Returns information about the most recent garbage collection.
Verify internal consistency.
This method is implementation specific. Now this method checks generational consistency if RGenGC is supported.
Set
the default id conversion object.
This is expected to be an instance such as DRb::DRbIdConv
that responds to to_id
and to_obj
that can convert objects to and from DRb
references.
See DRbServer#default_id_conv.
Set
the default id conversion object.
This is expected to be an instance such as DRb::DRbIdConv
that responds to to_id
and to_obj
that can convert objects to and from DRb
references.
See DRbServer#default_id_conv.
Returns whether or not the struct of type type
contains member
. If it does not, or the struct type can’t be found, then false is returned. You may optionally specify additional headers
in which to look for the struct (in addition to the common header files).
If found, a macro is passed as a preprocessor constant to the compiler using the type name and the member name, in uppercase, prepended with HAVE_
.
For example, if have_struct_member('struct foo', 'bar')
returned true, then the HAVE_STRUCT_FOO_BAR
preprocessor macro would be passed to the compiler.
HAVE_ST_BAR
is also defined for backward compatibility.
Generate URL-encoded form data from given enum
.
This generates application/x-www-form-urlencoded data defined in HTML5 from given an Enumerable
object.
This internally uses URI.encode_www_form_component(str)
.
This method doesn’t convert the encoding of given items, so convert them before call this method if you want to send data as other than original encoding or mixed encoding data. (Strings which are encoded in an HTML5 ASCII incompatible encoding are converted to UTF-8.)
This method doesn’t handle files. When you send a file, use multipart/form-data.
This refers url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-urlencoded-serializer
URI.encode_www_form([["q", "ruby"], ["lang", "en"]]) #=> "q=ruby&lang=en" URI.encode_www_form("q" => "ruby", "lang" => "en") #=> "q=ruby&lang=en" URI.encode_www_form("q" => ["ruby", "perl"], "lang" => "en") #=> "q=ruby&q=perl&lang=en" URI.encode_www_form([["q", "ruby"], ["q", "perl"], ["lang", "en"]]) #=> "q=ruby&q=perl&lang=en"
Decode URL-encoded form data from given str
.
This decodes application/x-www-form-urlencoded data and returns array of key-value array.
This refers url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-urlencoded-parser , so this supports only &-separator, don’t support ;-separator.
ary = URI.decode_www_form("a=1&a=2&b=3") p ary #=> [['a', '1'], ['a', '2'], ['b', '3']] p ary.assoc('a').last #=> '1' p ary.assoc('b').last #=> '3' p ary.rassoc('a').last #=> '2' p Hash[ary] # => {"a"=>"2", "b"=>"3"}
Returns a list of paths matching glob
from the latest gems that can be used by a gem to pick up features from other gems. For example:
Gem.find_latest_files('rdoc/discover').each do |path| load path end
if check_load_path
is true (the default), then find_latest_files
also searches $LOAD_PATH for files as well as gems.
Unlike find_files
, find_latest_files
will return only files from the latest version of a gem.
Returns the latest release version of RubyGems.
Deduce Ruby’s –program-prefix and –program-suffix from its install name
Returns strongly connected components as an array of arrays of nodes. The array is sorted from children to parents. Each elements of the array represents a strongly connected component.
class G include TSort def initialize(g) @g = g end def tsort_each_child(n, &b) @g[n].each(&b) end def tsort_each_node(&b) @g.each_key(&b) end end graph = G.new({1=>[2, 3], 2=>[4], 3=>[2, 4], 4=>[]}) p graph.strongly_connected_components #=> [[4], [2], [3], [1]] graph = G.new({1=>[2], 2=>[3, 4], 3=>[2], 4=>[]}) p graph.strongly_connected_components #=> [[4], [2, 3], [1]]
Returns strongly connected components as an array of arrays of nodes. The array is sorted from children to parents. Each elements of the array represents a strongly connected component.
The graph is represented by each_node and each_child. each_node should have call
method which yields for each node in the graph. each_child should have call
method which takes a node argument and yields for each child node.
g = {1=>[2, 3], 2=>[4], 3=>[2, 4], 4=>[]} each_node = lambda {|&b| g.each_key(&b) } each_child = lambda {|n, &b| g[n].each(&b) } p TSort.strongly_connected_components(each_node, each_child) #=> [[4], [2], [3], [1]] g = {1=>[2], 2=>[3, 4], 3=>[2], 4=>[]} each_node = lambda {|&b| g.each_key(&b) } each_child = lambda {|n, &b| g[n].each(&b) } p TSort.strongly_connected_components(each_node, each_child) #=> [[4], [2, 3], [1]]
Should be implemented by a extended class.
tsort_each_node
is used to iterate for all nodes over a graph.
Should be implemented by a extended class.
tsort_each_child
is used to iterate for child nodes of node.
Removes session from the session cache.
A non-blocking version of sysread
. Raises an SSLError
if reading would block. If “exception: false” is passed, this method returns a symbol of :wait_readable, :wait_writable, or nil, rather than raising an exception.
Reads length bytes from the SSL
connection. If a pre-allocated buffer is provided the data will be written into it.
Returns true
if a reused session was negotiated during the handshake.
Returns the result of the peer certificates verification. See verify(1) for error values and descriptions.
If no peer certificate was presented X509_V_OK is returned.
Returns the ALPN protocol string that was finally selected by the server during the handshake.
Returns the protocol string that was finally selected by the client during the handshake.
Creates a new X509::Extension
with passed values. See also x509v3_config(5).