From: "nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada)" Date: 2013-02-10T22:34:14+09:00 Subject: [ruby-core:52109] [ruby-trunk - Feature #7816] Don't invalidate method caches when defining a new method on a class without subclasses Issue #7816 has been updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada). charliesome (Charlie Somerville) wrote: > I think it should stay in include/ruby/ruby.h where all the other > flags are defined. This way if someone adds a new class flag, they > do not accidentally also pick FL_USER5 because they did not see it > already in use. Rather I think other RMODULE_* flags also should go to internal.h. > > * Class#has_subclass? is not only useless but harmful, it mimics > > users when subclasses are removed. > > Fair enough, I'll update my patch and remove it. Or, add subclass count in rb_classext_t. > > * what's inst in .gitignore. > > Ditto, I use './configure --prefix=`pwd`/inst', but I forgot to > stash before creating the patch. I use dotted directories, e.g., .x86_64-linux. ---------------------------------------- Feature #7816: Don't invalidate method caches when defining a new method on a class without subclasses https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/7816#change-36126 Author: charliesome (Charlie Somerville) Status: Open Priority: Normal Assignee: Category: core Target version: next minor =begin Attached is a patch that avoids incrementing the VM state version when defining a method and these conditions are true: * The method is not a redefinition of an existing method in the same class or any superclass * The class has no subclasses * The class is not a module This means that defining singleton methods on objects no longer invalidates every method cache. This will significantly improve performance of code that defines singleton methods at runtime (eg. when using OpenStruct) In my testing, a fresh Rails app boots about 15% faster (~1.7 sec down to ~1.4 sec). This controller action can do ~440 requests per second with my patch, compared to ~320 requests per second without my patch. class HomeController < ApplicationController def index OpenStruct.new a: 1, b: 2 render text: "home" end end Of course these numbers will vary between apps, but I think this is a good start in improving the performance of a very common use case in Ruby. =end -- http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/