Class: Ractor
Relationships & Source Files | |
Namespace Children | |
Classes:
| |
Exceptions:
| |
Inherits: | Object |
Defined in: | ractor.rb, ractor.c |
Overview
Ractor
is a Actor-model abstraction for Ruby that provides thread-safe parallel execution.
.new can make a new Ractor
, and it will run in parallel.
# The simplest ractor
r = Ractor.new {puts "I am in Ractor!"}
r.take # wait for it to finish
# here "I am in Ractor!" would be printed
Ractors do not share usual objects, so the same kinds of thread-safety concerns such as data-race, race-conditions are not available on multi-ractor programming.
To achieve this, ractors severely limit object sharing between different ractors. For example, unlike threads, ractors can’t access each other’s objects, nor any objects through variables of the outer scope.
a = 1
r = Ractor.new {puts "I am in Ractor! a=#{a}"}
# fails immediately with
# ArgumentError (can not isolate a Proc because it accesses outer variables (a).)
On CRuby (the default implementation), Global Virtual Machine Lock (GVL) is held per ractor, so ractors are performed in parallel without locking each other.
Instead of accessing the shared state, the objects should be passed to and from ractors via sending and receiving objects as messages.
a = 1
r = Ractor.new do
a_in_ractor = receive # receive blocks till somebody will pass message
puts "I am in Ractor! a=#{a_in_ractor}"
end
r.send(a) # pass it
r.take
# here "I am in Ractor! a=1" would be printed
There are two pairs of methods for sending/receiving messages:
-
#send and .receive for when the sender knows the receiver (push);
-
.yield and #take for when the receiver knows the sender (pull);
In addition to that, an argument to .new would be passed to block and available there as if received by .receive, and the last block value would be sent outside of the ractor as if sent by .yield.
A little demonstration on a classic ping-pong:
server = Ractor.new do
puts "Server starts: #{self.inspect}"
puts "Server sends: ping"
Ractor.yield 'ping' # The server doesn't know the receiver and sends to whoever interested
received = Ractor.receive # The server doesn't know the sender and receives from whoever sent
puts "Server received: #{received}"
end
client = Ractor.new(server) do |srv| # The server is sent inside client, and available as srv
puts "Client starts: #{self.inspect}"
received = srv.take # The Client takes a message specifically from the server
puts "Client received from " \
"#{srv.inspect}: #{received}"
puts "Client sends to " \
"#{srv.inspect}: pong"
srv.send 'pong' # The client sends a message specifically to the server
end
[client, server].each(&:take) # Wait till they both finish
This will output:
Server starts: #<Ractor:#2 test.rb:1 running>
Server sends: ping
Client starts: #<Ractor:#3 test.rb:8 running>
Client received from #<Ractor:#2 rac.rb:1 blocking>: ping
Client sends to #<Ractor:#2 rac.rb:1 blocking>: pong
Server received: pong
It is said that Ractor
receives messages via the incoming port, and sends them to the outgoing port. Either one can be disabled with #close_incoming and #close_outgoing respectively. If a ractor terminated, its ports will be closed automatically.
Shareable and unshareable objects
When the object is sent to and from the ractor, it is important to understand whether the object is shareable or unshareable. Most of objects are unshareable objects.
Shareable objects are basically those which can be used by several threads without compromising thread-safety; e.g. immutable ones. .shareable? allows to check this, and .make_shareable tries to make object shareable if it is not.
Ractor.shareable?(1) #=> true -- numbers and other immutable basic values are
Ractor.shareable?('foo') #=> false, unless the string is frozen due to # freeze_string_literals: true
Ractor.shareable?('foo'.freeze) #=> true
ary = ['hello', 'world']
ary.frozen? #=> false
ary[0].frozen? #=> false
Ractor.make_shareable(ary)
ary.frozen? #=> true
ary[0].frozen? #=> true
ary[1].frozen? #=> true
When a shareable object is sent (via #send or .yield), no additional processing happens, and it just becomes usable by both ractors. When an unshareable object is sent, it can be either copied or moved. The first is the default, and it makes the object’s full copy by deep cloning of non-shareable parts of its structure.
data = ['foo', 'bar'.freeze]
r = Ractor.new do
data2 = Ractor.receive
puts "In ractor: #{data2.object_id}, #{data2[0].object_id}, #{data2[1].object_id}"
end
r.send(data)
r.take
puts "Outside : #{data.object_id}, #{data[0].object_id}, #{data[1].object_id}"
This will output:
In ractor: 340, 360, 320
Outside : 380, 400, 320
(Note that object id of both array and non-frozen string inside array have changed inside the ractor, showing it is different objects. But the second array’s element, which is a shareable frozen string, has the same object_id.)
