From d43accae15cdfc245052f6b08c5880913a35ae9e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?=E5=8D=9C=E9=83=A8=E6=98=8C=E5=B9=B3?= Date: Thu, 11 Mar 2021 16:34:49 +0900 Subject: include/ruby/internal/intern/object.h: add doxygen Must not be a bad idea to improve documents. [ci skip] --- include/ruby/internal/attr/deprecated.h | 8 + include/ruby/internal/intern/object.h | 563 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 2 files changed, 529 insertions(+), 42 deletions(-) (limited to 'include') diff --git a/include/ruby/internal/attr/deprecated.h b/include/ruby/internal/attr/deprecated.h index 6c27e36785..e1bbdbd15a 100644 --- a/include/ruby/internal/attr/deprecated.h +++ b/include/ruby/internal/attr/deprecated.h @@ -64,4 +64,12 @@ # define RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED(msg) /* void */ #endif +/** This is when a function is used internally (for backwards compatibility + * etc.), but extension libraries must consider it deprecated. */ +#if defined(RUBY_EXPORT) +# define RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(msg) /* void */ +#else +# define RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(msg) RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED(msg) +#endif + #endif /* RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_H */ diff --git a/include/ruby/internal/intern/object.h b/include/ruby/internal/intern/object.h index 9736172085..6bb4ccb2fe 100644 --- a/include/ruby/internal/intern/object.h +++ b/include/ruby/internal/intern/object.h @@ -20,70 +20,549 @@ * extension libraries. They could be written in C++98. * @brief Public APIs related to ::rb_cObject. */ +#include "ruby/internal/attr/const.h" +#include "ruby/internal/attr/deprecated.h" +#include "ruby/internal/attr/nonnull.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/pure.h" #include "ruby/internal/dllexport.h" #include "ruby/internal/value.h" RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_BEGIN() +/** + * This macro is (used but) mysterious. Why on earth do we need this? + * + * - `obj != orig` check is done anyways inside of rb_obj_init_copy(). + * - rb_obj_init_copy() returns something. No need are there to add `, 1`. + */ #define RB_OBJ_INIT_COPY(obj, orig) \ ((obj) != (orig) && (rb_obj_init_copy((obj), (orig)), 1)) +/** @old{RB_OBJ_INIT_COPY} */ #define OBJ_INIT_COPY(obj, orig) RB_OBJ_INIT_COPY(obj, orig) -VALUE rb_class_new_instance_pass_kw(int, const VALUE *, VALUE); -VALUE rb_class_new_instance(int, const VALUE*, VALUE); -VALUE rb_class_new_instance_kw(int, const VALUE*, VALUE, int); - /* object.c */ -int rb_eql(VALUE, VALUE); -VALUE rb_any_to_s(VALUE); -VALUE rb_inspect(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_is_instance_of(VALUE, VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_is_kind_of(VALUE, VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_alloc(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_clone(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_dup(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_init_copy(VALUE,VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_taint(VALUE); + +/** + * Identical to rb_class_new_instance(), except it passes the passed keywords + * if any to the `#initialize` method. + * + * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. + * @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of method arguments. + * @param[in] klass An instance of ::rb_cClass. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `klass`'s allocator is undefined. + * @exception rb_eException Any exceptions can happen inside. + * @return An allocated new instance of `klass`. + * @note This is _the_ implementation of `Object.new`. + */ +VALUE rb_class_new_instance_pass_kw(int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE klass); + +/** + * Allocates, then initialises an instance of the given class. It first calls + * the passed class' allocator to obtain an uninitialised object, then calls + * its initialiser with the remaining arguments. + * + * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. + * @param[in] argv Arguments passed to `#initialize`. + * @param[in] klass An instance of ::rb_cClass. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `klass`'s allocator is undefined. + * @exception rb_eException Any exceptions can happen inside. + * @return An allocated new instance of `klass`. + */ +VALUE rb_class_new_instance(int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE klass); + +/** + * Identical to rb_class_new_instance(), except you can specify how to handle + * the last element of the given array. + * + * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. + * @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of method arguments. + * @param[in] klass An instance of ::rb_cClass. + * @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters: + * - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is not a keyword argument. + * - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is a keyword argument. + * - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `klass`'s allocator is undefined. + * @exception rb_eException Any exceptions can happen inside. + * @return An allocated new instance of `klass`. + */ +VALUE rb_class_new_instance_kw(int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE klass, int kw_splat); + +/** + * Checks for equality of the passed objects, in terms of `Object#eql?