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author | Eric Wong <bofh@yhbt.net> | 2023-09-05 06:43:20 +0000 |
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committer | Eric Wong <bofh@yhbt.net> | 2024-01-15 01:45:45 +0000 |
commit | b652fa51c1342496bdcdecca8e567f1fb46c41c9 (patch) | |
tree | b10a1dd61bdf0c4b253600ab38dbfbc311da93ed /test/unit/test_tee_input.rb | |
parent | 31d0539878b0e2247a4f98bc0241e05d4738e500 (diff) | |
download | unicorn-b652fa51c1342496bdcdecca8e567f1fb46c41c9.tar.gz |
kgio is an extra download and shared object which costs users bandwidth, disk space, startup time and memory. Ruby 2.3+ provides `Socket#accept_nonblock(exception: false)' support in addition to `exception: false' support in IO#*_nonblock methods from Ruby 2.1. We no longer distinguish between TCPServer and UNIXServer as separate classes internally; instead favoring the `Socket' class of Ruby for both. This allows us to use `Socket#accept_nonblock' and get a populated `Addrinfo' object off accept4(2)/accept(2) without resorting to a getpeername(2) syscall (kgio avoided getpeername(2) in the same way). The downside is there's more Ruby-level argument passing and stack usage on our end with HttpRequest#read_headers (formerly HttpRequest#read). I chose this tradeoff since advancements in Ruby itself can theoretically mitigate the cost of argument passing, while syscalls are a high fixed cost given modern CPU vulnerability mitigations. Note: no benchmarks have been run since I don't have a suitable system.
Diffstat (limited to 'test/unit/test_tee_input.rb')
-rw-r--r-- | test/unit/test_tee_input.rb | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/test/unit/test_tee_input.rb b/test/unit/test_tee_input.rb index 6f5bc8a..607ce87 100644 --- a/test/unit/test_tee_input.rb +++ b/test/unit/test_tee_input.rb @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ end class TestTeeInput < Test::Unit::TestCase def setup - @rd, @wr = Kgio::UNIXSocket.pair + @rd, @wr = UNIXSocket.pair @rd.sync = @wr.sync = true @start_pid = $$ @rs = "\n" |