| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Since 0c2d81dada, not all trace events are cleared during VM teardown.
This causes a crash when there is a tracepoint for
`RUBY_INTERNAL_EVENT_GC_EXIT` active during teardown.
The commit looks like a refactoring commit so I think this change was
unintentional.
[Bug #16682]
(cherry picked from commit b385f7670ffa420790bc548747fa4b58c4c5d8f6)
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Block for `create_makefile` is expected to return the content of
the makefile.
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BSD make can run parallel more aggressively than GNU make. It communicate
with other make process through -J option in MAKEFLAGS environment variable
to notify a build failure happend in an other pararell make process.
https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?make
It usually works well but ext/-test-/cxxanyargs/Makefile has two targets
which are expected to fail (failure.o and failurem1.o).
Additional note:
To test and debug this issue, following command will speed up it.
`make -f exts.mk -j8 clean all`
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Asynchronous events such as signal trap, finalization timing,
thread switching and so on are managed by "interrupt_flag".
Ruby's threads check this flag periodically and if a thread
does not check this flag, above events doesn't happen.
This checking is CHECK_INTS() (related) macro and it is placed
at some places (laeve instruction and so on). However, at the end
of C methods, C blocks (IMEMO_IFUNC) etc there are no checking
and it can introduce uninterruptible thread.
To modify this situation, we decide to place CHECK_INTS() at
vm_pop_frame(). It increases interrupt checking points.
[Bug #16366]
This patch can introduce unexpected events...
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I noticed that some files in rubygems were executable, and I could think
of no reason why they should be.
In general, I think ruby files should never have the executable bit set
unless they include a shebang, so I run the following command over the
whole repo:
```bash
find . -name '*.rb' -type f -executable -exec bash -c 'grep -L "^#!" $1 || chmod -x $1' _ {} \;
```
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This macro is used here before defined in ruby.h.
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Cited from mount(8):
```
strictatime
Always update the file access time when reading from a
file. Without this option the filesystem may default to a
less strict update mode, where some access time updates
are skipped for performance reasons. This option could be
ignored if it is not supported by the filesystem.
```
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Currently, there is not a way to create a sized enumerator in C
with a different set of arguments than provided by Ruby, and
correctly handle keyword arguments. This function allows that.
The need for this is fairly uncommon, but it occurs at least in
Enumerator.produce, which takes arugments from Ruby but calls
rb_enumeratorize_with_size with a different set of arguments.
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This adds rb_funcall_passing_block_kw, rb_funcallv_public_kw,
and rb_yield_splat_kw. This functions are necessary to easily
handle cases where rb_funcall_passing_block, rb_funcallv_public,
and rb_yield_splat are currently used and a keyword argument
separation warning is raised.
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This fixes instance_exec and similar methods. It also fixes
Enumerator::Yielder#yield, rb_yield_block, and a couple of cases
with Proc#{<<,>>}.
This support requires the addition of rb_yield_values_kw, similar to
rb_yield_values2, for passing the keyword flag.
Unlike earlier attempts at this, this does not modify the rb_block_call_func
type or add a separate function type. The functions of type
rb_block_call_func are called by Ruby with a separate VM frame, and we can
get the keyword flag information from the VM frame flags, so it doesn't need
to be passed as a function argument.
These changes require the following VM functions accept a keyword flag:
* vm_yield_with_cref
* vm_yield
* vm_yield_with_block
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Cfuncs that use rb_scan_args with the : entry suffer similar keyword
argument separation issues that Ruby methods suffer if the cfuncs
accept optional or variable arguments.
This makes the following changes to : handling.
* Treats as **kw, prompting keyword argument separation warnings
if called with a positional hash.
* Do not look for an option hash if empty keywords are provided.
For backwards compatibility, treat an empty keyword splat as a empty
mandatory positional hash argument, but emit a a warning, as this
behavior will be removed in Ruby 3. The argument number check
needs to be moved lower so it can correctly handle an empty
positional argument being added.
* If the last argument is nil and it is necessary to treat it as an option
hash in order to make sure all arguments are processed, continue to
treat the last argument as the option hash. Emit a warning in this case,
as this behavior will be removed in Ruby 3.
* If splitting the keyword hash into two hashes, issue a warning, as we
will not be splitting hashes in Ruby 3.
