[#108771] [Ruby master Bug#18816] Ractor segfaulting MacOS 12.4 (aarch64 / M1 processor) — "brodock (Gabriel Mazetto)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18816 has been reported by brodock (Gabriel Mazetto).

8 messages 2022/06/05

[#108802] [Ruby master Feature#18821] Expose Pattern Matching interfaces in core classes — "baweaver (Brandon Weaver)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18821 has been reported by baweaver (Brandon Weaver).

9 messages 2022/06/08

[#108822] [Ruby master Feature#18822] Ruby lack a proper method to percent-encode strings for URIs (RFC 3986) — "byroot (Jean Boussier)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18822 has been reported by byroot (Jean Boussier).

18 messages 2022/06/09

[#108937] [Ruby master Bug#18832] Suspicious superclass mismatch — "fxn (Xavier Noria)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18832 has been reported by fxn (Xavier Noria).

16 messages 2022/06/15

[#108976] [Ruby master Misc#18836] DevMeeting-2022-07-21 — "mame (Yusuke Endoh)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18836 has been reported by mame (Yusuke Endoh).

12 messages 2022/06/17

[#109043] [Ruby master Bug#18876] OpenSSL is not available with `--with-openssl-dir` — "Gloomy_meng (Gloomy Meng)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18876 has been reported by Gloomy_meng (Gloomy Meng).

18 messages 2022/06/23

[#109052] [Ruby master Bug#18878] parse.y: Foo::Bar {} is inconsistently rejected — "qnighy (Masaki Hara)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18878 has been reported by qnighy (Masaki Hara).

9 messages 2022/06/26

[#109055] [Ruby master Bug#18881] IO#read_nonblock raises IOError when called following buffered character IO — "javanthropus (Jeremy Bopp)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18881 has been reported by javanthropus (Jeremy Bopp).

9 messages 2022/06/26

[#109063] [Ruby master Bug#18882] File.read cuts off a text file with special characters when reading it on MS Windows — magynhard <noreply@...>

Issue #18882 has been reported by magynhard (Matth辰us Johannes Beyrle).

15 messages 2022/06/27

[#109081] [Ruby master Feature#18885] Long lived fork advisory API (potential Copy on Write optimizations) — "byroot (Jean Boussier)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18885 has been reported by byroot (Jean Boussier).

23 messages 2022/06/28

[#109083] [Ruby master Bug#18886] Struct aref and aset don't trigger any tracepoints. — "ioquatix (Samuel Williams)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18886 has been reported by ioquatix (Samuel Williams).

8 messages 2022/06/29

[#109095] [Ruby master Misc#18888] Migrate ruby-lang.org mail services to Google Domains and Google Workspace — "shugo (Shugo Maeda)" <noreply@...>

Issue #18888 has been reported by shugo (Shugo Maeda).

16 messages 2022/06/30

[ruby-core:108747] [Ruby master Feature#18812] Add ability to trace exit locations for YJIT

From: "eileencodes (Eileen Uchitelle)" <noreply@...>
Date: 2022-06-01 14:42:46 UTC
List: ruby-core #108747
Issue #18812 has been reported by eileencodes (Eileen Uchitelle).

----------------------------------------
Feature #18812: Add ability to trace exit locations for YJIT
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18812

* Author: eileencodes (Eileen Uchitelle)
* Status: Open
* Priority: Normal
----------------------------------------
Currently, when running yjit with `--yjit-stats` you are able to see method call exit reasons and the top 20 most frequent exits. This is useful to know where to spend time investigating whether an exit should be fixed, but in a larger codebase like Rails, it's next to impossible to know what the Ruby code that is exiting looks like.

Aaron Patterson and I aim to fix that with the addition of `--yjit-trace-exits` option and feature.

When running with `--yjit-stats` turned on Ruby code can inform the user
what the most common exits are. While this is useful information it
doesn't tell you the source location of the code that exited or what the
code that exited looks like. This change intends to fix that.

To use the feature, run yjit with `--yjit-stats` and `--yjit-trace-exits`,
which will record the backtrace for every exit that occurs. Users must save
the output of `RubyVM::YJIT.exit_locations` to a dump file. That file
can then be read by StackProf to see the code that exited and the
reason.

*Example usage:*

Given the following script, we write to a file called
`concat_array.dump` the results of `RubyVM::YJIT.exit_locations`.

```ruby
def concat_array
  ["t", "r", *x = "u", "e"].join
end

1000.times do
  concat_array
end

File.write("concat_array.dump", Marshal.dump(RubyVM::YJIT.exit_locations))
```

When we run the file with this branch and the appropriate flags the
stacktrace will be recorded. Note Stackprof needs to be installed or you
need to point to the library directly.

```
./ruby --yjit --yjit-call-threshold=1 --yjit-stats --yjit-trace-exits -I/Users/eileencodes/open_source/stackprof/lib test.rb
```

We can then read the dump file with Stackprof:

```
./ruby -I/Users/eileencodes/open_source/stackprof/lib/ /Users/eileencodes/open_source/stackprof/bin/stackprof --text concat_array.dump
```

Results will look similar to the following:

```
==================================
  Mode: ()
  Samples: 1817 (0.00% miss rate)
  GC: 0 (0.00%)
==================================
     TOTAL    (pct)     SAMPLES    (pct)     FRAME
      1001  (55.1%)        1001  (55.1%)     concatarray
       335  (18.4%)         335  (18.4%)     invokeblock
       178   (9.8%)         178   (9.8%)     send
       140   (7.7%)         140   (7.7%)     opt_getinlinecache
       ...etc...
```

Simply inspecting the `concatarray` method will give `SOURCE
UNAVAILABLE` because the source is insns.def.

```
./ruby -I/Users/eileencodes/open_source/stackprof/lib/ /Users/eileencodes/open_source/stackprof/bin/stackprof --text concat_array.dump --method concatarray
```

Result:

```
concatarray (nonexistent.def:1)
  samples:  1001 self (55.1%)  /   1001 total (55.1%)
  callers:
    1000  (   99.9%)  Object#concat_array
       1  (    0.1%)  Gem.suffixes
  callees (0 total):
  code:
        SOURCE UNAVAILABLE
```

However if we go deeper to the callee we can see the exact
source of the `concatarray` exit.

```
./ruby -I/Users/eileencodes/open_source/stackprof/lib/ /Users/eileencodes/open_source/stackprof/bin/stackprof --text concat_array.dump --method Object#concat_array
```

```
Object#concat_array (/Users/eileencodes/open_source/rust_ruby/test.rb:1)
  samples:     0 self (0.0%)  /   1000 total (55.0%)
  callers:
    1000  (  100.0%)  block in <main>
  callees (1000 total):
    1000  (  100.0%)  concatarray
  code:
                                  |     1  | def concat_array
 1000   (55.0%)                   |     2  |   ["t", "r", *x = "u", "e"].join
                                  |     3  | end
```

The `--walk` option is recommended for this feature as it make it
easier to traverse the tree of exits.

*Goals of this feature:*

This feature is meant to give more information when working on YJIT.
The idea is that if we know what code is exiting we can decide what
areas to prioritize when fixing exits. In some cases this means adding
prioritizing avoiding certain exits in yjit. In more complex cases it
might mean changing the Ruby code to be more performant when run with
yjit. Ultimately the more information we have about what code is exiting
AND why, the better we can make yjit.

*Known limitations:*

* Due to tracing exits, running this on large codebases like Rails
can be quite slow.
* On complex methods it can still be difficult to pinpoint the exact cause of
an exit.
* Stackprof is a requirement to to view the backtrace information from
the dump file

PR https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/5970



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