Bug #18435
closedCalling `protected` on ancestor method changes result of `instance_methods(false)`
Description
As documented instance_methods(false)
works as follows:
module A
def method1() end
end
class B
include A
def method2() end
end
p B.instance_methods(false) #=> [:method2]
However, calling protected
on the method defined by A
, unexpectedly changes the result of instance_methods(false)
on B
, even though the owner of the method is still A
:
module A
def method1() end
end
class B
include A
protected :method1
def method2() end
end
p B.instance_methods(false) #=> [:method1, :method2]
p B.instance_method(:method1).owner #=> A
In contrast, calling private
or public
on the same method does not cause any changes on the result of B.instance_methods(false)
.
This feels like a bug in the implementation of instance_methods(false)
, but, if it is by design, it should at least be documented on Module#instance_methods
.
This reproduction script gives the same output all the way from Ruby 2.0 up to Ruby-HEAD:
https://wandbox.org/permlink/LqbXMBTYxURRZmDz
Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) almost 3 years ago
I don't think this is a bug, I think it is expected behavior. When you call protected
in the class, it creates a method entry in the class with a different visibility, even if the owner of the method is still the module. Hopefully a committer with more experience can confirm that.
I don't think this should be documented in instance_methods
. After all, it is not unique to instance_methods
, but all related methods (methods
, protected_instance_methods
, etc.). If we document this behavior at all, it would be better to document the creation of method entries in doc/syntax/modules_and_classes.rdoc
, in the section on Visibility
. However, I don't think that this behavior is worth documenting.
Updated by ufuk (Ufuk Kayserilioglu) almost 3 years ago
I understand why the difference in behaviour is happening, but I respectfully disagree that this is not a bug.
Regardless of how protected
is implemented internally, the return value of instance_methods(false)
should not include methods that explicitly say that their owner is a different constant in the ancestor chain. The fact that those methods are being returned is a leak of internal implementation details. Users of the method should not need to know how and why protected
would have such a side-effect. Moreover, as I stated in my original report private
does not have a similar problem, either.
Basically the documentation of instance_methods
explicitly states:
If the optional parameter is
false
, the methods of any ancestors are not included.
and, in this case, that statement is not correct.
Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) almost 3 years ago
ufuk (Ufuk Kayserilioglu) wrote in #note-2:
I understand why the difference in behaviour is happening, but I respectfully disagree that this is not a bug.
That's fair. It's not 100% clear that this isn't a bug. Which I why I would like to get input from other committers.
Moreover, as I stated in my original report
private
does not have a similar problem, either.
This is incorrect, private
has exactly the same issue, it's just that instance_methods
doesn't include private methods:
module A
def method1() end
end
class B
include A
private :method1
private def method2() end
end
p B.private_instance_methods(false) #=> [:method1, :method2]
p B.instance_method(:method1).owner #=> A
public
has the same issue:
module A
private def method1() end
end
class B
include A
public :method1
def method2() end
end
p B.instance_methods(false) #=> [:method1, :method2]
p B.instance_method(:method1).owner #=> A
Basically the documentation of
instance_methods
explicitly states:If the optional parameter is
false
, the methods of any ancestors are not included.and, in this case, that statement is not correct.
This depends on your definition of "methods of any ancestors". As I mentioned, public
/private
/protected
create method entries in the current class if the method whose visibility they are affecting is defined in the parent class. I think that makes them methods of the current class, even if the definition occurs in the ancestor.
After doing some more testing, I think there is a bug here, but it's related to instance_method
/method
returning the wrong information. Evidence of this behavior can be found via the newly introduced methods for checking method visibility:
module A
def method1() end
end
class B
include A
protected :method1
end
p A.instance_method(:method1).public? #=> true
p B.instance_method(:method1).public? #=> true (should be false)
p A.instance_method(:method1).protected? #=> false
p B.instance_method(:method1).protected? #=> false (should be true)
p B.new.method(:method1).public? #=> true (should be false)
p B.new.method(:method1).protected? #=> false (should be true)
I'll see if I can work on a patch to fix this.
Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) almost 3 years ago
I've submitted a pull request to fix this issue: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/5356 . It makes method
/instance_method
(and similar methods) no longer skip ZSUPER method entries, so owner
will correctly show the class where the method entry is defined, and the visibility methods will return the correct results.
