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This commit introduces an "inline ivar cache" struct. The reason we
need this is so compaction can differentiate from an ivar cache and a
regular inline cache. Regular inline caches contain references to
`VALUE` and ivar caches just contain references to the ivar index. With
this new struct we can easily update references for inline caches (but
not inline var caches as they just contain an int)
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These functions are used from within a compilation unit so we can
make them static, for better binary size. This changeset reduces
the size of generated ruby binary from 26,590,128 bytes to
26,584,472 bytes on my macihne.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2682
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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.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2476
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Looking at the list of symbols inside of libruby-static.a, I found
hundreds of functions that are defined, but used from nowhere.
There can be reasons for each of them (e.g. some functions are
specific to some platform, some are useful when debugging, etc).
However it seems the functions deleted here exist for no reason.
This changeset reduces the size of ruby binary from 26,671,456
bytes to 26,592,864 bytes on my machine.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2677
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Add an experimental `__builtin_inline!(c_expression)` special intrinsic
which run a C code snippet.
In `c_expression`, you can access the following variables:
* ec (rb_execution_context_t *)
* self (const VALUE)
* local variables (const VALUE)
Not that you can read these variables, but you can not write them.
You need to return from this expression and return value will be a
result of __builtin_inline!().
Examples:
`def foo(x) __builtin_inline!('return rb_p(x);'); end` calls `p(x)`.
`def double(x) __builtin_inline!('return INT2NUM(NUM2INT(x) * 2);')`
returns x*2.
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Support loading builtin features written in Ruby, which implement
with C builtin functions.
[Feature #16254]
Several features:
(1) Load .rb file at boottime with native binary.
Now, prelude.rb is loaded at boottime. However, this file is contained
into the interpreter as a text format and we need to compile it.
This patch contains a feature to load from binary format.
(2) __builtin_func() in Ruby call func() written in C.
In Ruby file, we can write `__builtin_func()` like method call.
However this is not a method call, but special syntax to call
a function `func()` written in C. C functions should be defined
in a file (same compile unit) which load this .rb file.
Functions (`func` in above example) should be defined with
(a) 1st parameter: rb_execution_context_t *ec
(b) rest parameters (0 to 15).
(c) VALUE return type.
This is very similar requirements for functions used by
rb_define_method(), however `rb_execution_context_t *ec`
is new requirement.
(3) automatic C code generation from .rb files.
tool/mk_builtin_loader.rb creates a C code to load .rb files
needed by miniruby and ruby command. This script is run by
BASERUBY, so *.rb should be written in BASERUBY compatbile
syntax. This script load a .rb file and find all of __builtin_
prefix method calls, and generate a part of C code to export
functions.
tool/mk_builtin_binary.rb creates a C code which contains
binary compiled Ruby files needed by ruby command.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2655
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http://ci.rvm.jp/results/trunk-vm-asserts@silicon-docker/2340856
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Replacing adjacent struct rb_call_info and struct rb_call_cache
into a struct rb_call_data.
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To perform a regular method call, the VM needs two structs,
`rb_call_info` and `rb_call_cache`. At the moment, we allocate these two
structures in separate buffers. In the worst case, the CPU needs to read
4 cache lines to complete a method call. Putting the two structures
together reduces the maximum number of cache line reads to 2.
Combining the structures also saves 8 bytes per call site as the current
layout uses separate two pointers for the call info and the call cache.
This saves about 2 MiB on Discourse.
This change improves the Optcarrot benchmark at least 3%. For more
details, see attached bugs.ruby-lang.org ticket.
Complications:
- A new instruction attribute `comptime_sp_inc` is introduced to
calculate SP increase at compile time without using call caches. At
compile time, a `TS_CALLDATA` operand points to a call info struct, but
at runtime, the same operand points to a call data struct. Instruction
that explicitly define `sp_inc` also need to define `comptime_sp_inc`.
- MJIT code for copying call cache becomes slightly more complicated.
- This changes the bytecode format, which might break existing tools.
[Misc #16258]
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2564
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On Android, a signal handler that is not SIG_DFL is set by default for
SIGSEGV. Ruby's install_sighandler inserts Ruby's handler only when the
signal has no handler, so it does not insert Ruby's SEGV report handler,
which caused some test failures.
This changeset forces to install Ruby's handler for some fatal signals
(sigbus, sigsegv, and sigill). They keep the original handlers, and
call them when the interpreter receives the signals.
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Just refactoring.
The name "rb_bug_context" is completely unclear for me.
(Can you see that "context" means "machine register context"?)
The context is available only when a fatal signal (sigbus, sigsegv, or
sigill) is received; in fact, the function is used only for fatal
signals. So, I think the name should be changed.
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ko1 cannot remember why he introduced the function. And it is not used.
After it is removed, the argument "base_block" of
rb_iseq_compile_with_option is always zero.
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This reverts commits: 10d6a3aca7 8ba48c1b85 fba8627dc1 dd883de5ba
6c6a25feca 167e6b48f1 7cb96d41a5 3207979278 595b3c4fdd 1521f7cf89
c11c5e69ac cf33608203 3632a812c0 f56506be0d 86427a3219 .
