Issue #17145 has been updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze).
@marcandre Thanks, I didn't get the use-case from the DeepCover above (I just missed the `freeze` definition).
I think the last variant of #20 works too if we call user `freeze` instead of internal freeze.
As long we call it before iterating ivars/reachable_objects of that object, we should be fine.
----------------------------------------
Feature #17145: Ractor-aware `Object#deep_freeze`
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/17145#change-88099
* Author: marcandre (Marc-Andre Lafortune)
* Status: Open
* Priority: Normal
----------------------------------------
I'd like to propose `Object#deep_freeze`:
Freezes recursively the contents of the receiver (by calling `deep_freeze`) and
then the receiver itself (by calling `freeze`).
Values that are shareable via `Ractor` (e.g. classes) are never frozen this way.
```ruby
# freezes recursively:
ast = [:hash, [:pair, [:str, 'hello'], [:sym, :world]]].deep_freeze
ast.dig(1, 1) # => [:str, 'hello']
ast.dig(1, 1).compact! # => FrozenError
# does not freeze classes:
[[String]].deep_freeze
String.frozen? # => false
# calls `freeze`:
class Foo
def freeze
build_cache!
puts "Ready for freeze"
super
end
# ...
end
[[[Foo.new]]].deep_freeze # => Outputs "Ready for freeze"
```
I think a variant `deep_freeze!` that raises an exception if the result isn't Ractor-shareable would be useful too:
```ruby
class Fire
def freeze
# do not call super
end
end
x = [Fire.new]
x.deep_freeze! # => "Could not be deeply-frozen: #<Fire:0x00007ff151994748>"
```
--
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/
Unsubscribe: <mailto:ruby-core-request / ruby-lang.org?subject=unsubscribe>
<http://lists.ruby-lang.org/cgi-bin/mailman/options/ruby-core>