mame (Yusuke Endoh) wrote in #note-2:
@jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) Could you explain the use case?
This could be used to warn or raise on singleton class creation
Why do you want to warn such a case? (To avoid some performance degeneration?)
Correct. I recently updated Sequel to avoid singleton classes for datasets, with performance improvements of 20-40% even in simple cases (and potentially more in more complex cases).
The reasons for the improvements:
Avoiding the use of singleton classes significantly improved performance in this case. It could potentially improve performance in other cases.
or modify the instance to change behavior, such as allow optimizations when a singleton class does not exist, but allow fallbacks if it does exist.
AFAIK, it is not visible for a Ruby programmer if a singleton class is "generated" or not. What optimization do you have in mind?
In terms of visibility, that used to be true for plain Ruby methods (you could work around using a C-extension). Starting in Ruby 3.2, you can check for visibility in plain Ruby:
public def has_singleton_class?
ObjectSpace.each_object(Class){|obj| return true if obj.singleton_class? && obj.attached_object.equal?(self)}
false
end
However, as that uses ObjectSpace.each_object
, it is rather slow.
In terms of optimization, the optimization that Sequel uses is that it takes something that previously used clone(freeze: false)
and extend(*mods)
with something that does Class.new(self.class){include(*mods)}.new(self.db, self.opts)
. This optimization is broken if the receiver does have a singleton class. For Sequel's case, because all Sequel datasets are frozen by default (and you cannot add a useful singleton class to a frozen object), I was still able to implement the optimization. But other libraries that do not use an always-frozen design would not currently be able to perform a similar optimization safely.
My understanding of the Ruby object model is that every object has a singleton class from the beginning. class << obj
just retrieves it.
Because a naive implementation that actually makes every object have a singleton class will be slow, it is lazily generated as needed. But I think that it is just a kind of internal optimization, which should be invisible to a Ruby programmer.
Conceptually, I agree with you. If the performance increase from avoiding singleton classes was not so large, I would not be proposing this. However, considering the extent of the performance increase from optimizations to avoid singleton classes, I think having a hook on singleton class creation is a good idea.