Deep cloning of the objects may be slow, and sometimes impossible. Alternatively, move: true
may be used on sending. This will move the object to the receiving ractor, making it inaccessible for a sending ractor.
data = ['foo', 'bar']
r = Ractor.new do
data_in_ractor = Ractor.receive
puts "In ractor: #{data_in_ractor.object_id}, #{data_in_ractor[0].object_id}"
end
r.send(data, move: true)
r.take
puts "Outside: moved? #{Ractor::MovedObject === data}"
puts "Outside: #{data.inspect}"
This will output:
In ractor: 100, 120
Outside: moved? true
test.rb:9:in `method_missing': can not send any methods to a moved object (Ractor::MovedError)
Notice that even #inspect (and more basic methods like __id__
) is inaccessible on a moved object.
Besides frozen objects, there are shareable objects. ::Class
and ::Module
objects are shareable so the Class/Module definitions are shared between ractors. Ractor
objects are also shareable objects. All operations for the shareable mutable objects are thread-safe, so the thread-safety property will be kept. We can not define mutable shareable objects in Ruby, but C extensions can introduce them.
It is prohibited to access instance variables of mutable shareable objects (especially Modules and classes) from ractors other than main:
class C
class << self
attr_accessor :tricky
end
end
C.tricky = 'test'
r = Ractor.new(C) do |cls|
puts "I see #{cls}"
puts "I can't see #{cls.tricky}"
end
r.take
# I see C
# can not access instance variables of classes/modules from non-main Ractors (RuntimeError)
Ractors can access constants if they are shareable. The main Ractor
is the only one that can access non-shareable constants.
GOOD = 'good'.freeze
BAD = 'bad'
r = Ractor.new do
puts "GOOD=#{GOOD}"
puts "BAD=#{BAD}"
end
r.take
# GOOD=good
# can not access non-shareable objects in constant Object::BAD by non-main Ractor. (NameError)
# Consider the same C class from above
r = Ractor.new do
puts "I see #{C}"
puts "I can't see #{C.tricky}"
end
r.take
# I see C
# can not access instance variables of classes/modules from non-main Ractors (RuntimeError)
See also the description of # shareable_constant_value
pragma in Comments syntax
explanation.
Ractors vs threads
Each ractor creates its own thread. New threads can be created from inside ractor (and, on CRuby, sharing GVL with other threads of this ractor).
r = Ractor.new do
a = 1
Thread.new {puts "Thread in ractor: a=#{a}"}.join
end
r.take
# Here "Thread in ractor: a=1" will be printed
Note on code examples
In examples below, sometimes we use the following method to wait till ractors that are not currently blocked will finish (or process till next blocking) method.
def wait
sleep(0.1)
end
It is **only for demonstration purposes** and shouldn’t be used in a real code. Most of the times, just #take is used to wait till ractor will finish.
Reference
See design doc
for more details.
Class Method Summary
-
.count
Returns total count of Ractors currently running.
-
.current
Returns the currently executing
Ractor
. -
.main
returns main ractor.
-
.make_shareable(obj, copy: false) ⇒ shareable_obj
Make
obj
shareable between ractors. -
.new(*args, name: nil) {|*args| ... } ⇒ Ractor
constructor
Create a new
Ractor
with args and a block. -
.receive ⇒ msg
(also: .recv)
Receive an incoming message from the current Ractor’s incoming port’s queue, which was sent there by #send.
-
.receive_if {|msg| ... } ⇒ msg
Receive only a specific message.
-
.recv
Alias for .receive.