Updated by alanwu (Alan Wu) almost 3 years ago
I agree this is a confusing part of the API surface. This ticket reminds me of
the discussion from [Bug #16106].
Consider the following setup:
class Parent
def foo; end
end
class Child < Parent
protected :foo
end
p Child.instance_method(:foo).owner # => Parent
Module#instance_methods
(plural) only returns public and protected methods,
but Module#instance_method
(singular) doesn't filter based on visibility.
Also, as Jeremy pointed out in [ruby-core:106839]
Child.protected_instance_methods(false)
gives [:foo]
, but
Child.instance_method(:foo).protected?
gives false
surprisingly.
So currently, Module#protected_instance_methods
and similar APIs can provide
more information than Module#instance_method
. APIs with plural names can
observe the effects of using Child.protected(:foo)
.
An important question is whether Module#protected
and other visibility change
APIs semantically define new methods when used in a subclass. If not, the
particular wording for relevant APIs cover the current behavior:
Module#protected: ... With arguments, sets the named methods to have
protected visibility ...UnboundedMethod#owner: Returns the class or module that defines the method.
...
The wording for Module#instance_method
is unclear as to what should happen
when there is a visibility difference:
Module#instance_method: Returns an +UnboundMethod+ representing the given
instance method in mod.
I think Jeremy's PR makes it a rule that using visibility change methods in
subclasses semantically define new methods, but it opens up some design issues
I posted as a comment on GitHub. I don't think it should be merged as a
simple bug fix since it's a breaking change to APIs that are fairly fundamental
to the language. I do agree that the addition of public?
and friends have
made how Module#instance_method
behaves with respect to visibility change
APIs more surprising.
I think it's worth mentioning in docs that Module#instance_method{s,}
are
very different despite having names that imply a relationship.
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) almost 3 years ago
I'm not fully clear on the expected semantics of private/protected/public in a subclass, that would probably be good to improve in the docs of these methods or in general docs.
However since the current semantics seems to clearly create new method entries on the subclass (when the visibility isn't already what's requested) then I think it would make a lot of sense to update the owner of the new method entry to be the subclass, since it's effectively defined on that class (the source_location would remain untouched, of course).
Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) almost 3 years ago
I've pushed a simpler fix that doesn't change the semantics of method
, but still returns the correct visibility for ZSUPER methods, by storing the correct visibility as a member of struct METHOD: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/5356/commits/8fd730db1d414f61f42cfb75b8e8711347b1d032
It may be worth discussing whether to change the semantics of ZSUPER Method objects (such as who the owner
should be), but for right now, it's probably best to just fix the bug.
Updated by jeremyevans (Jeremy Evans) almost 3 years ago
- Status changed from Open to Closed
Applied in changeset git|58dc8bf8f15df9a33d191074e8a5d4946a3d59d5.
Fix {Method,UnboundMethod}#{public?,private?,protected?} for ZSUPER methods
Add a visibility member to struct METHOD storing the original
method visibility, and use that, instead of taking the visibility
from the stored method entry (which may have different visibility
for ZSUPER methods).
Consider Method/UnboundMethod objects different if they have
different visibilities.
Fixes [Bug #18435]
Updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) over 2 years ago
- Related to Bug #18729: Method#owner and UnboundMethod#owner are incorrect after using Module#public/protected/private added
Updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) over 2 years ago
- Related to Bug #18751: Regression on master for Method#== when comparing public with private method added
Updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) over 2 years ago
- Status changed from Closed to Open
I thought it was OK to accept this behavior, but it caused issues like #18729 and #18751. At the time of the decision, I haven't noticed those corner cases. Although it has already been shipped with 3.1, I proposed to revert this change. I estimate the impact of reverting incompatibility is minimal.
Instead of changing old behavior, the documentation of instance_methods(false)
should be updated to explain why method1
is included in the above example (visibility changes or making aliases are considered as definition by instance_methods
).
Matz.
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) over 2 years ago
I believe the only way that makes sense here is to remove "ZSUPER methods" altogether.
Other Ruby implementations do not have this needless complexity and near-impossible-to-understand semantics.
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18751#note-11 might help to be closer, but IMHO we should remove "ZSUPER methods" altogether.
public/private/protected
should shallow-copy a method entry (but still change Method#owner
of course), just like alias_method
already behaves.