`. + * + * @param[in] lhs Comparison left hand side. + * @param[in] rhs Comparison right hand side. + * @retval RUBY_Qtrue They are equal. + * @retval RUBY_Qfalse Otherwise. + * @note This function actually calls `lhs.eql?(rhs)` so you cannot + * implement your class' `#eql?` method using it. + */ +int rb_eql(VALUE lhs, VALUE rhs); + +/** + * Generates a textual representation of the given object. + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cString that represents `obj`. + * @note This is the default implementation of `Object#to_s` that each + * subclasses want to override. + */ +VALUE rb_any_to_s(VALUE obj); + +/** + * Generates a human-readable textual representation of the given object. This + * is largely similar to Ruby level `Object#inspect` but not the same; it + * additionally escapes the inspection result so that the string be compatible + * with that of default internal (or default external, if absent). + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cString that represents `obj`. + */ +VALUE rb_inspect(VALUE obj); + +/** + * Queries if the given object is a direct instance of the given class. + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @param[in] klass An instance of ::rb_cModule. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `klass` is neither module nor class. + * @retval RUBY_Qtrue `obj` is an instance of `klass`. + * @retval RUBY_Qfalse Otherwise. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_is_instance_of(VALUE obj, VALUE klass); + +/** + * Queries if the given object is an instance (of possibly descendants) of the + * given class. + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @param[in] klass An instance of ::rb_cModule. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `klass` is neither module nor class. + * @retval RUBY_Qtrue `obj` is a `klass`. + * @retval RUBY_Qfalse Otherwise. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_is_kind_of(VALUE obj, VALUE klass); + +/** + * Allocates an instance of the given class. + * + * @param[in] klass A class to instantiate. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `klass` is not a class. + * @return An allocated, not yet initialised instance of `klass`. + * @note It calls the allocator defined by rb_define_alloc_func(). You + * cannot use this function to define an allocator. Use + * rb_newobj_of(), #TypedData_Make_Struct or others, instead. + * @note Usually prefer rb_class_new_instance() to rb_obj_alloc() and + * rb_obj_call_init(). + * @see rb_class_new_instance() + * @see rb_obj_call_init() + * @see rb_define_alloc_func() + * @see rb_newobj_of() + * @see #TypedData_Make_Struct + */ +VALUE rb_obj_alloc(VALUE klass); + +/** + * Produces a shallow copy of the given object. Its list of instance variables + * are copied, but not the objects they reference. It also copies the frozen + * value state. + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @exception rb_eException `#initialize_copy` can raise anything. + * @return A "clone" of `obj`. + * + * @internal + * + * Unlike ruby-level `Object#clone`, there is no way to control the frozen-ness + * of the return value. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_clone(VALUE obj); + +/** + * Duplicates the given object. This does almost the same thing as + * rb_obj_clone() do. However it does not copy the singleton class (if any). + * It also doesn't copy frozen-ness. + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @exception rb_eException `#initialize_copy` can raise anything. + * @return A shallow copy of `obj`. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_dup(VALUE obj); + +/** + * Default implementation of `#initialize_copy`, `#initialize_dup` and + * `#initialize_clone`. It does almost nothing. Just raises exceptions for + * checks. + * + * @param[in] dst The destination object. + * @param[in] src The source object. + * @exception rb_eFrozenError `dst` is frozen. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `dst` and `src` have different classes. + * @return Always returns `dst`. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_init_copy(VALUE src, VALUE dst); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(("taintedness turned out to be a wrong idea.")) +/** + * @deprecated This function once was a thing in the old days, but makes no + * sense any longer today. Exists here for backwards + * compatibility only. You can safely forget about it. + * + * @param[in] obj Object in question. + * @return Verbatim `obj`. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_taint(VALUE obj); RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE() -VALUE rb_obj_tainted(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_untaint(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_untrust(VALUE); +RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(("taintedness turned out to be a wrong idea.")) +/** + * @deprecated This function once was a thing in the old days, but makes no + * sense any longer today. Exists here for backwards + * compatibility only. You can safely forget about it. + * + * @param[in] obj Object in question. + * @return Always returns ::RUBY_Qfalse. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_tainted(VALUE obj); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(("taintedness turned out to be a wrong idea.")) +/** + * @deprecated This function once was a thing in the old days, but makes no + * sense any longer today. Exists here for backwards + * compatibility only. You can safely forget about it. + * + * @param[in] obj Object in question. + * @return Verbatim `obj`. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_untaint(VALUE obj); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(("trustedness turned out to be a wrong idea.")) +/** + * @deprecated This function once was a thing in the old days, but makes no + * sense any longer today. Exists here for backwards + * compatibility only. You can safely forget about it. + * + * @param[in] obj Object in question. + * @return Verbatim `obj`. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_untrust(VALUE obj); RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE() -VALUE rb_obj_untrusted(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_trust(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_freeze(VALUE); +RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(("trustedness turned out to be a wrong idea.")) +/** + * @deprecated This function once was a thing in the old days, but makes no + * sense any longer today. Exists here for backwards + * compatibility only. You can safely forget about it. + * + * @param[in] obj Object in question. + * @return Always returns ::RUBY_Qfalse. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_untrusted(VALUE obj); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_DEPRECATED_EXT(("trustedness turned out to be a wrong idea.")) +/** + * @deprecated This function once was a thing in the old days, but makes no + * sense any longer today. Exists here for backwards + * compatibility only. You can safely forget about it. + * + * @param[in] obj Object in question. + * @return Verbatim `obj`. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_trust(VALUE obj); + +/** + * Just calls rb_obj_freeze_inline() inside. Does this make any sens to + * extension libraries? + * + * @param[out] obj Object to freeze. + * @return Verbatim `obj`. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_freeze(VALUE obj); RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE() -VALUE rb_obj_frozen_p(VALUE); +/** + * Just calls RB_OBJ_FROZEN() inside. Does this make any sens to extension + * libraries? + * + * @param[in] obj Object in question. + * @retval RUBY_Qtrue Yes it is. + * @retval RUBY_Qfalse No it isn't. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_frozen_p(VALUE obj); + +/* gc.c */ + +/** + * Finds or creates an integer primary key of the given object. In the old + * days this function was a purely arithmetic operation that maps the + * underlying memory address where the object resides into a Ruby's integer. + * Some time around 2.x this changed. It no longer relates its return values + * to C level pointers. This function assigns some random number to the given + * object if absent. The same number will be returned on all subsequent + * requests. No two active objects share a number. + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cInteger which is an "identifier" of `obj`. + * + * @internal + * + * The "some random number" is in fact a monotonic-increasing process-global + * unique integer, much like an `INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY` column in + * a MySQL table. + */ +VALUE rb_obj_id(VALUE obj); -VALUE rb_obj_id(VALUE); -VALUE rb_memory_id(VALUE); -VALUE rb_obj_class(VALUE); +RBIMPL_ATTR_CONST() +/** + * Identical to rb_obj_id(), except it hesitates from allocating a new instance + * of ::rb_cInteger. rb_obj_id() could allocate ::RUBY_T_BIGNUM objects. That + * allocation might perhaps impact negatively. On such situations, this + * function instead returns one-shot temporary small integers that need no + * allocations at all. The values are guaranteed unique at the moment, but no + * future