-
.select(*ractors, [yield_value:, move: false]) ⇒ Ractor, ...
Waits for the first ractor to have something in its outgoing port, reads from this ractor, and returns that ractor and the object received.
-
.shareable?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
Checks if the object is shareable by ractors.
-
.yield(msg, move: false) ⇒ nil
Send a message to the current ractor’s outgoing port to be consumed by #take.
Instance Method Summary
-
#<<(obj, move: false)
Alias for #send.
-
#[](sym)
get a value from ractor-local storage.
-
#[]=(sym, val)
set a value in ractor-local storage.
-
#close_incoming ⇒ Boolean
Closes the incoming port and returns its previous state.
-
#close_outgoing ⇒ Boolean
Closes the outgoing port and returns its previous state.
- #inspect (also: #to_s)
-
#name
The name set in .new, or
nil
. -
#recv
Alias for #receive.
-
#send(msg, move: false) ⇒ self
(also: #<<)
Send a message to a Ractor’s incoming queue to be consumed by .receive.
-
#take ⇒ msg
Take a message from ractor’s outgoing port, which was put there by .yield or at ractor’s finalization.
-
#to_s
Alias for #inspect.
-
#receive
(also: #recv)
private
same as .receive
- #receive_if(&b) private
Constructor Details
.new(*args, name: nil) {|*args| ... } ⇒ Ractor
Create a new Ractor
with args and a block.
A block (Proc) will be isolated (can’t access to outer variables). self
inside the block will refer to the current Ractor
.
r = Ractor.new { puts "Hi, I am #{self.inspect}" }
r.take
# Prints "Hi, I am #<Ractor:#2 test.rb:1 running>"
args
passed to the method would be propagated to block args by the same rules as objects passed through #send/Ractor.receive: if args
are not shareable, they will be copied (via deep cloning, which might be inefficient).
arg = [1, 2, 3]
puts "Passing: #{arg} (##{arg.object_id})"
r = Ractor.new(arg) {|received_arg|
puts "Received: #{received_arg} (##{received_arg.object_id})"
}
r.take
# Prints:
# Passing: [1, 2, 3] (#280)
# Received: [1, 2, 3] (#300)
Ractor’s #name can be set for debugging purposes:
r = Ractor.new(name: 'my ractor') {}
p r
#=> #<Ractor:#3 my ractor test.rb:1 terminated>
# File 'ractor.rb', line 262
def self.new(*args, name: nil, &block) b = block # TODO: builtin bug raise ArgumentError, "must be called with a block" unless block if __builtin_cexpr!("RBOOL(ruby_single_main_ractor)") warn("Ractor is experimental, and the behavior may change in future versions of Ruby! " \ "Also there are many implementation issues.", uplevel: 0, category: :experimental) end loc = caller_locations(1, 1).first loc = "#{loc.path}:#{loc.lineno}" __builtin_ractor_create(loc, name, args, b) end
Class Method Details
.count
# File 'ractor.rb', line 291
def self.count __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ULONG2NUM(GET_VM()->ractor.cnt); } end
.current
Returns the currently executing Ractor
.
Ractor.current #=> #<Ractor:#1 running>
# File 'ractor.rb', line 277
def self.current __builtin_cexpr! %q{ rb_ractor_self(rb_ec_ractor_ptr(ec)); } end
.main
returns main ractor
# File 'ractor.rb', line 837
def self.main __builtin_cexpr! %q{ rb_ractor_self(GET_VM()->ractor.main_ractor); } end
.receive ⇒ msg
Also known as: .recv
Receive an incoming message from the current Ractor’s incoming port’s queue, which was sent there by #send.
r = Ractor.new do
v1 = Ractor.receive
puts "Received: #{v1}"
end
r.send('message1')
r.take
# Here will be printed: "Received: message1"
Alternatively, private instance method receive
may be used:
r = Ractor.new do
v1 = receive
puts "Received: #{v1}"
end
r.send('message1')
r.take
# Here will be printed: "Received: message1"
The method blocks if the queue is empty.
