See Zlib::GzipReader
documentation for a description.
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
Return trace points in the instruction sequence. Return an array of [line, event_symbol] pair.
It returns recorded script lines if it is availalble. The script lines are not limited to the iseq range, but are entire lines of the source file.
Note that this is an API for ruby internal use, debugging, and research. Do not use this for any other purpose. The compatibility is not guaranteed.
Returns the new Hash suitable for pattern matching containing only the keys specified as an argument.
Like Net::HTTP.get
, but writes the returned body to $stdout; returns nil
.
Sets the maximum number of times to retry an idempotent request in case of Net::ReadTimeout
, IOError
, EOFError
, Errno::ECONNRESET, Errno::ECONNABORTED, Errno::EPIPE, OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError
, Timeout::Error
. The initial value is 1.
Argument retries
must be a non-negative numeric value:
http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) http.max_retries = 2 # => 2 http.max_retries # => 2
Sends a POST request to the path
.
Returns the response as a Net::HTTPResponse
object.
When called with a block, the block is passed an HTTPResponse
object. The body of that response will not have been read yet; the block can process it using HTTPResponse#read_body
, if desired.
Returns the response.
This method never raises Net::* exceptions.
# example response = http.request_post('/cgi-bin/nice.rb', 'datadatadata...') p response.status puts response.body # body is already read in this case # using block http.request_post('/cgi-bin/nice.rb', 'datadatadata...') {|response| p response.status p response['content-type'] response.read_body do |str| # read body now print str end }
Returns the full path for an HTTP
request, as required by Net::HTTP::Get
.
If the URI
contains a query, the full path is URI#path + ‘?’ + URI#query. Otherwise, the path is simply URI#path.
Example:
uri = URI::HTTP.build(path: '/foo/bar', query: 'test=true') uri.request_uri # => "/foo/bar?test=true"
for debug