* If the keyword argument is required to fill a mandatory positional
argument, continue to do so, but emit a warning as this behavior will
be going away in Ruby 3.
* If keyword arguments are provided and the last argument is not a hash,
that indicates something wrong. This can happen if a cfunc is calling
rb_scan_args multiple times, and providing arguments that were not
passed to it from Ruby. Callers need to switch to the new
rb_scan_args_kw function, which allows passing of whether keywords
were provided.
This commit fixes all warnings caused by the changes above.
It switches some function calls to *_kw versions with appropriate
kw_splat flags. If delegating arguments, RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS
is used. If creating new arguments, RB_PASS_KEYWORDS is used if
the last argument is a hash to be treated as keywords.
In open_key_args in io.c, use rb_scan_args_kw.
In this case, the arguments provided come from another C
function, not Ruby. The last argument may or may not be a hash,
so we can't set keyword argument mode. However, if it is a
hash, we don't want to warn when treating it as keywords.
In Ruby files, make sure to appropriately use keyword splats
or literal keywords when calling Cfuncs that now issue keyword
argument separation warnings through rb_scan_args. Also, make
sure not to pass nil in place of an option hash.
Work around Kernel#warn warnings due to problems in the Rubygems
override of the method. There is an open pull request to fix
these issues in Rubygems, but part of the Rubygems tests for
their override fail on ruby-head due to rb_scan_args not
recognizing empty keyword splats, which this commit fixes.
Implementation wise, adding rb_scan_args_kw is kind of a pain,
because rb_scan_args takes a variable number of arguments.
In order to not duplicate all the code, the function internals need
to be split into two functions taking a va_list, and to avoid passing
in a ton of arguments, a single struct argument is used to handle
the variables previously local to the function.
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NMAKE sets MAKE to the full path name, which includes spaces by
the default installation.
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* Removed excess backslashes
* Fixed the target name to try failure.cpp
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To substitute suffixes and VPATH for nmake.
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Look up language module with `MakeMakefile.[]`, insted of a
accessing constant under that module directly, to get rid of
expose the constant to the toplevel inadvertently.
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This makes method_missing take a flag for whether keyword arguments
were passed.
Adds tests both for rb_call_super_kw usage as well as general usage
of super calling method_missing in Ruby methods.
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This is a test extension so we basically want test failures rather
than a configure breakage but if there is no C++ compiler, we need
no test at all because there will be no chance for the tested
header file to be used later.
This makes it possible to build the ruby binary without any C++
compiler installed in a build environment.
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These variables then get their room for storage.
See also https://github.com/ruby/ruby/runs/214042030
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This reverts commit 53d21087da078cf999cc4757b03b2ff0fab4c2cf.
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Kill the failing tests.
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Otherwise the dynamic linker cannot find this function.
See also https://ci.appveyor.com/project/ruby/ruby/builds/27224231/job/4pg6lxlsnsjotu2l
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Should use numeric 0 for maximum portability.
See also https://travis-ci.org/ruby/ruby/jobs/581543798
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See also https://github.com/ruby/ruby/runs/213964487
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This is just a trivial mistake introduced in
0f36e8fc03a5c6433972d6bb5f177d5f6e106bac.
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After 5e86b005c0f2ef30df2f9906c7e2f3abefe286a2, I now think ANYARGS is
dangerous and should be extinct. This commit deletes ANYARGS from
st_foreach. I strongly believe that this commit should have had come
with b0af0592fdd9e9d4e4b863fde006d67ccefeac21, which added extra
parameter to st_foreach callbacks.
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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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It is not dumped, as it is a short alias for `:encoding`.
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__unused__ is unavailable on Sun C.
https://rubyci.org/logs/rubyci.s3.amazonaws.com/solaris11s-sunc/ruby-master/log/20190801T112505Z.fail.html.gz
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It seems the compiler does not support VLAs.
See also: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/ruby/ruby/builds/26392589/job/px6nuiuw4e78weg1
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PC modification in gc_event_hook_body was careless. There are (so
to say) abnormal iseqs stored in the cfp. We have to check sanity
before we touch the PC.
This has not been fixed because there was no way to (ab)use the
setup from pure-Ruby. However by using our official C APIs it is
possible to touch such frame(s), resulting in SEGV.
Fixes [Bug #14834].
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