Previously, there were a lot of nops after conditional branches. They
come from branch to LIR labels:
./miniruby --zjit-call-threshold=1 --zjit-dump-disasm -e 'Object || String'
# Insn: v14 CheckInterrupts
# RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec)
ldur w2, [x20, #0x20]
tst w2, w2
b.ne #0x120900278
nop
nop
nop
nop
nop
# Insn: v15 Test v11
tst x0, #-5
mov x2, #0
mov x3, #1
csel x2, x2, x3, eq
# Insn: v16 IfTrue v15, bb3(v6, v11)
tst x2, x2
b.eq #0x120900198
nop
nop
nop
nop
nop
They gunk up the disassembly and can't be helpful for speed. This commit
removes them. I think they were accidentally inherited from certain YJIT
branches that require padding for patching. ZJIT doesn't have these
requirements.
Use a single branch instruction for conditional branches to labels; Jmp
already uses a single `B` instruction. This will work for assemblers
that generate less than ~260,000 instructions -- plenty.
Let the CodeBlock::label_ref() callback return a failure, so we can
fail compilation instead of panicking in case we do get large offsets.
What is Ruby?
Ruby is an interpreted object-oriented programming language often used for web development. It also offers many scripting features to process plain text and serialized files, or manage system tasks. It is simple, straightforward, and extensible.
Features of Ruby
- Simple Syntax
- Normal Object-oriented Features (e.g. class, method calls)
- Advanced Object-oriented Features (e.g. mix-in, singleton-method)
- Operator Overloading
- Exception Handling
- Iterators and Closures
- Garbage Collection
- Dynamic Loading of Object Files (on some architectures)
- Highly Portable (works on many Unix-like/POSIX compatible platforms as well as Windows, macOS, etc.) cf. https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/maintainers_md.html#label-Platform+Maintainers
How to get Ruby
For a complete list of ways to install Ruby, including using third-party tools like rvm, see:
https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/
You can download release packages and the snapshot of the repository. If you want to download whole versions of Ruby, please visit https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/releases/.
Download with Git
The mirror of the Ruby source tree can be checked out with the following command:
$ git clone https://github.com/ruby/ruby.git
There are some other branches under development. Try the following command to see the list of branches:
$ git ls-remote https://github.com/ruby/ruby.git
You may also want to use https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git (actual master of Ruby source) if you are a committer.
How to build
See Building Ruby
Ruby home page
Documentation
Mailing list
There is a mailing list to discuss Ruby. To subscribe to this list, please send the following phrase:
join
in the mail subject (not body) to the address ruby-talk-request@ml.ruby-lang.org.
Copying
See the file COPYING.
Feedback
Questions about the Ruby language can be asked on the Ruby-Talk mailing list or on websites like https://stackoverflow.com.
Bugs should be reported at https://bugs.ruby-lang.org. Read "Reporting Issues" for more information.
Contributing
See "Contributing to Ruby", which includes setup and build instructions.
The Author
Ruby was originally designed and developed by Yukihiro Matsumoto (Matz) in 1995.