Results for: "OptionParser"

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If the buffer is internal, meaning it references memory allocated by the buffer itself.

An internal buffer is not associated with any external memory (e.g. string) or file mapping.

Internal buffers are created using ::new and is the default when the requested size is less than the IO::Buffer::PAGE_SIZE and it was not requested to be mapped on creation.

Internal buffers can be resized, and such an operation will typically invalidate all slices, but not always.

No documentation available

Fill buffer with value, starting with offset and going for length bytes.

buffer = IO::Buffer.for('test')
# =>
#   <IO::Buffer 0x00007fca40087c38+4 SLICE>
#   0x00000000  74 65 73 74         test

buffer.clear
# =>
#   <IO::Buffer 0x00007fca40087c38+4 SLICE>
#   0x00000000  00 00 00 00         ....

buf.clear(1) # fill with 1
# =>
#   <IO::Buffer 0x00007fca40087c38+4 SLICE>
#   0x00000000  01 01 01 01         ....

buffer.clear(2, 1, 2) # fill with 2, starting from offset 1, for 2 bytes
# =>
#   <IO::Buffer 0x00007fca40087c38+4 SLICE>
#   0x00000000  01 02 02 01         ....

buffer.clear(2, 1) # fill with 2, starting from offset 1
# =>
#   <IO::Buffer 0x00007fca40087c38+4 SLICE>
#   0x00000000  01 02 02 02         ....

Efficiently copy data from a source IO::Buffer into the buffer, at offset using memcpy. For copying String instances, see set_string.

buffer = IO::Buffer.new(32)
#  =>
# #<IO::Buffer 0x0000555f5ca22520+32 INTERNAL>
# 0x00000000  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
# 0x00000010  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................  *

buffer.copy(IO::Buffer.for("test"), 8)
# => 4 -- size of data copied
buffer
#  =>
# #<IO::Buffer 0x0000555f5cf8fe40+32 INTERNAL>
# 0x00000000  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 74 65 73 74 00 00 00 00 ........test....
# 0x00000010  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................ *

copy can be used to put data into strings associated with buffer:

string= "data:    "
# => "data:    "
buffer = IO::Buffer.for(str)
buffer.copy(IO::Buffer.for("test"), 5)
# => 4
string
# => "data:test"

Attempt to copy into a read-only buffer will fail:

File.write('test.txt', 'test')
buffer = IO::Buffer.map(File.open('test.txt'), nil, 0, IO::Buffer::READONLY)
buffer.copy(IO::Buffer.for("test"), 8)
# in `copy': Buffer is not writable! (IO::Buffer::AccessError)

See ::map for details of creation of mutable file mappings, this will work:

buffer = IO::Buffer.map(File.open('test.txt', 'r+'))
buffer.copy("boom", 0)
# => 4
File.read('test.txt')
# => "boom"

Attempt to copy the data which will need place outside of buffer’s bounds will fail:

buffer = IO::Buffer.new(2)
buffer.copy('test', 0)
# in `copy': Specified offset+length exceeds source size! (ArgumentError)

Returns the instruction sequence as a String in human readable form.

puts RubyVM::InstructionSequence.compile('1 + 2').disasm

Produces:

== disasm: <RubyVM::InstructionSequence:<compiled>@<compiled>>==========
0000 trace            1                                               (   1)
0002 putobject        1
0004 putobject        2
0006 opt_plus         <ic:1>
0008 leave

Returns the path of this instruction sequence.

<compiled> if the iseq was evaluated from a string.

For example, using irb:

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

Using ::compile_file:

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

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

Takes body, a Method or Proc object, and returns a String with the human readable instructions for body.

For a Method object:

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

puts RubyVM::InstructionSequence.disasm(method(:hello))

Produces:

== disasm: <RubyVM::InstructionSequence:hello@/tmp/method.rb>============
0000 trace            8                                               (   1)
0002 trace            1                                               (   2)
0004 putself
0005 putstring        "hello, world"
0007 send             :puts, 1, nil, 8, <ic:0>
0013 trace            16                                              (   3)
0015 leave                                                            (   2)

For a Proc:

# /tmp/proc.rb
p = proc { num = 1 + 2 }
puts RubyVM::InstructionSequence.disasm(p)

Produces:

== disasm: <RubyVM::InstructionSequence:block in <main>@/tmp/proc.rb>===
== catch table
| catch type: redo   st: 0000 ed: 0012 sp: 0000 cont: 0000
| catch type: next   st: 0000 ed: 0012 sp: 0000 cont: 0012
|------------------------------------------------------------------------
local table (size: 2, argc: 0 [opts: 0, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1] s1)
[ 2] num
0000 trace            1                                               (   1)
0002 putobject        1
0004 putobject        2
0006 opt_plus         <ic:1>
0008 dup
0009 setlocal         num, 0
0012 leave

Set path for which this cookie applies

Set whether the Cookie is a secure cookie or not.

val must be a boolean.

Set whether the Cookie is a httponly cookie or not.

val must be a boolean.

Store session data on the server and close the session storage. For some session storage types, this is a no-op.

No documentation available
No documentation available
No documentation available

Returns the new Array suitable for pattern matching containing the values of the row.

No documentation available

Is uri the URI for this server?

No documentation available

Return an DRb::DRbSSLSocket instance as a client-side connection, with the SSL connected. This is called from DRb::start_service or while connecting to a remote object:

DRb.start_service 'drbssl://localhost:0', front, config

uri is the URI we are connected to, 'drbssl://localhost:0' above, config is our configuration. Either a Hash or DRb::DRbSSLSocket::SSLConfig

No documentation available
No documentation available

Creates a new Net::HTTP object, then additionally opens the TCP connection and HTTP session.

Arguments are the following:

address

hostname or IP address of the server

port

port of the server

p_addr

address of proxy

p_port

port of proxy

p_user

user of proxy

p_pass

pass of proxy

opt

optional hash

opt sets following values by its accessor. The keys are ipaddr, ca_file, ca_path, cert, cert_store, ciphers, keep_alive_timeout, close_on_empty_response, key, open_timeout, read_timeout, write_timeout, ssl_timeout, ssl_version, use_ssl, verify_callback, verify_depth and verify_mode. If you set :use_ssl as true, you can use https and default value of verify_mode is set as OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER.

If the optional block is given, the newly created Net::HTTP object is passed to it and closed when the block finishes. In this case, the return value of this method is the return value of the block. If no block is given, the return value of this method is the newly created Net::HTTP object itself, and the caller is responsible for closing it upon completion using the finish() method.

The IP address to connect to/used to connect to

Set the IP address to connect to

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