promise is made; could be reused. Use of this API should be very + * instant. It is a failure to store the returned integer to somewhere else. + * + * In short it is difficult to use. + * + * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cInteger unique at the moment. + * + * @internal + * + * This is roughly the old behaviour of rb_obj_id(). + */ +VALUE rb_memory_id(VALUE obj); + +/* object.c */ RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE() -VALUE rb_class_real(VALUE); +/** + * Finds a "real" class. As the name implies there are class objects that are + * surreal. This function takes a class, traverses its ancestry tree, and + * returns its nearest ancestor which is neither a module nor a singleton + * class. + * + * @param[in] klass An instance of ::rb_cClass. + * @retval RUBY_Qfalse No real class in `klass`' ancestry tree. + * @retval klass `klass` itself is a real class. + * @retval otherwise Nearest ancestor of `klass` who is real. + */ +VALUE rb_class_real(VALUE klass); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE() +/** + * Determines if the given two modules are relatives. + * + * @param[in] scion Possible subclass. + * @param[in] ascendant Possible superclass. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `ascendant` is not a module. + * @retval RUBY_Qtrue `scion` inherits, or is equal to `ascendant`. + * @retval RUBY_Qfalse `ascendant` inherits `scion`. + * @retval RUBY_Qnil They are not relatives. + */ +VALUE rb_class_inherited_p(VALUE scion, VALUE ascendant); RBIMPL_ATTR_PURE() -VALUE rb_class_inherited_p(VALUE, VALUE); -VALUE rb_class_superclass(VALUE); -VALUE rb_class_get_superclass(VALUE); -VALUE rb_convert_type(VALUE,int,const char*,const char*); -VALUE rb_check_convert_type(VALUE,int,const char*,const char*); -VALUE rb_check_to_integer(VALUE, const char *); -VALUE rb_check_to_float(VALUE); -VALUE rb_to_int(VALUE); -VALUE rb_check_to_int(VALUE); -VALUE rb_Integer(VALUE); -VALUE rb_to_float(VALUE); -VALUE rb_Float(VALUE); -VALUE rb_String(VALUE); -VALUE rb_Array(VALUE); -VALUE rb_Hash(VALUE); -double rb_cstr_to_dbl(const char*, int); -double rb_str_to_dbl(VALUE, int); +/** + * Queries the parent of the given class. + * + * @param[in] klass A child class. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `klass` is a `Class.allocate`. + * @retval RUBY_Qfalse `klass` has no superclass. + * @retval otherwise `klass`' superclass. + * + * @internal + * + * Is there any class except ::rb_cBasicObject, that has no superclass? + */ +VALUE rb_class_superclass(VALUE klass); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_NONNULL(()) +/** + * Converts an object into another type. Calls the specified conversion method + * if necessary. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @param[in] type A value of enum ::ruby_value_type. + * @param[in] name Name to display on error (e.g. "Array"). + * @param[in] mid Conversion method (e.g. "to_ary"). + * @exception rb_eTypeError Failed to convert. + * @return An object of the specified type. + */ +VALUE rb_convert_type(VALUE val, int type, const char *name, const char *mid); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_NONNULL(()) +/** + * Identical to rb_convert_type(), except it returns ::RUBY_Qnil instead of + * raising exceptions, in case of conversion failure. It still raises + * exceptions for various reasons, like when the conversion method itself + * raises, though. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @param[in] type A value of enum ::ruby_value_type. + * @param[in] name Name to display on error (e.g. "Array"). + * @param[in] mid Conversion method (e.g. "to_ary"). + * @exception rb_eTypeError The `mid` does not generate `type`. + * @retval RUBY_Qnil No conversion defined. + * @retval otherwise An object of the specified type. + */ +VALUE rb_check_convert_type(VALUE val, int type, const char *name, const char *mid); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_NONNULL(()) +/** + * Identical to rb_check_convert_type(), except the return value type is fixed + * to ::rb_cInteger. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @param[in] mid Conversion method (e.g. "to_ary"). + * @exception rb_eTypeError The `mid` does not generate an integer. + * @retval RUBY_Qnil No conversion defined. + * @retval otherwise An instance of ::rb_cInteger. + */ +VALUE rb_check_to_integer(VALUE val, const char *mid); + +/** + * This is complicated. + * + * - When the passed object is already an instance of ::rb_cFloat, just + * returns it as-is. + * + * - When the passed object is something numeric, the function tries to + * convert it using `#to_f` method. + * + * - If that conversion fails (this happens for instance when the numeric + * is a complex) it returns ::RUBY_Qnil. + * + * - Otherwise returns the conversion result. + * + * - Otherwise it also returns ::RUBY_Qnil. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @retval RUBY_Qnil Conversion from `val` to float is undefined. + * @retval otherwise Converted result. + */ +VALUE rb_check_to_float(VALUE val); + +/** + * Identical to rb_check_to_int(), except it raises in case of conversion + * mismatch. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `#to_int` does not generate an integer. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cInteger. + */ +VALUE rb_to_int(VALUE val); + +/** + * Identical to rb_check_to_integer(), except it uses `#to_int` for conversion. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @exception rb_eTypeError `#to_int` does not return an integer. + * @retval RUBY_Qnil No conversion defined. + * @retval otherwise An instance of ::rb_cInteger. + */ +VALUE rb_check_to_int(VALUE val); + +/** + * This is the logic behind `Kernel#Integer`. Numeric types are converted + * directly, with floating point numbers being truncated. Strings are + * interpreted strictly; only leading/trailing whitespaces, plus/minus sign, + * radix indicators such as `0x`, digits, and underscores are allowed. + * Anything else are converted by first trying `#to_int`, then `#to_i`. + * + * This is slightly stricter than `String#to_i`. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @exception rb_eArgError Malformed `val` passed. + * @exception rb_eTypeError No conversion defined. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cInteger. + */ +VALUE rb_Integer(VALUE val); + +/** + * Identical to rb_check_to_float(), except it raises on error. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @exception rb_eTypeError No conversion defined. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cFloat. + */ +VALUE rb_to_float(VALUE val); + +/** + * This is the logic behind `Kernel#Float`. Numeric types are converted + * directly to the nearest value that a Float can represent. Strings are + * interpreted strictly; only leading/trailing whitespaces are allowed except + * what `strtod` understands. Anything else are converted using `#to_f`. + * + * This is slightly stricter than `String#to_f`. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @exception rb_eArgError Malformed `val` passed. + * @exception rb_eTypeError No conversion defined. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cFloat. + */ +VALUE rb_Float(VALUE val); + +/** + * This is the logic behind `Kernel#String`. Arguments are converted by first + * trying `#to_str`, then `#to_s`. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @exception rb_eTypeError No conversion defined. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cString. + */ +VALUE rb_String(VALUE val); + +/** + * This is the logic behind `Kernel#Array`. Arguments are converted by first + * trying `#to_ary`, then `#to_a`, and if both failed, returns an array of + * length 1 that contains the passed argument as the sole contents. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cArray. + */ +VALUE rb_Array(VALUE val); + +/** + * This is the logic behind `Kernel#Hash`. Arguments are converted by first + * trying `#to_hash`. if it failed, and the argument is either ::RUBY_Qnil or + * an empty array, returns an empty hash. Otherwise an exception is raised. + * + * @param[in] val An object to convert. + * @exception rb_eTypeError No conversion defined. + * @return An instance of ::rb_cHash. + */ +VALUE rb_Hash(VALUE val); + +RBIMPL_ATTR_NONNULL(()) +/** + * Converts a textual representation of a real number into a numeric, which is + * the nearest value that the return type can represent, of the value that the + * argument represents. This is in fact a 2-in-1 function whose behaviour can + * be controlled using the second (mode) argument. If the mode is zero, this + * function is in "historical" mode which only understands "floating-constant" + * defined at ISO/IEC 9899:1990 section 6.1.3.1. If the mode is nonzero, it is + * in "extended" mode, which also accepts "hexadecimal-floating-constant" + * defined at ISO/IEC 9899:2018 section 6.4.4.2. + * + * @param[in] str A textual representation of a real number. + * @param[in] mode Conversion mode, as described above. + * @exception rb_eArgError Malformed `str` passed. + * @see https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/2969 + * @note Null pointers are allowed, and it returns 0.0 then. + */ +double rb_cstr_to_dbl(const char *str, int mode); + +/** + * Identical to rb_cstr_to_dbl(), except it accepts a Ruby's string instead of + * C's. + * + * @param[in] str A textual representation of a real number. + * @param[in] mode Conversion mode, as described in rb_cstr_to_dbl(). + * @exception rb_eArgError Malformed `str` passed. + * @see https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/2969 + */ +double rb_str_to_dbl(VALUE str, int mode); RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_END() -- cgit v1.2.3