Bug #15711
closedRemove use of _id2ref from DRb
Description
This issue relates to https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15408
DRb uses _idref
internally to implement a weak map, and this issue seeks to replace that code with an implementation that does not use _id2ref
.
We will be deprecating ObjectSpace._id2ref
in the near future since it fails to work like people expect (when implemented as a pointer address) or adds memory and invocation overhead to object_id
.
An initial patch for this is provided by JRuby, which implements object_id
using a monotonically-increasing value, and only allows _id2ref
use with a command line flag.
This implementation uses the stdlib weakref
to implement a simple weak map, and it would be suitable as an implementation for now. However there's some inefficiency here because it has to periodically "clean" the hash of vacated references by scanning all entries.
There are two more efficient implementations that require additional work:
Alternate 1: Use ObjectSpace::WeakMap
, which is an opaque VM-supported implementation of a weak Hash. Unfortunately I don't think WeakMap
has ever been blessed as a public API, and since we're rapidly moving standard libraries to gems, it would not be appropriate to use an internal API. So, we can either make WeakMap an official part of the public standard API, or do alternate 2.
Alternate 2: Add weak reference queues to the weakref API, so users can implement their own efficient weak maps. Some of this has been discussed (at great length) in https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/4168, and the JRuby team has supported the weaklink gem for many years (which provides a WeakRef+RefQueue implementation for JRuby).
The original patch works well for small numbers of remoted objects.