Results for: "OptionParser"

Called when the document starts with the declared version, tag_directives, if the document is implicit.

version will be an array of integers indicating the YAML version being dealt with, tag_directives is a list of tuples indicating the prefix and suffix of each tag, and implicit is a boolean indicating whether the document is started implicitly.

Example

Given the following YAML:

%YAML 1.1
%TAG ! tag:tenderlovemaking.com,2009:
--- !squee

The parameters for start_document must be this:

version         # => [1, 1]
tag_directives  # => [["!", "tag:tenderlovemaking.com,2009:"]]
implicit        # => false

Called when a sequence ends.

Called when a map starts.

anchor is the anchor associated with the map or nil. tag is the tag associated with the map or nil. implicit is a boolean indicating whether or not the map was implicitly started. style is an integer indicating the mapping style.

See the constants in Psych::Nodes::Mapping for the possible values of style.

Example

Here is a YAML document that exercises most of the possible ways this method can be called:

---
k: !!map { hello: world }
v: &pewpew
  hello: world

The above YAML document consists of three maps, an outer map that contains two inner maps. Below is a matrix of the parameters sent in order to represent these three maps:

# anchor    tag                       implicit  style
[nil,       nil,                      true,     1     ]
[nil,       "tag:yaml.org,2002:map",  false,    2     ]
["pewpew",  nil,                      true,     1     ]

Handles start_document events with version, tag_directives, and implicit styling.

See Psych::Handler#start_document

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This method is called when some event handler is undefined. event is :on_XXX, token is the scanned token, and data is a data accumulator.

The return value of this method is passed to the next event handler (as of Enumerable#inject).

Returns new ancillary data for IP_PKTINFO.

If spec_dst is not given, addr is used.

IP_PKTINFO is not standard.

Supported platform: GNU/Linux

addr = Addrinfo.ip("127.0.0.1")
ifindex = 0
spec_dst = Addrinfo.ip("127.0.0.1")
p Socket::AncillaryData.ip_pktinfo(addr, ifindex, spec_dst)
#=> #<Socket::AncillaryData: INET IP PKTINFO 127.0.0.1 ifindex:0 spec_dst:127.0.0.1>

Extracts addr, ifindex and spec_dst from IP_PKTINFO ancillary data.

IP_PKTINFO is not standard.

Supported platform: GNU/Linux

addr = Addrinfo.ip("127.0.0.1")
ifindex = 0
spec_dest = Addrinfo.ip("127.0.0.1")
ancdata = Socket::AncillaryData.ip_pktinfo(addr, ifindex, spec_dest)
p ancdata.ip_pktinfo
#=> [#<Addrinfo: 127.0.0.1>, 0, #<Addrinfo: 127.0.0.1>]

Returns new ancillary data for IPV6_PKTINFO.

IPV6_PKTINFO is defined by RFC 3542.

addr = Addrinfo.ip("::1")
ifindex = 0
p Socket::AncillaryData.ipv6_pktinfo(addr, ifindex)
#=> #<Socket::AncillaryData: INET6 IPV6 PKTINFO ::1 ifindex:0>

Extracts addr and ifindex from IPV6_PKTINFO ancillary data.

IPV6_PKTINFO is defined by RFC 3542.

addr = Addrinfo.ip("::1")
ifindex = 0
ancdata = Socket::AncillaryData.ipv6_pktinfo(addr, ifindex)
p ancdata.ipv6_pktinfo #=> [#<Addrinfo: ::1>, 0]

Same as IO.

See Zlib::GzipReader documentation for a description.

See Zlib::GzipReader documentation for a description.

Iterates over keys and objects in a weakly referenced object

Returns serialized iseq binary format data as a String object. A corresponding iseq object is created by RubyVM::InstructionSequence.load_from_binary() method.

String extra_data will be saved with binary data. You can access this data with RubyVM::InstructionSequence.load_from_binary_extra_data(binary).

Note that the translated binary data is not portable. You can not move this binary data to another machine. You can not use the binary data which is created by another version/another architecture of Ruby.

Returns the absolute path of this instruction sequence.

nil if the iseq was evaluated from a string.

For example, using ::compile_file:

# /tmp/method.rb
def hello
  puts "hello, world"
end

# in irb
> iseq = RubyVM::InstructionSequence.compile_file('/tmp/method.rb')
> iseq.absolute_path #=> /tmp/method.rb

Returns the base label of this instruction sequence.

For example, using irb:

iseq = RubyVM::InstructionSequence.compile('num = 1 + 2')
#=> <RubyVM::InstructionSequence:<compiled>@<compiled>>
iseq.base_label
#=> "<compiled>"

Using ::compile_file:

# /tmp/method.rb
def hello
  puts "hello, world"
end

# in irb
> iseq = RubyVM::InstructionSequence.compile_file('/tmp/method.rb')
> iseq.base_label #=> <main>

Returns the number of the first source line where the instruction sequence was loaded from.

For example, using irb:

iseq = RubyVM::InstructionSequence.compile('num = 1 + 2')
#=> <RubyVM::InstructionSequence:<compiled>@<compiled>>
iseq.first_lineno
#=> 1

Returns true if this is a header row.

Creates a Regexp to match an address.

Routes respond_to? to the referenced remote object.

Has a method been included in the list of insecure methods?

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