From: "Eregon (Benoit Daloze)" Date: 2022-04-21T09:52:05+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:108343] [Ruby master Feature#18668] Merge `io-nonblock` gems into core Issue #18668 has been updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze). @ko1 showed us the output on Windows: ``` require 'io/nonblock' require 'socket' # p STDOUT.nonblock? p s = Socket.tcp('atdot.net', 80) p s.nonblock = true p s.nonblock? #=> `nonblock?': nonblock?() function is unimplemented on this machine (NotImplementedError) ``` We should fix IO#nonblock? to just be false on Windows. And IO#nonblock= should raise on Windows, either always or when passed true. BTW, several CRuby tests check if nonblock?, and they do it via `IO.method_defined?("nonblock=")` most liekly to workaround that bug. ---------------------------------------- Feature #18668: Merge `io-nonblock` gems into core https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18668#change-97368 * Author: Eregon (Benoit Daloze) * Status: Open * Priority: Normal ---------------------------------------- The new io-nonblock gem defines just 3 methods on IO: (https://github.com/ruby/io-nonblock/blob/e20578b24405d225e6383d6c5ebfb7ffefac646b/ext/io/nonblock/nonblock.c#L137-L139) * IO#nonblock? * IO#nonblock=(nonblock) * IO#nonblock(nonblock = true, &block) I think these 3 methods should move to core, and the gem become a noop if these methods are already defined in core. These methods are small and yet they access IO internals and their behavior is extremely unlikely to change. Their behavior and names are well known and established. The benefit of a gem seems nonexistent here (no point to version those 3 methods), while the cost is significant (have to support each Ruby implementation, while this code just makes more sense in each Ruby implementation's repo). io/nonblock is useful to tell if an IO is in non-blocking mode and to set it upfront. This is needed when using a Fiber scheduler but also other cases such as https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18630#note-9. In fact `io/nonblock` is so small it's already core in TruffleRuby. Many core IO methods even need to check/set whether an IO is nonblocking, so it's natural to just use the existing methods for that when such IO methods are written in Ruby. No gem seems to depend on io-nonblock anyway, so it seems of no use to be a gem, and it should either be core or stdlib-not-a-gem: https://github.com/ruby/io-nonblock/network/dependents https://rubygems.org/gems/io-wait/reverse_dependencies Proposal: * Merge io-nonblock into io.c for Ruby 3.2 * Publish a new io-nonblock version that simply noops if the methods are already defined, or an empty gem (so the stdlib io/nonblock gets used). * Add a lib/io/nonblock.rb stub for compatibility, with eventually a deprecation warning. -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: