
Have you ever considered rewriting some parts of your ~~slow~~ Ruby application?
Just replace your Ruby application with Rust, method by method, class by class. It does not require you to change the interface of your classes or to change any other Ruby code.
As simple as Ruby, as efficient as Rust.
String#blank? methodString#blank? methodThe fast String#blank? implementation by Yehuda Katz
```rust,no_run
extern crate ruru;
use ruru::{Boolean, Class, Object, RString};
methods!( RString, itself,
fn string_is_blank() -> Boolean { Boolean::new(itself.to_string().chars().all(|c| c.is_whitespace())) } );
pub extern fn initialize_string() { Class::from_existing("String").define(|itself| { itself.def("blank?", string_is_blank); }); }
### Simple Sidekiq-compatible server
[Link to the repository](https://github.com/d-unseductable/rust_sidekiq)
### Safe conversions
Since 0.8.0 safe conversions are available for built-in Ruby types and for custom types.
Let's imagine that we are writing an HTTP server. It should handle requests which are passed from
Ruby side.
Any object which responds to `#body` method is considered as a valid request.
```rust,no_run
#[macro_use]
extern crate ruru;
use std::error::Error;
use ruru::{Class, Object, RString, VerifiedObject, VM};
class!(Request);
impl VerifiedObject for Request {
fn is_correct_type<T: Object>(object: &T) -> bool {
object.respond_to("body")
}
fn error_message() -> &'static str {
"Not a valid request"
}
}
class!(Server);
methods!(
Server,
itself,
fn process_request(request: Request) -> RString {
let body = request
.and_then(|request| request.send("body", vec![]).try_convert_to::<RString>())
.map(|body| body.to_string());
// Either request does not respond to `body` or `body` is not a String
if let Err(ref error) = body {
VM::raise(error.to_exception(), error.description());
}
let formatted_body = format!("[BODY] {}", body.unwrap());
RString::new(&formatted_body)
}
);
#[no_mangle]
pub extern fn initialize_server() {
Class::new("Server", None).define(|itself| {
itself.def("process_request", process_request);
});
}
Wrap Servers to RubyServer objects
```rust,no_run
use ruru::{AnyObject, Class, Fixnum, Object, RString, VM};
// The structure which we want to wrap pub struct Server { host: String, port: u16, }
impl Server { fn new(host: String, port: u16) -> Self { Server { host: host, port: port, } }
fn host(&self) -> &str {
&self.host
}
fn port(&self) -> u16 {
self.port
}
}
wrappable_struct!(Server, ServerWrapper, SERVER_WRAPPER);
class!(RubyServer);
methods!( RubyServer, itself,
fn ruby_server_new(host: RString, port: Fixnum) -> AnyObject {
let server = Server::new(host.unwrap().to_string(),
port.unwrap().to_i64() as u16);
Class::from_existing("RubyServer").wrap_data(server, &*SERVER_WRAPPER)
}
fn ruby_server_host() -> RString {
let host = itself.get_data(&*SERVER_WRAPPER).host();
RString::new(host)
}
fn ruby_server_port() -> Fixnum {
let port = itself.get_data(&*SERVER_WRAPPER).port();
Fixnum::new(port as i64)
}
);
fn main() { let data_class = Class::from_existing("Data");
Class::new("RubyServer", Some(&data_class)).define(|itself| {
itself.def_self("new", ruby_server_new);
itself.def("host", ruby_server_host);
itself.def("port", ruby_server_port);
});
}
### True parallelism
Ruru provides a way to enable true parallelism for Ruby threads by releasing GVL (GIL).
It means that a thread with released GVL runs in parallel with other threads without
being interrupted by GVL.
Current example demonstrates a "heavy" computation (`2 * 2` for simplicity) run in parallel.
```rust,no_run
#[macro_use] extern crate ruru;
use ruru::{Class, Fixnum, Object, VM};
class!(Calculator);
methods!(
Calculator,
itself,
fn heavy_computation() -> Fixnum {
let computation = || { 2 * 2 };
let unblocking_function = || {};
// release GVL for current thread until `computation` is completed
let result = VM::thread_call_without_gvl(
computation,
Some(unblocking_function)
);
Fixnum::new(result)
}
);
fn main() {
Class::new("Calculator", None).define(|itself| {
itself.def("heavy_computation", heavy_computation);
});
}
Let's say you have a Calculator class.
class Calculator
def pow_3(number)
(1..number).each_with_object({}) do |index, hash|
hash[index] = index ** 3
end
end
end
# ... somewhere in the application code ...
Calculator.new.pow_3(5) #=> { 1 => 1, 2 => 8, 3 => 27, 4 => 64, 5 => 125 }
You have found that it's very slow to call pow_3 for big numbers and decided to replace the whole class
with Rust.