The reason for the revert is that we observe ABA problem around
inline method cache. When a cache misshits, we search for a
method entry. And if the entry is identical to what was cached
before, we reuse the cache. But the commits we are reverting here
introduced situations where a method entry is freed, then the
identical memory region is used for another method entry. An
inline method cache cannot detect that ABA.
Here is a code that reproduce such situation:
```ruby
require 'prime'
class << Integer
alias org_sqrt sqrt
def sqrt(n)
raise
end
GC.stress = true
Prime.each(7*37){} rescue nil # <- Here we populate CC
class << Object.new; end
# These adjacent remove-then-alias maneuver
# frees a method entry, then immediately
# reuses it for another.
remove_method :sqrt
alias sqrt org_sqrt
end
Prime.each(7*37).to_a # <- SEGV
```
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Most (if not all) of the fields of rb_method_definition_t are never
meant to be modified once after they are stored. Marking them const
makes it possible for compilers to warn on unintended modifications.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2486
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VM_NO_KEYWORDS was introduced first in vm_core.h, but it is best
to only use a single definition for this.
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Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2484
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This approach uses a flag bit on the final hash object in the regular splat,
as opposed to a previous approach that used a VM frame flag. The hash flag
approach is less invasive, and handles some cases that the VM frame flag
approach does not, such as saving the argument splat array and splatting it
later:
ruby2_keywords def foo(*args)
@args = args
bar
end
def bar
baz(*@args)
end
def baz(*args, **kw)
[args, kw]
end
foo(a:1) #=> [[], {a: 1}]
foo({a: 1}, **{}) #=> [[{a: 1}], {}]
foo({a: 1}) #=> 2.7: [[], {a: 1}] # and warning
foo({a: 1}) #=> 3.0: [[{a: 1}], {}]
It doesn't handle some cases that the VM frame flag handles, such as when
the final hash object is replaced using Hash#merge, but those cases are
probably less common and are unlikely to properly support keyword
argument separation.
Use ruby2_keywords to handle argument delegation in the delegate library.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2477
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The built-in version operates on a buffer of 5 words, much smaller than
the size of jmp_buf defined in libc.
Note, powerpc requires 5 words, while arm and x86_64 just require 3.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2471
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Method#call, UnboundMethod#bind_call
Also add keyword argument separation warnings for Class#new and Method#call.
To allow for keyword argument to required positional hash converstion in
cfuncs, add a vm frame flag indicating the cfunc was called with an empty
keyword hash (which was removed before calling the cfunc). The cfunc can
check this frame flag and add back an empty hash if it is passing its
arguments to another Ruby method. Add rb_empty_keyword_given_p function
for checking if called with an empty keyword hash, and
rb_add_empty_keyword for adding back an empty hash to argv.
All of this empty keyword argument support is only for 2.7. It will be
removed in 3.0 as Ruby 3 will not convert empty keyword arguments to
required positional hash arguments. Comment all of the relevent code
to make it obvious this is expected to be removed.
Add rb_funcallv_kw as an public C-API function, just like rb_funcallv
but with a keyword flag. This is used by rb_obj_call_init (internals
of Class#new). This also required expected call_type enum with
CALL_FCALL_KW, similar to the recent addition of CALL_PUBLIC_KW.
Add rb_vm_call_kw as a internal function, used by call_method_data
(internals of Method#call and UnboundMethod#bind_call). Add tests
for UnboundMethod#bind_call keyword handling.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2432
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I think this is easier to read than using literal 0 with comments
in every case where it is used.
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The kw_splat flag is whether the original call passes keyword or not.
Some types of methods (e.g., bmethod and sym_proc) drops the
information. This change tries to propagate the flag to the final
callee, as far as I can.
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Requested by ko1. Also, because now that this function is internal
use only, why not just directly use struct rb_call_cache to purge
the ZALLOC.
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Add rb_keyword_given_p to the C-API
Notes:
Merged-By: jeremyevans <code@jeremyevans.net>
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consistent with the definition
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This syntax means the method should be treated as a method that
uses keyword arguments, but no specific keyword arguments are
supported, and therefore calling the method with keyword arguments
will raise an ArgumentError. It is still allowed to double splat
an empty hash when calling the method, as that does not pass
any keyword arguments.
Notes:
Merged: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2395
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After 5e86b005c0f2ef30df2f9906c7e2f3abefe286a2, I now think ANYARGS is
dangerous and should be extinct. This commit deletes ANYARGS from
rb_thread_create, which seems very safe to do.
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After 5e86b005c0f2ef30df2f9906c7e2f3abefe286a2, I now think ANYARGS is
dangerous and should be extinct. This commit deletes ANYARGS from
rb_ensure, which also revealed many arity / type mismatches.
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After 5e86b005c0f2ef30df2f9906c7e2f3abefe286a2, I now think ANYARGS is
dangerous and should be extinct. This commit deletes ANYARGS from
struct vm_ifunc, but in doing so we also have to decouple the usage
of this struct in compile.c, which (I think) is an abuse of ANYARGS.
