From: "jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) via ruby-core" Date: 2024-01-24T22:25:23+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:116429] [Ruby master Feature#20205] Enable `frozen_string_literal` by default Issue #20205 has been updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans). byroot (Jean Boussier) wrote in #note-25: > As of today running ruby with `--enable=frozen_string_literal` is a little known feature that basically no-one is doing. It's hard, if not impossible to convince maintainers to take in such changes. As a counterpoint, I've been testing Sequel, Roda, and Rodauth since the release of Ruby 2.3 with `--enable-frozen-string-literal`. When starting out, many of the dependencies (direct and transitive) broke internally, and I had to submit pull requests to fix them. It took a few years, but I eventually got all related pull requests merged upstream (or alternative fixes implemented), and for years the tests have been clean with `--enable-frozen-string-literal`. In most cases, it was easy to convince maintainers to fix any breakage encountered when using `--enable-frozen-string-literal`, and in many cases, maintainers took it upon themselves to fix other issues I didn't encounter. > And any new gem created from today will likely not test with `--enable=frozen_string_literal`, so when they get added on our apps, they won't work. So it will be a never ending task. It's been years since I've had to submit a pull request upstream related to `--enable-frozen-string-literal`, so I don't think it necessarily has to be a never ending task. However, I'm not dealing with 700 transitive dependencies, maybe not even 70. And when you are using `--enable-frozen-string-literal`, you need to have everything fixed for things to work. So maybe at Shopify scale, the problem really is intractable. > Now if the Ruby project states that in the future the default will flip, even if it's a long time from now, it becomes easy to convince maintainers. Certainly it becomes easier, but my experience is that it is already easy. I would expect you are more likely to run into a dependency that isn't maintained, versus a dependency that is maintained but the maintainer is against fixing `--enable-frozen-string-literal` issues. > But also, I'm not getting this out of thin air, unless I misunderstood Matz, he stated he wishes to enable frozen string literals by default at some point, and that the only reason it wasn't done yet is the lack of a proper migration plan. So I'm not the one to suggest to flip the default in the first place, I'm merely proposing a migration plan. I am in favor of switching to frozen static string literals by default with the migration plan proposed. ---------------------------------------- Feature #20205: Enable `frozen_string_literal` by default https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/20205#change-106452 * Author: byroot (Jean Boussier) * Status: Open * Priority: Normal ---------------------------------------- ### Context The `frozen_string_literal: true` pragma was introduced in Ruby 2.3, and as far as I'm aware the plan was initially to make it the default for Ruby 3.0, but this plan was abandoned because it would be too much of a breaking change without any real further notice. According to Matz, he still wishes to enable `frozen_string_literal` by default in the future, but a reasonable migration plan is required. The main issue is backward compatibility, flipping the switch immediately would break a lot of code, so there must be some deprecation period. The usual the path forward for this kind of change is to emit deprecation warnings one of multiple versions in advance. One example of that was the Ruby 2.7 keyword argument deprecation. It was quite verbose, and some users were initially annoyed, but I think the community pulled through it and I don't seem to hear much about it anymore. So for frozen string literals, the first step would be to start warning when a string that would be frozen in the future is mutated. ### Deprecation Warning Implementation I implemented a quick proof of concept with @etienne in https://github.com/Shopify/ruby/pull/549 In short: - Files with `# frozen_string_literal: true` or `# frozen_string_literal: false` don't change in behavior at all. - Files with no `# frozen_string_literal` comment are compiled to use `putchilledstring` opcode instead of regular `putstring`. - This opcode mark the string with a user flag, when these strings are mutated, a warning is issued. Currently the proof of concept issue the warning at the mutation location, which in some case can make locating where the string was allocated a bit hard. But it is possible to improve it so the message also include the location at which the literal string was allocated, and learning from the keyword argument warning experience, we can record which warnings were already issued to avoid spamming users with duplicated warnings. As currently implemented, there is almost no overhead. If we modify the implementation to record the literal location, we'd incur a small memory overhead for each literal string in a file without an explicit `frozen_string_literal` pragma. But I believe we could do it in a way that has no overhead if `Warning[:deprecated] = false`. ### Timeline The migration would happen in 3 steps, each step can potentially last multiple releases. e.g. `R0` could be `3.4`, `R1` be `3.7` and `R2` be `4.0`. I don't have a strong opinion on the pace. - Release `R0`: introduce the deprecation warning (only if deprecation warnings enabled). - Release `R1`: make the deprecation warning show up regardless of verbosity level. - Release `R2`: make string literals frozen by default. ### Impact Given that `rubocop` is quite popular in the community and it has enforced the usage of `# frozen_string_literal: true` for years now, I suspect a large part of the actively maintained codebases in the wild wouldn't see any warnings. And with recent versions of `minitest` enabling deprecation warnings by default (and [potentially RSpec too](https://github.com/rspec/rspec-core/issues/2867)), the few that didn't migrate will likely be made compatible quickly. The real problem of course are the less actively developed libraries and applications. For such cases, any codebase can remain compatible by setting `RUBYOPT="--disable=frozen_string_literal"`, and so even after `R2` release. The flag would never be removed any legacy codebase can continue upgrading Ruby without changing a single line of cod by just flipping this flag. ### Workflow for library maintainers As a library maintainer, fixing the deprecation warnings can be as simple as prepending `# frozen_string_literal: false` at the top of all their source files, and this will keep working forever. Alternatively they can of course make their code compatible with frozen string literals. Code that is frozen string literal compatible doesn't need to explicitly declare it. Only code that need it turned of need to do so. ### Workflow for application owners For application owners, the workflow is the same than for libraries. However if they depend on a gem that hasn't updated, or that they can't upgrade it, they can run their application with `RUBYOPT="--disable=frozen_string_literal"` and it will keep working forever. Any user running into an incompatibility issue can set `RUBYOPT="--disable=frozen_string_literal"` forever, even in `4.x`, the only thing changing is the default value. And any application for which all dependencies have been made fully frozen string literal compatible can set `RUBYOPT="--enable=frozen_string_literal"` and start immediately removing magic comment from their codebase. -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ ______________________________________________ ruby-core mailing list -- ruby-core@ml.ruby-lang.org To unsubscribe send an email to ruby-core-leave@ml.ruby-lang.org ruby-core info -- https://ml.ruby-lang.org/mailman3/postorius/lists/ruby-core.ml.ruby-lang.org/