Misc #18968
closedRun MJIT under a forked Ruby process
Description
Changes¶
- When MJIT compiles a method, it spawns a child Ruby process and lets it generate a C code and compile it.
- Stop supporting platforms without fork(2), i.e. mswin
- A suggested alternative to it in Windows, in general, is running the implementation for Linux on WSL. It's likely already faster than the mswin one because of recent SIGCHLD-related changes.
Background¶
To improve the maintainability of MJIT's optimization logic, I'm planning to rewrite MJIT in Ruby.
To run Ruby code safely, you need a GVL or at least be on a Ractor. Doing so in the main thread would cause performance problems. We evaluated running MJIT on a Ractor https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/4024, but enabling the multi-Ractor mode slows down things.
The proposed change, forking a child process, doesn't enable the multi-Ractor mode, and it's confirmed to be faster than the Ractor-based patch. If you fork a process and run it for a while, you need inter-process communication to give the latest inline cache contents. But it requires synchronization. Another option that doesn't require synchronization that much is to fork a process every time, which is what's discussed in this ticket.