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We are pleased to announce the release of Ruby 3.3.0. Ruby 3.3 adds a new parser named Prism, uses Lrama as a parser generator, adds a new pure-Ruby JIT compiler named RJIT, and many performance improvements especially YJIT.
Prism
- Introduced the Prism parser as a default gem
- Prism is a portable, error tolerant, and maintainable recursive descent parser for the Ruby language
- Prism is production ready and actively maintained, you can use it in place of Ripper
- There is extensive documentation on how to use Prism
- Prism is both a C library that will be used internally by CRuby and a Ruby gem that can be used by any tooling which needs to parse Ruby code
- Notable methods in the Prism API are:
Prism.parse(source)
which returns the AST as part of a parse result objectPrism.parse_comments(source)
which returns the commentsPrism.parse_success?(source)
which returns true if there are no errors
- You can make pull requests or issues directly on the Prism repository if you are interested in contributing
- You can now use
ruby --parser=prism
orRUBYOPT="--parser=prism"
to experiment with the Prism compiler. Please note that this flag is for debugging only.
Use Lrama instead of Bison
- Replace Bison with Lrama LALR parser generator [Feature #19637]
- If you have interest, please see The future vision of Ruby Parser
- Lrama internal parser is replaced with LR parser generated by Racc for maintainability
- Parameterizing Rules
(?, *, +)
are supported, it will be used in Ruby parse.y
YJIT
- Major performance improvements over Ruby 3.2
- Support for splat and rest arguments has been improved.
- Registers are allocated for stack operations of the virtual machine.
- More calls with optional arguments are compiled. Exception handlers are also compiled.
- Unsupported call types and megamorphic call sites no longer exit to the interpreter.
- Basic methods like Rails
#blank?
and
specialized#present?
are inlined. Integer#*
,Integer#!=
,String#!=
,String#getbyte
,
Kernel#block_given?
,Kernel#is_a?
,Kernel#instance_of?
, andModule#===
are specially optimized.- Compilation speed is now slightly faster than Ruby 3.2.
- Now more than 3x faster than the interpreter on Optcarrot!
- Significantly improved memory usage over Ruby 3.2
- Metadata for compiled code uses a lot less memory.
--yjit-call-threshold
is automatically raised from 30 to 120
when the application has more than 40,000 ISEQs.--yjit-cold-threshold
is added to skip compiling cold ISEQs.- More compact code is generated on Arm64.
- Code GC is now disabled by default
--yjit-exec-mem-size
is treated as a hard limit where compilation of new code stops.- No sudden drops in performance due to code GC.
Better copy-on-write behavior on servers reforking with
Pitchfork. - You can still enable code GC if desired with
--yjit-code-gc
- Add
RubyVM::YJIT.enable
that can enable YJIT at run-time- You can start YJIT without modifying command-line arguments or environment variables.
Rails 7.2 will enable YJIT by default
using this method. - This can also be used to enable YJIT only once your application is
done booting.--yjit-disable
can be used if you want to use other
YJIT options while disabling YJIT at boot.
- You can start YJIT without modifying command-line arguments or environment variables.
- More YJIT stats are available by default
yjit_alloc_size
and several more metadata-related stats are now available by default.ratio_in_yjit
stat produced by--yjit-stats
is now available in release builds,
a special stats or dev build is no longer required to access most stats.
- Add more profiling capabilities
--yjit-perf
is added to facilitate profiling with Linux perf.--yjit-trace-exits
now supports sampling with--yjit-trace-exits-sample-rate=N
- More thorough testing and multiple bug fixes
RJIT
- Introduced a pure-Ruby JIT compiler RJIT and replaced MJIT.
- RJIT supports only x86-64 architecture on Unix platforms.
- Unlike MJIT, it doesn’t require a C compiler at runtime.
- RJIT exists only for experimental purposes.
- You should keep using YJIT in production.
- If you are interested in developing JIT for Ruby, please check out k0kubun’s presentation on Day 3 of RubyKaigi.
M:N thread scheduler
- M:N thread scheduler was introduced. [Feature #19842]
- M Ruby threads are managed by N native threads (OS threads) so the thread creation and management cost are reduced.
- It can break C-extension compatibility so that M:N thread scheduler is disabled on the main Ractor by default.
RUBY_MN_THREADS=1
environment variable enables M:N threads on the main Ractor.- M:N threads are always enabled on non-main Ractors.
RUBY_MAX_CPU=n
environment variable sets maximum number ofN
(maximum number of native threads). The default value is 8.- Since only one Ruby thread per Ractor can run at the same time, the number of native threads will be used, which is the smaller of the number specified in
RUBY_MAX_CPU
and the number of running Ractors. So that single Ractor applications (most of applications) will only use 1 native thread. - To support blocking operations, more than
N
native threads can be used.
- Since only one Ruby thread per Ractor can run at the same time, the number of native threads will be used, which is the smaller of the number specified in
Performance improvements
defined?(@ivar)
is optimized with Object Shapes.- Name resolution such as
Socket.getaddrinfo
can now be interrupted (in environments where pthreads are available). [Feature #19965] - Several performance improvements to the Garbage Collector
- Young objects referenced by old objects are no longer immediately
promoted to the old generation. This significantly reduces the frequency of
major GC collections. [Feature #19678] - A new
REMEMBERED_WB_UNPROTECTED_OBJECTS_LIMIT_RATIO
tuning variable was
introduced to control the number of unprotected objects cause a major GC
collection to trigger. The default is set to0.01
(1%). This significantly
reduces the frequency of major GC collection. [Feature #19571] - Write Barriers were implemented for many core types that were missing them,
notablyTime
,Enumerator
,MatchData
,Method
,File::Stat
,BigDecimal
and several others. This significantly reduces minor GC collection time and major
GC collection frequency. - Most core classes are now using Variable Width Allocation, notably
Hash
,Time
,
Thread::Backtrace
,Thread::Backtrace::Location
,File::Stat
,Method
.
