42475db467
Only caveat: such flags can only be set before the V8 platform gets initialized. Comes in handy to deactivate for example V8's aggressive use of `pthread` which somehow seems to not play too nice with Unicorn: ``` MiniRacer::Platform.set_flag! '--noconcurrent_recompilation' MiniRacer::Platform.set_flag! '--noconcurrent_sweeping' ``` Also protecting the platform initialization with a mutex, not sure how/why current concurrent tests never seem to hit bugs without that mutex. Added just one test on the new `MiniRacer::Platform.set_flag!` method, and unsure how to make other tests without making tests run in order (bad), given that flags can only be set before anything else is done. |
||
---|---|---|
benchmark | ||
bin | ||
ext/mini_racer_extension | ||
lib | ||
test | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CHANGELOG | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
Gemfile | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
mini_racer.gemspec | ||
Rakefile | ||
README.md |
MiniRacer
Minimal, modern embedded V8 for Ruby.
MiniRacer provides a minimal two way bridge between the V8 JavaScript engine and Ruby.
It was created as an alternative to the excellent therubyracer. Unlike therubyracer, mini_racer only implements a minimal bridge. This reduces the surface area making upgrading v8 much simpler and exhaustive testing simpler.
MiniRacer has an adapter for execjs so it can be used directly with Rails projects to minify assets, run babel or compile CoffeeScript.
Features
Simple eval for JavaScript
You can simply eval one or many JavaScript snippets in a shared context
context = MiniRacer::Context.new
context.eval 'var adder = (a,b)=>a+b;'
puts context.eval 'adder(20,22)'
# => 42
Attach global Ruby functions to your JavaScript context
You can attach one or many ruby proc that can be accessed via JavaScript
context = MiniRacer::Context.new
context.attach("math.adder", proc{|a,b| a+b})
puts context.eval 'math.adder(20,22)'
# => 42
context = MiniRacer::Context.new
context.attach("array_and_hash", proc{{a: 1, b: [1, {a: 1}]}})
puts context.eval 'array_and_hash()'
# => {"a" => 1, "b" => [1, {"a" => 1}]}
GIL free JavaScript execution
The Ruby Global interpreter lock is released when scripts are executing
context = MiniRacer::Context.new
Thread.new do
sleep 1
context.stop
end
context.eval 'while(true){}'
# => exception is raised
This allows you to execute multiple scripts in parallel.
Timeout support
Contexts can specify a default timeout for scripts
# times out after 1 second (1000 ms)
context = MiniRacer::Context.new(timeout: 1000)
context.eval 'while(true){}'
# => exception is raised
Threadsafe
Context usage is threadsafe
context = MiniRacer::Context.new
context.eval('counter=0; plus=()=>counter++;')
(1..10).map do
Thread.new {
context.eval("plus()")
}
end.each(&:join)
puts context.eval("counter")
# => 10
Performance
The bench
folder contains benchmark.
Benchmark minification of Discourse application.js (both minified and unminified)
- MiniRacer version 0.1
- therubyracer version 0.12.2
$ ruby bench_uglify.rb
Benching with MiniRacer
MiniRacer minify discourse_app.js 13813.36ms
MiniRacer minify discourse_app_minified.js 18271.19ms
MiniRacer minify discourse_app.js twice (2 threads) 13587.21ms
Benching with therubyracer
MiniRacer minify discourse_app.js 151467.164ms
MiniRacer minify discourse_app_minified.js 158172.097ms
MiniRacer minify discourse_app.js twice (2 threads) - DOES NOT FINISH
Killed: 9
The huge performance disparity (MiniRacer is 10x faster) is due to MiniRacer running latest version of V8. In July 2016 there is a queued upgrade to therubyracer which should bring some of the perf inline.
Note how the global interpreter lock release leads to 2 threads doing the same work taking the same wall time as 1 thread.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'mini_racer'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install mini_racer
Note using v8.h and compiling MiniRacer requires a C++11 standard compiler, more specifically clang 3.5 (or later) or gcc 4.8 (or later).
Travis-ci
To install mini-racer
you will need a version of gcc that supports C++11 (gcc 4.8) this is included by default in ubuntu trusty based images.
Travis today ships by default with a precise based image. Precise Pangolin (12.04 LTS) was first released in August 2012. Even though you can install GCC 4.8 on precise the simpler approach is to opt for the trusty based image.
Add this to your .travis.yml file:
- sudo: required
- dist: trusty
Similar Projects
###therubyracer
- https://github.com/cowboyd/therubyracer
- Most comprehensive bridge available
- Provides the ability to "eval" JavaScript
- Provides the ability to invoke Ruby code from JavaScript
- Hold refrences to JavaScript objects and methods in your Ruby code
- Hold refrences to Ruby objects and methods in JavaScript code
- Uses libv8, so installation is fast
- Supports timeouts for JavaScript execution
- Does not release global interpreter lock, so performance is constrained to a single thread
- Currently (May 2016) only supports v8 version 3.16.14 (Released approx November 2013), plans to upgrade by July 2016
- Supports execjs
###v8eval
- https://github.com/sony/v8eval
- Provides the ability to "eval" JavaScript using the latest V8 engine
- Does not depend on the libv8 gem, installation can take 10-20 mins as V8 needs to be downloaded and compiled.
- Does not release global interpreter lock when executing JavaScript
- Does not allow you to invoke Ruby code from JavaScript
- Multi runtime support due to SWIG based bindings
- Supports a JavaScript debugger
- Does not support timeouts for JavaScript execution
- No support for execjs (can not be used with Rails uglifier and coffeescript gems)
###therubyrhino
- https://github.com/cowboyd/therubyrhino
- API compatible with therubyracer
- Uses Mozilla's Rhino engine https://github.com/mozilla/rhino
- Requires JRuby
- Support for timeouts for JavaScript execution
- Concurrent cause .... JRuby
- Supports execjs
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/discourse/mini_racer. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.