Bug #2774
closedadd explicit constraints for WONTFIX IO bug
Description
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Hi, all
I propose writing two constraints into rdoc of IO:
-
after running IO#dup, both an original IO and generated IO may
cause "bezarre behavior" except IO#close -
after running IO#reopen, an original IO that passed to reopen
may cause "bezarre behavior" except IO#close
In short, it means "IO#dup should not be used" and "IO that was once
passed to IO#reopen should be just closed."
"bezarre behavior" does not mean undefined behavior (such as SEGV),
but means wrong order of reading and writing, wrong value from
IO#pos, etc. (see Appendix)
These behaviors are caused by bug of core's wrong buffering handing.
But to fix these, we must change the structure `rb_io_t', public API
in include/ruby/io.h, resulting in binary incompatibility.
We are currently thinking that these behaviors won't cause so serious
issue to ought to be fixed with even binary incompatibility.
So I'm proposing writing the above constraints to assert WONTFIX in
the immediate future.
Please say your rebuttal if the above constraints make trouble in
"real world" example. If valid and convincing rebuttal is come, the
issue will be fixed with breaking binary compatibility. If not, the
above constraint statement will be added.
Answers for anticipated rebuttal:
- how to replace stdout and stderr temporarily to invoke subprocess
Use Kernel#spawn's option.
- my existing code will not work
Please fix your code.
Fixing this, all users will be forced to reinstall ext library
(even worse, the code of the library may need to be modified).
We are expecting rebuttals such as examples that cannot be absorbed
by Ruby-level fix or that requires all users to do more cumbersome
things.
If anyone says no objection in three days, I'll add the constraints.
Thanks,
Appendix: current bezarre behaviors of IO#dup and reopen
foo.txt¶
A
B
C
example: first-come-first-served gets after IO#reopen (1)¶
f1 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2 = File.new("foo.txt")
f1.reopen(f2)
p f1.gets #=> "A\n"
p f2.gets #=> nil (cannot read)
example: first-come-first-served gets after IO#reopen (2)¶
f1 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2 = File.new("foo.txt")
f1.reopen(f2)
p f2.gets #=> "A\n"
p f1.gets #=> nil (cannot read)
example: negative value of IO#pos after IO#reopen¶
f1 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2.gets
f1.reopen(f2)
f2.gets
f1.rewind
p f2.pos #=> -2
example: wrong value of IO#pos after IO#dup¶
f1 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2 = f1.dup()
p f1.pos #=> 0
p f2.gets #=> "A\n"
p f1.pos #=> 6 (neither 0 or 2)
example: IO#pos with side-effect after IO#reopen¶
f1 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2.gets
f1.reopen(f2)
f2.gets
p f1.pos #=> 6
f2.pos
p f1.pos #=> 4 (changed)
example: wrong order of reading after IO#dup¶
r, w = IO.pipe
Thread.new do
w.print "Foo\nBar"
sleep 1
w.print "Baz\n"
sleep 1
w.print "Qux\n"
end
p r.gets #=> "Foo\n"
r2 = r.dup
p r2.gets #=> "Baz\n" (not "BarBaz\n")
p r.gets #=> "BarQux\n" (not "Qux\n")
example: wrong order of writing after IO#dup¶
f = File.new("out.txt", "w")
f1 = File.new("foo.txt")
f2 = File.new("foo.txt")
f1.reopen(f)
f2.reopen(f)
f2.puts("foo")
f1.puts("bar")
#=> resulting "bar\nfoo\n" in out.txt, not "foo\nbar\n"
--
Yusuke ENDOH mame@tsg.ne.jp
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