From: "Eregon (Benoit Daloze)" Date: 2022-08-18T09:23:50+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:109537] [Ruby master Bug#18729] Method#owner and UnboundMethod#owner are incorrect after using Module#public/protected/private Issue #18729 has been updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze). Assignee set to Eregon (Benoit Daloze) @matz agreed to remove ZSUPER methods, because the current illusion is incomplete. In practice the semantics are the same (code is unlikely to monkey-patch a method after making it public), except owner/instance_methods is more consistent with "alias/copy" semantics. I'll make a PR. ---------------------------------------- Bug #18729: Method#owner and UnboundMethod#owner are incorrect after using Module#public/protected/private https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18729#change-98708 * Author: Eregon (Benoit Daloze) * Status: Open * Priority: Normal * Assignee: Eregon (Benoit Daloze) * ruby -v: ruby 3.1.1p18 (2022-02-18 revision 53f5fc4236) [x86_64-linux] * Backport: 2.6: UNKNOWN, 2.7: UNKNOWN, 3.0: UNKNOWN, 3.1: UNKNOWN ---------------------------------------- The #owner should be "the class or module that defines the method". Or in other words, the owner is the module which has the method table containing that method. This generally holds, and it seems very likely this assumption is relied upon (e.g., when decorating a method, undefining it, etc). But the returned value on CRuby is incorrect for this case: ```ruby class A protected def foo :A end end class B < A p [instance_method(:foo), instance_method(:foo).owner, instance_methods(false), A.instance_methods(false)] public :foo p [instance_method(:foo), instance_method(:foo).owner, instance_methods(false), A.instance_methods(false)] end ``` It gives: ``` [#, A, [], [:foo]] [#, A, [:foo], [:foo]] ``` So `UnboundMethod#owner` says `A`, but clearly there is a :foo method entry in B created by `public :foo`, and that is shown through `B.instance_methods(false)`. The expected output is: ``` [#, A, [], [:foo]] [#, B, [:foo], [:foo]] ``` -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: