Feature #22056
openAdd zero-copy String constructor backed by an arbitrary Ruby object
Description
Ruby has rich built-in functionality for working with byte sequences through String.
Objects that manage their own byte buffers naturally want to expose their data through this interface.
The straightforward approach is rb_str_new(), which copies the bytes:
VALUE str = rb_str_new(str, len);
For large or frequently accessed buffers this copy is wasteful in both time and memory. One approach is to create a String that directly references the existing memory, with the GC keeping the owner alive for as long as the String is reachable. This avoids both the copy and the need for manual lifetime management.
Existing APIs and their limitations¶
| API | Memory behavior |
|---|---|
rb_str_new / rb_str_new_cstr
|
Copies bytes; String owns the allocation |
rb_str_new_shared / rb_str_new_frozen
|
References another String's buffer; parent must be a String |
rb_str_new_static |
References static (compile-time) storage; no lifetime management |
rb_str_new_static avoids copying but is only safe for storage that lives forever.
When memory is owned by a Ruby object, it is freed when that object is collected, and rb_str_new_static offers no way to express that dependency.
The common workaround is to pin the owner via an instance variable:
VALUE str = rb_str_new_static(str, len);
rb_ivar_set(str, id_owner, owner);
The chosen key is a convention rather than a contract, and the ivar can be cleared by Ruby-level code, invalidating the pointer without any warning. It also incurs ivar table allocation overhead.
Proposal¶
Add zero-copy String constructors that accept an explicit parent object. The proposed names are tentative and open for discussion (see below):
VALUE rb_str_new_external(const char *ptr, long len, VALUE parent);
VALUE rb_usascii_str_new_external(const char *ptr, long len, VALUE parent);
VALUE rb_utf8_str_new_external(const char *ptr, long len, VALUE parent);
VALUE rb_enc_str_new_external(const char *ptr, long len, rb_encoding *enc, VALUE parent);
parent can be any live Ruby object. The GC guarantees it is not collected before the returned String is.
ptr must point into memory whose lifetime is tied to parent; no copy is made.
Use cases¶
IO::Buffer#get_string
IO::Buffer.for(string) wraps a String's bytes in a READONLY EXTERNAL buffer.
IO::Buffer#get_string now copies those bytes into a new String. With this API, the returned String can reference the source String directly:
return rb_enc_str_new_external((const char *)base + offset, length, encoding, self);
The returned String holds a GC reference to the IO::Buffer, which owns or transitively keeps alive the backing memory. The zero-copy string therefore remains valid for as long as it is reachable.
GLib::Bytes#to_s (ruby-gnome)
GLib::Bytes is an immutable, reference-counted byte buffer from GLib. The current implementation uses the ivar workaround:
VALUE str = rb_str_new_static(data, size);
rb_iv_set(str, "@bytes", self);
With the proposed API this becomes:
return rb_str_new_external(data, size, self);
Open questions¶
Naming
The name rb_str_new_external is one option. Other candidates:
-
rb_str_new_owned_by/rb_enc_str_new_owned_by -
rb_str_new_pinned/rb_enc_str_new_pinned -
rb_str_new_with_parent/rb_enc_str_new_with_parent
Memory retention
When a String referencing a small slice of a large buffer remains reachable, the entire backing object is kept alive. This is the same concern that led Java to remove the shared-backing optimization from String.substring() in Java 7.
The risk was also raised in the context of Ruby's own lazy substring proposal (#19315, https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/19315#note-7):
I heard that Java stopped the shared substring technique 10 years ago (https://www.infoq.com/news/2013/12/Oracle-Tunes-Java-String/) because of the potential for memory leaks
I don't disagree this proposal, but it would be nice if we could evaluate the effectiveness of this optimization.
Whether the same concern applies to this proposal, and whether the API should offer a way to force an independent copy, is worth discussing.
Proof of concept¶
A prototype implementation is at: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/16834
The implementation introduces a new flag on non-embedded strings and stores the parent reference in RString.as.heap.aux.parent. The GC mark phase pins embedded parent strings to prevent compaction from invalidating the raw pointer stored in the zero-copy child.