r = Ractor.new do
puts "Before first receive"
v1 = Ractor.receive
puts "Received: #{v1}"
v2 = Ractor.receive
puts "Received: #{v2}"
end
wait
puts "Still not received"
r.send('message1')
wait
puts "Still received only one"
r.send('message2')
r.take
Output:
Before first receive
Still not received
Received:
Still received only one
Received:
If close_incoming was called on the ractor, the method raises ::Ractor::ClosedError
if there are no more messages in incoming queue:
Ractor.new do
close_incoming
receive
end
wait
# in `receive': The incoming port is already closed => #<Ractor:#2 test.rb:1 running> (Ractor::ClosedError)
# File 'ractor.rb', line 419
def self.receive __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ractor_receive(ec, rb_ec_ractor_ptr(ec)) } end
.receive_if {|msg| ... } ⇒ msg
Receive only a specific message.
Instead of .receive, receive_if
can provide a pattern by a block and you can choose the receiving message.
r = Ractor.new do
p Ractor.receive_if{|msg| msg.match?(/foo/)} #=> "foo3"
p Ractor.receive_if{|msg| msg.match?(/bar/)} #=> "bar1"
p Ractor.receive_if{|msg| msg.match?(/baz/)} #=> "baz2"
end
r << "bar1"
r << "baz2"
r << "foo3"
r.take
This will output:
foo3
baz2
If the block returns a truthy value, the message will be removed from the incoming queue and returned. Otherwise, the message remains in the incoming queue and the following received messages are checked by the given block.
If there are no messages left in the incoming queue, the method will block until new messages arrive.
If the block is escaped by break/return/exception/throw, the message is removed from the incoming queue as if a truthy value had been returned.
r = Ractor.new do
val = Ractor.receive_if{|msg| msg.is_a?(Array)}
puts "Received successfully: #{val}"
end
r.send(1)
r.send('test')
wait
puts "2 non-matching sent, nothing received"
r.send([1, 2, 3])
wait
Prints:
2 non-matching sent, nothing received
Received successfully: [1, 2, 3]
Note that you can not call receive/receive_if in the given block recursively. It means that you should not do any tasks in the block.
Ractor.current << true
Ractor.receive_if{|msg| Ractor.receive}
#=> `receive': can not call receive/receive_if recursively (Ractor::Error)
# File 'ractor.rb', line 497
def self.receive_if &b Primitive.ractor_receive_if b end
.recv
Alias for .receive.
# File 'ractor.rb', line 426
alias recv receive
.select(*ractors, [yield_value:, move: false]) ⇒ Ractor
, ...
Waits for the first ractor to have something in its outgoing port, reads from this ractor, and returns that ractor and the object received.
r1 = Ractor.new {Ractor.yield 'from 1'}
r2 = Ractor.new {Ractor.yield 'from 2'}
r, obj = Ractor.select(r1, r2)
puts "received #{obj.inspect} from #{r.inspect}"
# Prints: received "from 1" from #<Ractor:#2 test.rb:1 running>
If one of the given ractors is the current ractor, and it would be selected, r
will contain :receive
symbol instead of the ractor object.
r1 = Ractor.new(Ractor.current) do |main|
main.send 'to main'
Ractor.yield 'from 1'
end
r2 = Ractor.new do
Ractor.yield 'from 2'
end
r, obj = Ractor.select(r1, r2, Ractor.current)
puts "received #{obj.inspect} from #{r.inspect}"
# Prints: received "to main" from :receive
If yield_value
is provided, that value may be yielded if another Ractor
is calling #take. In this case, the pair [:yield, nil]
would be returned:
r1 = Ractor.new(Ractor.current) do |main|
puts "Received from main: #{main.take}"
end
puts "Trying to select"
r, obj = Ractor.select(r1, Ractor.current, yield_value: 123)
wait
puts "Received #{obj.inspect} from #{r.inspect}"
This will print:
Trying to select
Received from main: 123
Received nil from :yield
move
boolean flag defines whether yielded value should be copied (default) or moved.