```rust,no_run
extern crate ruru;
use std::error::Error; use ruru::{Class, Fixnum, Hash, Object, VM};
class!(Calculator);
methods!( Calculator, itself,
fn pow_3(number: Fixnum) -> Hash {
let mut result = Hash::new();
// Raise an exception if `number` is not a Fixnum
if let Err(ref error) = number {
VM::raise(error.to_exception(), error.description());
}
for i in 1..number.unwrap().to_i64() + 1 {
result.store(Fixnum::new(i), Fixnum::new(i.pow(3)));
}
result
}
);
pub extern fn initialize_calculator() { Class::new("Calculator", None).define(|itself| { itself.def("pow_3", pow_3); }); }
Ruby:
```ruby
# No Calculator class in Ruby anymore
# ... somewhere in the application ...
Calculator.new.pow_3(5) #=> { 1 => 1, 2 => 8, 3 => 27, 4 => 64, 5 => 125 }
Nothing has changed in the API of class, thus there is no need to change any code elsewhere in the app.
If the Calculator class from the example above has more Ruby methods, but we want to
replace only pow_3, use Class::from_existing()
```rust,ignore Class::from_existing("Calculator").define(|itself| { itself.def("pow_3", pow_3); });
### Class definition DSL
```rust,no_run
Class::new("Hello", None).define(|itself| {
itself.const_set("GREETING", &RString::new("Hello, World!").freeze());
itself.attr_reader("reader");
itself.def_self("greeting", greeting);
itself.def("many_greetings", many_greetings);
itself.define_nested_class("Nested", None).define(|itself| {
itself.def_self("nested_greeting", nested_greeting);
});
});
Which corresponds to the following Ruby code:
class Hello
GREETING = "Hello, World".freeze
attr_reader :reader
def self.greeting
# ...
end
def many_greetings
# ...
end
class Nested
def self.nested_greeting
# ...
end
end
end
See documentation for Class and Object for more information.
Getting an account balance of some User whose name is John and who is 18 or 19 years old.
default_balance = 0
account_balance = User
.find_by(age: [18, 19], name: 'John')
.account_balance
account_balance = default_balance unless account_balance.is_a?(Fixnum)
```rust,no_run
extern crate ruru;
use ruru::{Array, Class, Fixnum, Hash, Object, RString, Symbol};
fn main() { let default_balance = 0; let mut conditions = Hash::new();
conditions.store(
Symbol::new("age"),
Array::new().push(Fixnum::new(18)).push(Fixnum::new(19))
);
conditions.store(
Symbol::new("name"),
RString::new("John")
);
// Fetch user and his balance
// and set it to 0 if balance is not a Fixnum (for example `nil`)
let account_balance =
Class::from_existing("User")
.send("find_by", vec![conditions.to_any_object()])
.send("account_balance", vec![])
.try_convert_to::<Fixnum>()
.map(|balance| balance.to_i64())
.unwrap_or(default_balance);
} ```
Check out Documentation for many more examples!
No support of native Ruby types;
No way to create a standalone application to run the Ruby VM separately;
No way to call your Ruby code from Rust;
Warning! The crate is a WIP.
It is recommended to use Thermite gem, a Rake-based helper for building and distributing Rust-based Ruby extensions.
To be able to use Ruru, make sure that your Ruby version is 2.3.0 or higher.
--enable-shared option. For
example, using rbenv:bash
CONFIGURE_OPTS=--enable-shared rbenv install 2.3.0
Cargo.tomltoml
[dependencies]
ruru = "0.9.0"
dylibtoml
[lib]
crate-type = ["dylib"]
```rust,ignore #[no_mangle] pub extern fn initialize_my_app() { Class::new("SomeClass");
// ... etc
} ```
bash
$ cargo build --release
or using Thermite
bash
$ rake thermite:build
dylib and call the function to initialize extension```ruby require 'fiddle'
library = Fiddle::dlopen('path_to_dylib/libmy_library.dylib')
Fiddle::Function.new(library['initialize_my_app'], [], Fiddle::TYPE_VOIDP).call ```
If you have any questions, join Ruru on Gitter
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2015-2016 Dmitry Gritsay
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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