This is what TruffleRuby and JRuby do, it's simpler, it is what Ruby users expect (Method is a Ruby object that captures a method entry, at the time it was requested), and it is consistent (.owner
is always the module which has that method entry in its method table: #18729).
For instance this should be :p1\n:orig1
but currently it's :p2\n:orig1
on CRuby.
I claim no Ruby user expects that, because Method
should capture a specific method entry, that's why we have bind/call and that's how Method objects are used.
class P
private
def m
:p1
end
public
def orig
:orig1
end
end
class C < P
public :m
alias_method :alias, :orig
end
class P
private
def m
:p2
end
public
def orig
:orig2
end
end
p C.new.m
p C.new.alias
@matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) OK to remove "ZSUPER methods" and make public/protected/private much simpler by having them shallow copy method entries, just like alias_method already does it?
This will solve a lot of confusion and inconsistency for Method objects of methods defined by public/protected/private.
Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) about 2 years ago
- Status changed from Open to Closed
- Backport changed from 2.6: UNKNOWN, 2.7: UNKNOWN, 3.0: UNKNOWN, 3.1: UNKNOWN to 2.6: DONTNEED, 2.7: DONTNEED, 3.0: DONTNEED, 3.1: REQUIRED
matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) wrote in #note-11:
I thought it was OK to accept this behavior, but it caused issues like #18729 and #18751. At the time of the decision, I haven't noticed those corner cases. Although it has already been shipped with 3.1, I proposed to revert this change. I estimate the impact of reverting incompatibility is minimal.
I committed the revert at ff42e2359bdbf37e1721a82b4cfd95b31f494f3f. My understanding is that @matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) would like this backported to Ruby 3.1, so marking for backport.
Instead of changing old behavior, the documentation of
instance_methods(false)
should be updated to explain whymethod1
is included in the above example (visibility changes or making aliases are considered as definition byinstance_methods
).
I'll see if I can update the documentation for instance_methods
to explain this.
Updated by nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) about 2 years ago
I agree to backport the revert to ruby_3_1, but I think removing the existing methods in stable releases could be a severe damage to the depending applications/libraries.
I'd like to add dummy methods {Method,UnboundMethod}#{public?,protected?,private?} with warnings in 3.1.3.
@matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) @jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) I propose to the dummy implementation of {Method,UnboundMethod}#public? return true constantly, and the others return false. Do you have any objection for adding dummy methods?
Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) about 2 years ago
nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) wrote in #note-14:
I agree to backport the revert to ruby_3_1, but I think removing the existing methods in stable releases could be a severe damage to the depending applications/libraries.
I'd like to add dummy methods {Method,UnboundMethod}#{public?,protected?,private?} with warnings in 3.1.3.
@matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) @jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) I propose to the dummy implementation of {Method,UnboundMethod}#public? return true constantly, and the others return false. Do you have any objection for adding dummy methods?
I don't have a preference on whether the methods are kept or removed in 3.1. However, I think if we are going to keep the methods in 3.1, we should just have them emit a deprecation warning instead of changing their behavior.
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
protected methods like in this issue are part of the method table, so I think it makes no sense to hide them.
What we need to do is to stop hiding ZSUPER methods: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18751#note-12
Ruby implementations which do not use "ZSUPER methods" (i.e., both JRuby and TruffleRuby) already expose such methods in instance_methods
, as it should be semantically.
I don't think it makes sense to backport this, it's just likely to cause unnecessary incompatibilities and confusion for people updating from 3.1.2 to 3.1.3.
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
My understanding of this issue is it's the same as #18729.
The bug is not in instance_methods
which is correct.
It's in owner
, because of the (undesirable) ZSUPER methods hiding.
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
- Status changed from Closed to Open
Reopening this as because of the revert it is still inconsistent and unsolved.
PR to fix this by no longer hiding ZSUPER methods: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/6242
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
@matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) 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.
EDIT: see https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/6242#issuecomment-1219593598
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
- Assignee set to Eregon (Benoit Daloze)
Updated by jeremyevans (Jeremy Evans) about 2 years ago
- Status changed from Open to Closed
Applied in changeset git|8212aab81a77a2a91fb7c1681b4968171193b48f.
Make Object#method and Module#instance_method not skip ZSUPER methods
Based on https://github.com/jeremyevans/ruby/commit/c95e7e5329140f640b6497905485761f3336d967
Among other things, this fixes calling visibility methods (public?,
protected?, and private?) on them. It also fixes #owner to show the
class the zsuper method entry is defined in, instead of the original
class it references.
For some backwards compatibility, adjust #parameters and #source_location,
to show the parameters and source location of the method originally
defined. Also have the parameters and source location still be shown
by #inspect.
Clarify documentation of {Method,UnboundMethod}#owner.
Add tests based on the description of https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18435
and based on https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/5356#issuecomment-1005298809
Fixes [Bug #18435] [Bug #18729]
Co-authored-by: Benoit Daloze eregontp@gmail.com
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
- Related to Feature #11689: Add methods allow us to get visibility from Method and UnboundMethod object. added
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
@nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) wrote in #note-14:
I agree to backport the revert to ruby_3_1, but I think removing the existing methods in stable releases could be a severe damage to the depending applications/libraries.
I'd like to add dummy methods {Method,UnboundMethod}#{public?,protected?,private?} with warnings in 3.1.3.
@matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) @jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) I propose to the dummy implementation of {Method,UnboundMethod}#public? return true constantly, and the others return false. Do you have any objection for adding dummy methods?
Since https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/6242 these methods are no longer problematic (Method == method entry).
Also see https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/11689#note-27
I am not sure what to backport if anything.
Possibilities I see:
- Keep the methods for 3.1.x and accept they are confusing for zsuper methods in 3.1 (fixed in 3.2). Would be good to document that in the methods' rdoc and possibly release notes. Maybe even emit some warning as Jeremy suggests.
- Backport https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/6242, since it does fix bugs #18435 #18729 (#18751 too but I that seems master-only). Unsure if it's a good idea to backport since it's a bigger change (and every bug fix is a potential incompatibility).
- Remove the {public?,protected?,private?} methods. I think this makes sense because we want people to not use them in 3.1 as they are kind of broken, and code which feature checks correctly with
method.respond_to?(:public)
will then work correctly no matter <3.1, 3.1 or 3.2 (assuming the code uses a fallback).
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
FWIW, TruffleRuby and JRuby don't have ZSUPER methods, so it's like they always had the fix of https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/6242.
And so they could add correct {public?,protected?,private?} methods in 3.1 easily.
From that point of view it seems fairly safe to backport that PR (seems extremely unlikely to cause incompatibilities in practice).
Might still cause some confusion though if method/instance_method behavior changes between 3.1.2 and 3.1.3 for zsuper methods.
Updated by nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) about 2 years ago
- Backport changed from 2.6: DONTNEED, 2.7: DONTNEED, 3.0: DONTNEED, 3.1: REQUIRED to 2.6: DONTNEED, 2.7: DONTNEED, 3.0: DONTNEED, 3.1: DONE
ruby_3_1 5473c1064d5e82d706b554f2fe5a5b41900f6b14 merged revision(s) 8212aab81a77a2a91fb7c1681b4968171193b48f,209631a45f9682dedf718f4b4a140efe7d21a6fc.
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
@nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) Could you also backport the commits of https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/6467 ?
The semantics and final code in proc.c is much closer to what it was in 3.1 before the backport just above, so it seems best to backport it for compatibility with both previous Ruby releases and upcoming 3.2.
This still fixes the issue with visibility methods, hence it's worth backporting, it's just dealing slightly differently with zsuper methods.
Updated by nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) about 2 years ago
ruby_3_1 9e739022ded433f189a575017d3936b79541f229 merged revision(s) 94cea3e4d0a60326bd95be762819eed8ccd59ca6,aa53d69aa21c4dfa2a78a1cec5cb34e9697b3d30,6b7d32a5e54088b6b4014529bbf2b4b8c1a96029,c6319026caa6c8f0f569f80011e8502349a04b14,aa490f9442c32cd0e1e449ac817f410bd5924c8b.
Thank you Eregon to point out the additional changesets!
Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) about 2 years ago
@nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) Thanks! We need to backport one more commit, I forgot to mark the new field: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/commit/b91f685a2615ef957210f5e3a50c0e8299c20c55
Updated by nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) about 2 years ago
@Eregon (Benoit Daloze) Thanks! I will handle it soon.
Updated by nagachika (Tomoyuki Chikanaga) about 2 years ago
backported b91f685a2615ef957210f5e3a50c0e8299c20c55 into ruby_3_1 at 263ae503650531b90653ab78124b6d2d513e06cc.