This makes these classes faster to allocate and free, use less memory and reduce
heap fragmentation. - Support for weak references has been added to the garbage collector. [Feature #19783]
- Young objects referenced by old objects are no longer immediately
Other notable changes since 3.2
IRB
IRB has received several enhancements, including but not limited to:
- Advanced
irb:rdbg
integration that provides an equivalent debugging experience topry-byebug
(doc). - Pager support for
ls
,show_source
andshow_cmds
commands. - More accurate and helpful information provided by the
ls
andshow_source
commands. - Experimental autocompletion using type analysis (doc).
- It is now possible to change the font color and font style in the completion dialog by a newly introduced class Reline::Face (doc)
In addition, IRB has also undergone extensive refactoring and received dozens of bug fixes to facilitate easier future enhancements.
Compatibility issues
Note: Excluding feature bug fixes.
it
calls without arguments in a block with no ordinary parameters are
deprecated.it
will be a reference to the first block parameter in Ruby 3.4.
[Feature #18980]
Removed environment variables
The following deprecated methods are removed.
- Environment variable
RUBY_GC_HEAP_INIT_SLOTS
has been deprecated and is a no-op. Please use environment variablesRUBY_GC_HEAP_{0,1,2,3,4}_INIT_SLOTS
instead. [Feature #19785]
Stdlib compatibility issues
ext/readline
is retired
- We have
reline
that is pure Ruby implementation compatible withext/readline
API. We rely onreline
in the future. If you need to useext/readline
, you can installext/readline
via rubygems.org withgem install readline-ext
. - We no longer need to install libraries like
libreadline
orlibedit
.
Standard library updates
RubyGems and Bundler warn if users do require
the following gems without adding them to Gemfile or gemspec. This is because they will become the bundled gems in the future version of Ruby.
This warning is suppressed if you use bootsnap gem. We recommend to run your application with DISABLE_BOOTSNAP=1
environment variable at least once. This is limitation of this version.
Targeted libraries are:
- abbrev
- base64
- bigdecimal
- csv
- drb
- getoptlong
- mutex_m
- nkf
- observer
- racc
- resolv-replace
- rinda
- syslog
The following default gem is added.
- prism 0.19.0
The following default gems are updated.
- RubyGems 3.5.3
- abbrev 0.1.2
- base64 0.2.0
- benchmark 0.3.0
- bigdecimal 3.1.5
- bundler 2.5.3
- cgi 0.4.1
- csv 3.2.8
- date 3.3.4
- delegate 0.3.1
- drb 2.2.0
- english 0.8.0
- erb 4.0.3
- error_highlight 0.6.0
- etc 1.4.3
- fcntl 1.1.0
- fiddle 1.1.2
- fileutils 1.7.2
- find 0.2.0
- getoptlong 0.2.1
- io-console 0.7.1
- io-nonblock 0.3.0
- io-wait 0.3.1
- ipaddr 1.2.6
- irb 1.11.0
- json 2.7.1
- logger 1.6.0
- mutex_m 0.2.0
- net-http 0.4.0
- net-protocol 0.2.2
- nkf 0.1.3
- observer 0.1.2
- open-uri 0.4.1
- open3 0.2.1
- openssl 3.2.0
- optparse 0.4.0
- ostruct 0.6.0
- pathname 0.3.0
- pp 0.5.0
- prettyprint 0.2.0
- pstore 0.1.3
- psych 5.1.2
- rdoc 6.6.2
- readline 0.0.4
- reline 0.4.1
- resolv 0.3.0
- rinda 0.2.0
- securerandom 0.3.1
- set 1.1.0
- shellwords 0.2.0
- singleton 0.2.0
- stringio 3.1.0
- strscan 3.0.7
- syntax_suggest 2.0.0
- syslog 0.1.2
- tempfile 0.2.1
- time 0.3.0
- timeout 0.4.1
- tmpdir 0.2.0
- tsort 0.2.0
- un 0.3.0
- uri 0.13.0
- weakref 0.1.3
- win32ole 1.8.10
- yaml 0.3.0
- zlib 3.1.0
The following bundled gem is promoted from default gems.
- racc 1.7.3
The following bundled gems are updated.
- minitest 5.20.0
- rake 13.1.0
- test-unit 3.6.1
- rexml 3.2.6
- rss 0.3.0
- net-ftp 0.3.3
- net-imap 0.4.9
- net-smtp 0.4.0
- rbs 3.4.0
- typeprof 0.21.9
- debug 1.9.1
See GitHub releases like Logger or
changelog for details of the default gems or bundled gems.
See NEWS
or commit logs
for more details.
With those changes, 5532 files changed, 326851 insertions(+), 185793 deletions(-)
since Ruby 3.2.0!
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and enjoy programming with Ruby 3.3!
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What is Ruby
Ruby was first developed by Matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) in 1993,
and is now developed as Open Source. It runs on multiple platforms
and is used all over the world especially for web development.
Posted by naruse on 25 Dec 2023