def delegatee(a, b) = a + b

def delegator(...)
  delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)
end

def caller
  delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)
end
```

Before we call the delegator method, the stack looks like this:

```
Executing Line | Code                                  | Stack
---------------+---------------------------------------+--------
              1| def delegatee(a, b) = a + b           | self
              2|                                       | 1
              3| def delegator(...)                    | 2
              4|   #                                   |
              5|   delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)  |
              6| end                                   |
              7|                                       |
              8| def caller                            |
          -&gt;  9|   delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)     |
             10| end                                   |
```

The ISeq for `delegator` is tagged as "forwardable", so when `caller` calls in
to `delegator`, it writes `CI1` on to the stack as a local variable for the
`delegator` method.  The `delegator` method has a special local called `...`
that holds the caller's CI object.

Here is the ISeq disasm fo `delegator`:

```
== disasm: #&lt;ISeq:delegator@-e:1 (1,0)-(1,39)&gt;
local table (size: 1, argc: 0 [opts: 0, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: -1@-1, kwrest: -1])
[ 1] "..."@0
0000 putself                                                          (   1)[LiCa]
0001 getlocal_WC_0                          "..."@0
0003 send                                   &lt;calldata!mid:delegatee, argc:0, FCALL|FORWARDING&gt;, nil
0006 leave                                  [Re]
```

The local called `...` will contain the caller's CI: CI1.

Here is the stack when we enter `delegator`:

```
Executing Line | Code                                  | Stack
---------------+---------------------------------------+--------
              1| def delegatee(a, b) = a + b           | self
              2|                                       | 1
              3| def delegator(...)                    | 2
           -&gt; 4|   #                                   | CI1 (argc: 2)
              5|   delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)  | cref_or_me
              6| end                                   | specval
              7|                                       | type
              8| def caller                            |
              9|   delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)     |
             10| end                                   |
```

The CI at `delegatee` on line 5 is tagged as "FORWARDING", so it knows to
memcopy the caller's stack before calling `delegatee`.  In this case, it will
memcopy self, 1, and 2 to the stack before calling `delegatee`.  It knows how much
memory to copy from the caller because `CI1` contains stack size information
(argc: 2).

Before executing the `send` instruction, we push `...` on the stack.  The
`send` instruction pops `...`, and because it is tagged with `FORWARDING`, it
knows to memcopy (using the information in the CI it just popped):

```
== disasm: #&lt;ISeq:delegator@-e:1 (1,0)-(1,39)&gt;
local table (size: 1, argc: 0 [opts: 0, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: -1@-1, kwrest: -1])
[ 1] "..."@0
0000 putself                                                          (   1)[LiCa]
0001 getlocal_WC_0                          "..."@0
0003 send                                   &lt;calldata!mid:delegatee, argc:0, FCALL|FORWARDING&gt;, nil
0006 leave                                  [Re]
```

Instruction 001 puts the caller's CI on the stack.  `send` is tagged with
FORWARDING, so it reads the CI and _copies_ the callers stack to this stack:

```
Executing Line | Code                                  | Stack
---------------+---------------------------------------+--------
              1| def delegatee(a, b) = a + b           | self
              2|                                       | 1
              3| def delegator(...)                    | 2
              4|   #                                   | CI1 (argc: 2)
           -&gt; 5|   delegatee(...)  # CI2 (FORWARDING)  | cref_or_me
              6| end                                   | specval
              7|                                       | type
              8| def caller                            | self
              9|   delegator(1, 2) # CI1 (argc: 2)     | 1
             10| end                                   | 2
```

The "FORWARDING" call site combines information from CI1 with CI2 in order
to support passing other values in addition to the `...` value, as well as
perfectly forward splat args, kwargs, etc.

Since we're able to copy the stack from `caller` in to `delegator`'s stack, we
can avoid allocating objects.

I want to do this to eliminate object allocations for delegate methods.
My long term goal is to implement `Class#new` in Ruby and it uses `...`.

I was able to implement `Class#new` in Ruby
[here](https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/9289).
If we adopt the technique in this patch, then we can optimize allocating
objects that take keyword parameters for `initialize`.

For example, this code will allocate 2 objects: one for `SomeObject`, and one
for the kwargs:

```ruby
SomeObject.new(foo: 1)
```

If we combine this technique, plus implement `Class#new` in Ruby, then we can
reduce allocations for this common operation.

Co-Authored-By: John Hawthorn &lt;john@hawthorn.email&gt;
Co-Authored-By: Alan Wu &lt;XrXr@users.noreply.github.com&gt;
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Fixed indents in recently RJIT patch (#11001)</title>
<updated>2024-06-14T07:05:21+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Dmitry Ukolov</name>
<email>udmitry@mail.ru</email>
</author>
<published>2024-06-14T07:05:21+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=8ddb4de0acedaa10525c3e8549746fc2fb10b002'/>
<id>8ddb4de0acedaa10525c3e8549746fc2fb10b002</id>
<content type='text'>
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>RJIT: Fixed and/or reg+disp32 operations (#10856)</title>
<updated>2024-06-13T22:55:01+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Dmitry Ukolov</name>
<email>udmitry@mail.ru</email>
</author>
<published>2024-06-13T22:55:01+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=b988ae3a06506a4361ab5cbd51da5992268fb713'/>
<id>b988ae3a06506a4361ab5cbd51da5992268fb713</id>
<content type='text'>
Fixed RJIT `and reg+disp32` and `or reg+disp32` operation.</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Fixed RJIT `and reg+disp32` and `or reg+disp32` operation.</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Improve YJIT performance warning regression test</title>
<updated>2024-06-05T07:22:15+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Jean Boussier</name>
<email>jean.boussier@gmail.com</email>
</author>
<published>2024-06-04T17:39:17+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=f8abd24b1f28998157da1230b231419ef7b81722'/>
<id>f8abd24b1f28998157da1230b231419ef7b81722</id>
<content type='text'>
[Bug #20522]
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
[Bug #20522]
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>YJIT: Fix `Struct` accessors not firing tracing events (#10690)</title>
<updated>2024-05-01T14:22:41+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Alan Wu</name>
<email>XrXr@users.noreply.github.com</email>
</author>
<published>2024-05-01T14:22:41+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=2a978ee04732e719fb905af1baa03932b68a048a'/>
<id>2a978ee04732e719fb905af1baa03932b68a048a</id>
<content type='text'>
* YJIT: Fix `Struct` accessors not firing tracing events

Reading and writing to structs should fire `c_call` and `c_return`, but
YJIT wasn't correctly dropping those calls when tracing.
This has been missing since this functionality was added in 3081c83169c,
but the added test only fails when ran in isolation with
`--yjit-call-threshold=1`. The test sometimes failed on CI.

* RJIT: YJIT: Fix `Struct` readers not firing tracing events

Same issue as YJIT, but it looks like RJIT doesn't support writing to
structs, so only reading needs changing.</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
* YJIT: Fix `Struct` accessors not firing tracing events

Reading and writing to structs should fire `c_call` and `c_return`, but
YJIT wasn't correctly dropping those calls when tracing.
This has been missing since this functionality was added in 3081c83169c,
but the added test only fails when ran in isolation with
`--yjit-call-threshold=1`. The test sometimes failed on CI.

* RJIT: YJIT: Fix `Struct` readers not firing tracing events

Same issue as YJIT, but it looks like RJIT doesn't support writing to
structs, so only reading needs changing.</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Implement chilled strings</title>
<updated>2024-03-19T08:26:49+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Étienne Barrié</name>
<email>etienne.barrie@gmail.com</email>
</author>
<published>2023-12-01T10:33:00+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git/commit/?id=12be40ae6be78ac41e8e3f3c313cc6f63e7fa6c4'/>
<id>12be40ae6be78ac41e8e3f3c313cc6f63e7fa6c4</id>
<content type='text'>
[Feature #20205]

As a path toward enabling frozen string literals by default in the future,
this commit introduce "chilled strings". From a user perspective chilled
strings pretend to be frozen, but on the first attempt to mutate them,
they lose their frozen status and emit a warning rather than to raise a
`FrozenError`.

Implementation wise, `rb_compile_option_struct.frozen_string_literal` is
no longer a boolean but a tri-state of `enabled/disabled/unset`.

When code is compiled with frozen string literals neither explictly enabled
or disabled, string literals are compiled with a new `putchilledstring`
instruction. This instruction is identical to `putstring` except it marks
the String with the `STR_CHILLED (FL_USER3)` and `FL_FREEZE` flags.

Chilled strings have the `FL_FREEZE` flag as to minimize the need to check
for chilled strings across the codebase, and to improve compatibility with
C extensions.

Notes:
  - `String#freeze`: clears the chilled flag.
  - `String#-@`: acts as if the string was mutable.
  - `String#+@`: acts as if the string was mutable.
  - `String#clone`: copies the chilled flag.

Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;byroot@ruby-lang.org&gt;
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<pre>
[Feature #20205]

As a path toward enabling frozen string literals by default in the future,
this commit introduce "chilled strings". From a user perspective chilled
strings pretend to be frozen, but on the first attempt to mutate them,
they lose their frozen status and emit a warning rather than to raise a
`FrozenError`.

Implementation wise, `rb_compile_option_struct.frozen_string_literal` is
no longer a boolean but a tri-state of `enabled/disabled/unset`.

When code is compiled with frozen string literals neither explictly enabled
or disabled, string literals are compiled with a new `putchilledstring`
instruction. This instruction is identical to `putstring` except it marks
the String with the `STR_CHILLED (FL_USER3)` and `FL_FREEZE` flags.

Chilled strings have the `FL_FREEZE` flag as to minimize the need to check
for chilled strings across the codebase, and to improve compatibility with
C extensions.

Notes:
  - `String#freeze`: clears the chilled flag.
  - `String#-@`: acts as if the string was mutable.
  - `String#+@`: acts as if the string was mutable.
  - `String#clone`: copies the chilled flag.

Co-authored-by: Jean Boussier &lt;byroot@ruby-lang.org&gt;
</pre>
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</content>
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