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Feature #9785

closed

Feature Proposal: Dir.chdir Thread Safety

Added by schneems (Richard Schneeman) almost 10 years ago. Updated almost 10 years ago.

Status:
Rejected
Assignee:
-
Target version:
[ruby-core:62217]

Description

I am proposing that Dir.chdir with a block be local to the current thread and any threads that are created inside of that block. FileUtils.cd and FileUtils.chdir should also behave the same way.

Currently Dir.chdir will change the directory for the entire process. This makes writing a program that modifies different directories in threads very difficult. Here is some ruby code that demonstrates the problem:

# /tmp/code.rb

require 'fileutils'

FileUtils.mkdir_p("/tmp/foo")
FileUtils.mkdir_p("/tmp/bar")


threads = []
threads << Thread.new do
  Dir.chdir("/tmp/foo") do
    puts "Thread in Dir.chdir('/tmp/foo') pwd: #{`pwd`}"
  end
end


threads << Thread.new do
  puts "Thread without Dir.chdir        pwd: #{`pwd`}"
end

threads.map(&:join)

When you run it you get different results:

$ ruby /tmp/code.rb
Thread without Dir.chdir        pwd: /tmp
Thread in Dir.chdir('/tmp/foo') pwd: /private/tmp/foo

$ ruby /tmp/code.rb
Thread in Dir.chdir('/tmp/foo') pwd: /private/tmp/foo
Thread without Dir.chdir        pwd: /private/tmp/foo

This is because Dir.chdir is not limited to the scope of the block but rather changes the working directory globally for the entire process including different threads.

Threads in MRI are very good for reading and writing to the disk, however many times a programmer wishes to read or write to disk they will want to use Dir.chdir. The current behavior of Dir.chdir prevents a programmer from changing directory inside of threads and can be very confusing for anyone who does not know this behavior.

For a better programming experience either we can make Dir.chdir thread aware, or introduce a new way to change the directory inside of a new thread such as Dir.threadsafe_chdir, I believe the first option is the best.

Updated by schneems (Richard Schneeman) almost 10 years ago

It's come to my attention that this is fairly hardcoded into the OS (changing CWD is a per-process operation rather than a per-thread one). I do not have a proposed implementation for how to change directory within a thread, perhaps we could take ideas from another language allows this functionality if there are any.

Updated by rosenfeld (Rodrigo Rosenfeld Rosas) almost 10 years ago

If forking is an option for you, it would allow you to use chdir blocks the way you want I think.

Updated by normalperson (Eric Wong) almost 10 years ago

wrote:

It's come to my attention that this is fairly hardcoded into the OS
(changing CWD is a per-process operation rather than a per-thread
one). I do not have a proposed implementation for how to change
directory within a thread, perhaps we could take ideas from another
language allows this functionality if there are any.

Right, this is one of the reasons the *at family of syscalls
(openat, renameat, etc...) was introduced into POSIX.

Adding support for those might be good idea. However, OS support
outside Linux/Solaris is probably still limited at the moment.

Linux also allows unsetting the CLONE_FS flag for cloned threads,
but that's completely unportable.

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) almost 10 years ago

MVM branch has incomplete per-thread cwd, some methods are not implemented however, e.g., File#rename.

Updated by schneems (Richard Schneeman) almost 10 years ago

I think maybe the openat and family of *at calls is close to my original proposal but does not help for executing a script inside of a chdir block: https://github.com/heroku/hatchet/commit/f882d8920525df6c1dda5fbd5494ce03aaa7c592#diff-c8c936aa2a8d587bef4a4232e0028ed9L63.

As my original proposal violates the basic assumptions of threads and CWD, I think this specific proposal can be closed. Maybe when support becomes better for those functions or if someone has a better idea of how to utilize them we can open up a new issue. Here is a related discussion from 2008 that I found: https://www.ruby-forum.com/topic/165079

Updated by akr (Akira Tanaka) almost 10 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Rejected

:chdir option for spawn(), system() and IO.popen() is usable to specify the current directory of the child process without changing the current process of the parent process.

% pwd
/home/akr
% ruby -e 'system("pwd", :chdir => "/tmp")'
/tmp

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) almost 10 years ago

And if you want to discard output from the child process:

system(command, *args, chdir: dir, out: IO::NULL) # discard stdout only

system(command, *args, chdir: dir, out: IO::NULL, err: [:child, :out]) # also stderr
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