# File 'ractor.rb', line 346
def self.select(*ractors, yield_value: yield_unspecified = true, move: false) raise ArgumentError, 'specify at least one ractor or `yield_value`' if yield_unspecified && ractors.empty? __builtin_cstmt! %q{ const VALUE *rs = RARRAY_CONST_PTR_TRANSIENT(ractors); VALUE rv; VALUE v = ractor_select(ec, rs, RARRAY_LENINT(ractors), yield_unspecified == Qtrue ? Qundef : yield_value, (bool)RTEST(move) ? true : false, &rv); return rb_ary_new_from_args(2, rv, v); } end
.yield(msg, move: false) ⇒ nil
Send a message to the current ractor’s outgoing port to be consumed by #take.
r = Ractor.new {Ractor.yield 'Hello from ractor'}
puts r.take
# Prints: "Hello from ractor"
The method is blocking, and will return only when somebody consumes the sent message.
r = Ractor.new do
Ractor.yield 'Hello from ractor'
puts "Ractor: after yield"
end
wait
puts "Still not taken"
puts r.take
This will print:
Still not taken
Hello from ractor
Ractor: after yield
If the outgoing port was closed with #close_outgoing, the method will raise:
r = Ractor.new do
close_outgoing
Ractor.yield 'Hello from ractor'
end
wait
# `yield': The outgoing-port is already closed (Ractor::ClosedError)
The meaning of move
argument is the same as for #send.
# File 'ractor.rb', line 630
def self.yield(obj, move: false) __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ractor_yield(ec, rb_ec_ractor_ptr(ec), obj, move) } end
Instance Method Details
#<<(obj, move: false)
Alias for #send.
# File 'ractor.rb', line 591
alias << send
#[](sym)
get a value from ractor-local storage
# File 'ractor.rb', line 827
def [](sym) Primitive.ractor_local_value(sym) end
#[]=(sym, val)
set a value in ractor-local storage
# File 'ractor.rb', line 832
def []=(sym, val) Primitive.ractor_local_value_set(sym, val) end
#close_incoming ⇒ Boolean
Closes the incoming port and returns its previous state. All further attempts to .receive in the ractor, and #send to the ractor will fail with ::Ractor::ClosedError
.
r = Ractor.new {sleep(500)}
r.close_incoming #=> false
r.close_incoming #=> true
r.send('test')
# Ractor::ClosedError (The incoming-port is already closed)
# File 'ractor.rb', line 737
def close_incoming __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ractor_close_incoming(ec, RACTOR_PTR(self)); } end
#close_outgoing ⇒ Boolean
Closes the outgoing port and returns its previous state. All further attempts to .yield in the ractor, and #take from the ractor will fail with ::Ractor::ClosedError
.
r = Ractor.new {sleep(500)}
r.close_outgoing #=> false
r.close_outgoing #=> true
r.take
# Ractor::ClosedError (The outgoing-port is already closed)
# File 'ractor.rb', line 756
def close_outgoing __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ractor_close_outgoing(ec, RACTOR_PTR(self)); } end
#inspect Also known as: #to_s
[ GitHub ]# File 'ractor.rb', line 703
def inspect loc = __builtin_cexpr! %q{ RACTOR_PTR(self)->loc } name = __builtin_cexpr! %q{ RACTOR_PTR(self)->name } id = __builtin_cexpr! %q{ INT2FIX(rb_ractor_id(RACTOR_PTR(self))) } status = __builtin_cexpr! %q{ rb_str_new2(ractor_status_str(RACTOR_PTR(self)->status_)) } "#<Ractor:##{id}#{name ? ' '+name : ''}#{loc ? " " + loc : ''} #{status}>" end
#name
The name set in .new, or nil
.
# File 'ractor.rb', line 716
def name __builtin_cexpr! %q{RACTOR_PTR(self)->name} end
#receive (private) Also known as: #recv
same as .receive
# File 'ractor.rb', line 430
private def receive __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ractor_receive(ec, rb_ec_ractor_ptr(ec)) } end
#receive_if(&b) (private)
[ GitHub ]# File 'ractor.rb', line 501
private def receive_if &b Primitive.ractor_receive_if b end
#recv
Alias for #receive.
