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Bug #7135

closed

GC bug in Ruby 1.9.3-p194?

Added by alexdowad (Alex Dowad) over 11 years ago. Updated over 11 years ago.

Status:
Closed
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
ruby -v:
ruby 1.9.3p194 (2012-04-20 revision 35410) [x86_64-linux]
Backport:
[ruby-core:47881]

Description

I'm just doing some refactoring/performance work on a popular Ruby gem called Prawn (it's used for PDF generation). I'm fighting with a strange, intermittent failure on the spec tests, and from my experimentation so far, it seems very, very likely to be a bug in Ruby's garbage collector.

I'll try to keep this as brief as possible, but please be patient...

The code where the intermittent failure comes from measures the width of a string when rendered using a TTF font. This is part of the method body (including my debug print statements):

      # GC.disable
      # string.freeze
      p string.bytes.to_a if $my_debug
      p string.codepoints.to_a if $my_debug
      p scale if $my_debug
      result = string.codepoints.inject(0) do |s,r|
        print r if $my_debug
        print "," if $my_debug
        s + character_width_by_code(r)
      end * scale
      puts if $my_debug
      result

When the tests pass normally (which is about 7/8 of the time), the debug print statements show:

[104, 101, 108, 108, 111, 194, 173]
[104, 101, 108, 108, 111, 173]
0.012
104,101,108,108,111,173,

...You can see that the "print" calls in the "string.codepoints.inject" loop print the same series of codepoints as "p string.codepoints.to_a". This is what you would expect, because nothing is modifying the string. But about 1/8 of the time I get:

[104, 101, 108, 108, 111, 194, 173]
[104, 101, 108, 108, 111, 173]
0.012
104,42,0,0,0,0,0,

I have also seen "104,0,0,0,0,0" on occasion. In all cases, "p string.codepoints.to_a" prints the correct sequence of codepoints for the string.

You might think that something in the "string.codepoints.inject" loop is modifying the string, but it's not. I could show the contents of "character_width_by_code", but it would just be wasting your time, because it basically contains nothing but a couple of hash lookups.

If I uncomment "string.freeze", I can run the tests 100 times or more with no failure. (This proves that the string is not being modified by my code, because it would throw an exception otherwise!) Or, if I change the code to "string.codepoints.to_a.inject", again, the failure never happens. Most revealingly, if I uncomment "GC.disable", I can run the test 100 or more times with no failure. As soon as I comment out "GC.disable", the random failure comes back, for about 1/7 - 1/10 of runs.

Sometimes I also get another random failure from the same place: an "invalid codepoint in UTF-8" exception from "string.codepoints.inject". Again, this proves something inside Ruby is corrupting the string, because the call to "string.codepoints" just 2 lines before prints the correct sequence, with no exception raised.

I'd like to boil this down to a smaller example which demonstrates the failure, but it's a hopeless task. When I take pieces of the code and run them in irb, the failure never happens. Even rebooting the computer may make it go away... but then, when I am working on Prawn again, sooner or later it happens again. (I know because similar intermittent failures have happened before in the past.) Once it starts happening, though, it's pretty consistent at about 1/7 - 1/10 of test runs. Another clue is that the corrupted codepoints are always zero.

I can try to track down the problem, perhaps by adding some logging code to the Ruby interpreter source and recompiling, but I need some guidance on where to look. Can anyone who is familiar with Ruby internals (especially Strings and the GC) give me some ideas how to start?

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