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VM_DEBUG_MODE has been used only here.
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And pass rb_execution_context_t as an argument.
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This reverts commit a0980f2446c0db735b8ffeb37e241370c458a626.
Retry for macOS Mojave.
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This reverts commit 9faef3113fb4331524b81ba73005ba13fa0ef6c6.
It seemed to cause a failure on macOS Mojave, though I'm unsure how.
https://rubyci.org/logs/rubyci.s3.amazonaws.com/osx1014/ruby-master/log/20190802T034503Z.fail.html.gz
This tentative revert is to check if the issue is actually caused by the
change or not.
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This commit adds a specialized instruction for called to `.nil?`. It is
about 27% faster than master in the case where the object is nil or not
nil. In the case where an object implements `nil?`, I think it may be
slightly slower. Here is a benchmark:
```ruby
require "benchmark/ips"
class Niller
def nil?; true; end
end
not_nil = Object.new
xnil = nil
niller = Niller.new
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report("nil?") { xnil.nil? }
x.report("not nil") { not_nil.nil? }
x.report("niller") { niller.nil? }
end
```
On Ruby master:
```
[aaron@TC ~/g/ruby (master)]$ ./ruby compil.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
nil? 429.195k i/100ms
not nil 437.889k i/100ms
niller 437.935k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
nil? 20.166M (± 8.1%) i/s - 100.002M in 5.002794s
not nil 20.046M (± 7.6%) i/s - 99.839M in 5.020086s
niller 22.467M (± 6.1%) i/s - 112.111M in 5.013817s
[aaron@TC ~/g/ruby (master)]$ ./ruby compil.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
nil? 449.660k i/100ms
not nil 433.836k i/100ms
niller 443.073k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
nil? 19.997M (± 8.8%) i/s - 99.375M in 5.020458s
not nil 20.529M (± 7.0%) i/s - 102.385M in 5.020689s
niller 21.796M (± 8.0%) i/s - 108.110M in 5.002300s
[aaron@TC ~/g/ruby (master)]$ ./ruby compil.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
nil? 402.119k i/100ms
not nil 438.968k i/100ms
niller 398.226k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
nil? 20.050M (±12.2%) i/s - 98.519M in 5.008817s
not nil 20.614M (± 8.0%) i/s - 102.280M in 5.004531s
niller 22.223M (± 8.8%) i/s - 110.309M in 5.013106s
```
On this branch:
```
[aaron@TC ~/g/ruby (specialized-nilp)]$ ./ruby compil.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
nil? 468.371k i/100ms
not nil 456.517k i/100ms
niller 454.981k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
nil? 27.849M (± 7.8%) i/s - 138.169M in 5.001730s
not nil 26.417M (± 8.7%) i/s - 131.020M in 5.011674s
niller 21.561M (± 7.5%) i/s - 107.376M in 5.018113s
[aaron@TC ~/g/ruby (specialized-nilp)]$ ./ruby compil.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
nil? 477.259k i/100ms
not nil 428.712k i/100ms
niller 446.109k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
nil? 28.071M (± 7.3%) i/s - 139.837M in 5.016590s
not nil 25.789M (±12.9%) i/s - 126.470M in 5.011144s
niller 20.002M (±12.2%) i/s - 98.144M in 5.001737s
[aaron@TC ~/g/ruby (specialized-nilp)]$ ./ruby compil.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
nil? 467.676k i/100ms
not nil 445.791k i/100ms
niller 415.024k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
nil? 26.907M (± 8.0%) i/s - 133.755M in 5.013915s
not nil 25.319M (± 7.9%) i/s - 125.713M in 5.007758s
niller 19.569M (±11.8%) i/s - 96.286M in 5.008533s
```
Co-Authored-By: Ashe Connor <kivikakk@github.com>
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see RUBY_DEBUG for each debug options.
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If `vm_stack` is left dangling in a forked process, the gc attempts to scan
it, but it is invalid and will cause a segfault. Therefore, we clear it
before forking.
In order to simplify this, `rb_ec_clear_vm_stack` was introduced.
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This commit adds compaction support for:
* Fibers
* Continuations
* Autoload Constants
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It seems sanitizers require extra amount of machine stacks. Without
extending them the process tends to stack overflow.
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Before this commit, classes and modules would be registered with the
VM's `defined_module_hash`. The key was the ID of the class, but that
meant that it was possible for hash collisions to occur. The compactor
doesn't allow classes in the `defined_module_hash` to move, but if there
is a conflict, then it's possible a class would be removed from the hash
and not get pined.
This commit changes the key / value of the hash just to be the class
itself, thus preventing movement.
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🙏
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@67620 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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For some reason symbols (or classes) are being overridden in trunk
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@67598 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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This commit adds the new method `GC.compact` and compacting GC support.
Please see this issue for caveats:
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15626
[Feature #15626]
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@67576 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@67500 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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Because hard to specify commits related to r67479 only.
So please commit again.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@67499 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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