# File 'ractor.rb', line 435
alias recv receive
#send(msg, move: false) ⇒ self
Also known as: #<<
Send a message to a Ractor’s incoming queue to be consumed by .receive.
r = Ractor.new do
value = Ractor.receive
puts "Received #{value}"
end
r.send 'message'
# Prints: "Received: message"
The method is non-blocking (will return immediately even if the ractor is not ready to receive anything):
r = Ractor.new {sleep(5)}
r.send('test')
puts "Sent successfully"
# Prints: "Sent successfully" immediately
Attempt to send to ractor which already finished its execution will raise ::Ractor::ClosedError
.
r = Ractor.new {}
r.take
p r
# "#<Ractor:#6 (irb):23 terminated>"
r.send('test')
# Ractor::ClosedError (The incoming-port is already closed)
If close_incoming was called on the ractor, the method also raises ::Ractor::ClosedError
.
r = Ractor.new do
sleep(500)
receive
end
r.close_incoming
r.send('test')
# Ractor::ClosedError (The incoming-port is already closed)
# The error would be raised immediately, not when ractor will try to receive
If the obj
is unshareable, by default it would be copied into ractor by deep cloning. If the move: true
is passed, object is moved into ractor and becomes inaccessible to sender.
r = Ractor.new {puts "Received: #{receive}"}
msg = 'message'
r.send(msg, move: true)
r.take
p msg
This prints:
Received:
in `p': undefined method `inspect' for #<Ractor::MovedObject:0x000055c99b9b69b8>
All references to the object and its parts will become invalid in sender.
r = Ractor.new {puts "Received: #{receive}"}
s = 'message'
ary = [s]
copy = ary.dup
r.send(ary, move: true)
s.inspect
# Ractor::MovedError (can not send any methods to a moved object)
ary.class
# Ractor::MovedError (can not send any methods to a moved object)
copy.class
# => Array, it is different object
copy[0].inspect
# Ractor::MovedError (can not send any methods to a moved object)
# ...but its item was still a reference to `s`, which was moved
If the object was shareable, move: true
has no effect on it:
r = Ractor.new {puts "Received: #{receive}"}
s = 'message'.freeze
r.send(s, move: true)
s.inspect #=> "message", still available
# File 'ractor.rb', line 586
def send(obj, move: false) __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ractor_send(ec, RACTOR_PTR(self), obj, move) } end
#take ⇒ msg
Take a message from ractor’s outgoing port, which was put there by .yield or at ractor’s finalization.
r = Ractor.new do
Ractor.yield 'explicit yield'
'last value'
end
puts r.take #=> 'explicit yield'
puts r.take #=> 'last value'
puts r.take # Ractor::ClosedError (The outgoing-port is already closed)
The fact that the last value is also put to outgoing port means that take
can be used as some analog of Thread#join (“just wait till ractor finishes”), but don’t forget it will raise if somebody had already consumed everything ractor have produced.
If the outgoing port was closed with #close_outgoing, the method will raise ::Ractor::ClosedError
.
r = Ractor.new do
sleep(500)
Ractor.yield 'Hello from ractor'
end
r.close_outgoing
r.take
# Ractor::ClosedError (The outgoing-port is already closed)
# The error would be raised immediately, not when ractor will try to receive
If an uncaught exception is raised in the Ractor
, it is propagated on take as a ::Ractor::RemoteError
.
r = Ractor.new {raise "Something weird happened"}
begin
r.take
rescue => e
p e # => #<Ractor::RemoteError: thrown by remote Ractor.>
p e.ractor == r # => true
p e.cause # => #<RuntimeError: Something weird happened>
end
::Ractor::ClosedError
is a descendant of ::StopIteration
, so the closing of the ractor will break the loops without propagating the error:
r = Ractor.new do
3.times {|i| Ractor.yield "message #{i}"}
"finishing"
end
loop {puts "Received: " + r.take}
puts "Continue successfully"
This will print:
Received: 0
Received: 1
Received: 2
Received: finishing
Continue successfully
# File 'ractor.rb', line 697
def take __builtin_cexpr! %q{ ractor_take(ec, RACTOR_PTR(self)) } end
#to_s
Alias for #inspect.
# File 'ractor.rb', line 713
alias to_s inspect