Results for: "to_proc"

SOCKS is an Internet protocol that routes packets between a client and a server through a proxy server. SOCKS5, if supported, additionally provides authentication so only authorized users may access a server.

OLEProperty helper class of Property with arguments.

This class implements a pretty printing algorithm. It finds line breaks and nice indentations for grouped structure.

By default, the class assumes that primitive elements are strings and each byte in the strings have single column in width. But it can be used for other situations by giving suitable arguments for some methods:

There are several candidate uses:

Bugs

Report any bugs at bugs.ruby-lang.org

References

Christian Lindig, Strictly Pretty, March 2000, www.st.cs.uni-sb.de/~lindig/papers/#pretty

Philip Wadler, A prettier printer, March 1998, homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/topics/language-design.html#prettier

Author

Tanaka Akira <akr@fsij.org>

Raised when attempting to divide an integer by 0.

42 / 0   #=> ZeroDivisionError: divided by 0

Note that only division by an exact 0 will raise the exception:

42 /  0.0   #=> Float::INFINITY
42 / -0.0   #=> -Float::INFINITY
0  /  0.0   #=> NaN

Raised when Ruby can’t yield as requested.

A typical scenario is attempting to yield when no block is given:

def call_block
  yield 42
end
call_block

raises the exception:

LocalJumpError: no block given (yield)

A more subtle example:

def get_me_a_return
  Proc.new { return 42 }
end
get_me_a_return.call

raises the exception:

LocalJumpError: unexpected return

Raised when throw is called with a tag which does not have corresponding catch block.

throw "foo", "bar"

raises the exception:

UncaughtThrowError: uncaught throw "foo"

Profile provides a way to Profile your Ruby application.

Profiling your program is a way of determining which methods are called and how long each method takes to complete. This way you can detect which methods are possible bottlenecks.

Profiling your program will slow down your execution time considerably, so activate it only when you need it. Don’t confuse benchmarking with profiling.

There are two ways to activate Profiling:

Command line

Run your Ruby script with -rprofile:

ruby -rprofile example.rb

If you’re profiling an executable in your $PATH you can use ruby -S:

ruby -rprofile -S some_executable

From code

Just require ‘profile’:

require 'profile'

def slow_method
  5000.times do
    9999999999999999*999999999
  end
end

def fast_method
  5000.times do
    9999999999999999+999999999
  end
end

slow_method
fast_method

The output in both cases is a report when the execution is over:

ruby -rprofile example.rb

  %   cumulative   self              self     total
 time   seconds   seconds    calls  ms/call  ms/call  name
 68.42     0.13      0.13        2    65.00    95.00  Integer#times
 15.79     0.16      0.03     5000     0.01     0.01  Fixnum#*
 15.79     0.19      0.03     5000     0.01     0.01  Fixnum#+
  0.00     0.19      0.00        2     0.00     0.00  IO#set_encoding
  0.00     0.19      0.00        1     0.00   100.00  Object#slow_method
  0.00     0.19      0.00        2     0.00     0.00  Module#method_added
  0.00     0.19      0.00        1     0.00    90.00  Object#fast_method
  0.00     0.19      0.00        1     0.00   190.00  #toplevel

Returns the octet string representation of the elliptic curve point.

conversion_form specifies how the point is converted. Possible values are:

No documentation available
No documentation available

In order to execute a command on your OS, you need to define it as a Shell method.

Alternatively, you can execute any command via Shell::CommandProcessor#system even if it is not defined.

No documentation available
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Raised when the address is an invalid length.

No documentation available
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TupleSpaceProxy allows a remote Tuplespace to appear as local.

RingProvider uses a RingServer advertised TupleSpace as a name service. TupleSpace clients can register themselves with the remote TupleSpace and look up other provided services via the remote TupleSpace.

Services are registered with a tuple of the format [:name, klass, DRbObject, description].

RSS, being an XML-based format, has namespace support. If two namespaces are declared with the same name, an OverlappedPrefixError will be raised.

An error that indicates we weren’t able to fetch some data from a source

No documentation available

An HTTP Proxy server which proxies GET, HEAD and POST requests.

To create a simple proxy server:

require 'webrick'
require 'webrick/httpproxy'

proxy = WEBrick::HTTPProxyServer.new Port: 8000

trap 'INT'  do proxy.shutdown end
trap 'TERM' do proxy.shutdown end

proxy.start

See ::new for proxy-specific configuration items.

Modifying proxied responses

To modify content the proxy server returns use the :ProxyContentHandler option:

handler = proc do |req, res|
  if res['content-type'] == 'text/plain' then
    res.body << "\nThis content was proxied!\n"
  end
end

proxy =
  WEBrick::HTTPProxyServer.new Port: 8000, ProxyContentHandler: handler

The GC profiler provides access to information on GC runs including time, length and object space size.

Example:

GC::Profiler.enable

require 'rdoc/rdoc'

GC::Profiler.report

GC::Profiler.disable

See also GC.count, GC.malloc_allocated_size and GC.malloc_allocations

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