Misc #17180
openRactor and constant referencing
Description
Hey there.
From a high level, this bug report is describing my experience building something simple with Ractor without any shared state. I hope this is helpful as a feedback for the stable Ractor implementation in Ruby 3.0.
I've been iterating on a simple web server that utilizes Ractor. One of the things that a web server does is parsing HTTP headers. Thankfully, there's code in Ruby's standard library that can do that, so I decided to leverage WEBrick::HTTPRequest
.
Here's my example:
require 'webrick'
require 'stringio'
parser = Ractor.new do
s = StringIO.new("GET / HTTP/1.1\n"\
"Host: example.com\n"\
"User-Agent: curl/7.64.1\n"\
"Accept: */*")
req = WEBrick::HTTPRequest.new(WEBrick::Config::HTTP)
req.parse(s)
end
Ractor.select(parser)
This fails with can not access non-sharable objects in constant WEBrick::Config::HTTP by non-main Ractor. (NameError)
.
Let's try to copy that constant and pass it to the Ractor:
require 'webrick'
require 'stringio'
parser = Ractor.new(WEBrick::Config::HTTP) do |config|
s = StringIO.new("GET / HTTP/1.1\n"\
"Host: example.com\n"\
"User-Agent: curl/7.64.1\n"\
"Accept: */*")
req = WEBrick::HTTPRequest.new(config)
req.parse(s)
end
Ractor.select(parser)
This failed with can't dump hash with default proc
. I've guessed that maybe WEBrick::Config::HTTP
has a default proc? Let's try to work around:
require 'webrick'
require 'stringio'
http_c = WEBrick::Config::HTTP
http_c.default = nil
parser = Ractor.new(http_c) do |config|
s = StringIO.new("GET / HTTP/1.1\n"\
"Host: example.com\n"\
"User-Agent: curl/7.64.1\n"\
"Accept: */*")
req.parse(s)
end
Ractor.select(parser)
It failed with:
/Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/httprequest.rb:570:in `read_line': can not access non-sharable objects in constant WEBrick::LF by non-main ractor. (NameError)
I went ahead and made WEBrick freeze strings:
diff --git a/lib/webrick/httputils.rb b/lib/webrick/httputils.rb
index 76d4bd0dc7..273c596368 100644
--- a/lib/webrick/httputils.rb
+++ b/lib/webrick/httputils.rb
@@ -13,9 +13,9 @@
require 'tempfile'
module WEBrick
- CR = "\x0d" # :nodoc:
- LF = "\x0a" # :nodoc:
- CRLF = "\x0d\x0a" # :nodoc:
+ CR = "\x0d".freeze # :nodoc:
+ LF = "\x0a".freeze # :nodoc:
+ CRLF = "\x0d\x0a".freeze # :nodoc:
Now it's failing with:
/Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/singleton.rb:124:in `instance': can not access instance variables of classes/modules from non-main Ractors (RuntimeError)
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/utils.rb:132:in `register'
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/utils.rb:256:in `timeout'
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/httprequest.rb:559:in `_read_data'
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/httprequest.rb:570:in `read_line'
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/httprequest.rb:447:in `read_request_line'
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/httprequest.rb:201:in `parse'
from ./test.rb:16:in `block in <main>'
because WEBrick is manipulating with a class variable.
I've commented out some of that code in WEBrick for the sake of experiment and it started to fail with:
/Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/uri/common.rb:171:in `parse': can not access non-sharable objects in constant URI::RFC3986_PARSER by non-main ractor. (NameError)
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/httprequest.rb:484:in `parse_uri'
from /Users/kir/src/github.com/ruby/ruby/lib/webrick/httprequest.rb:217:in `parse'
This can be easily reproduced with a smaller piece of code:
parser = Ractor.new do
URI::parse("http://example.com")
end
Ractor.select(parser)
IMO, something as tiny and safe as URI::parse
should be allowrd to be called from a Ractor. We're either being too strict to the developer in terms of what constants they can reference from inside a Ractor, or we're missing a bunch of freeze
in the standard library. It's likely the latter, but in that case we'll need to push for freeze
as much as we can to make Ractor friendly to developers.
I'm very excited to see this happening in Ruby 3.0 and I'd like to help as much as I can to make it a great feature of Ruby.