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Code Editor : pstore.rb
# = PStore -- Transactional File Storage for Ruby Objects # # pstore.rb - # originally by matz # documentation by Kev Jackson and James Edward Gray II # improved by Hongli Lai # # See PStore for documentation. require "fileutils" require "digest/md5" require "thread" # # PStore implements a file based persistence mechanism based on a Hash. User # code can store hierarchies of Ruby objects (values) into the data store file # by name (keys). An object hierarchy may be just a single object. User code # may later read values back from the data store or even update data, as needed. # # The transactional behavior ensures that any changes succeed or fail together. # This can be used to ensure that the data store is not left in a transitory # state, where some values were updated but others were not. # # Behind the scenes, Ruby objects are stored to the data store file with # Marshal. That carries the usual limitations. Proc objects cannot be # marshalled, for example. # # == Usage example: # # require "pstore" # # # a mock wiki object... # class WikiPage # def initialize( page_name, author, contents ) # @page_name = page_name # @revisions = Array.new # # add_revision(author, contents) # end # # attr_reader :page_name # # def add_revision( author, contents ) # @revisions << { :created => Time.now, # :author => author, # :contents => contents } # end # # def wiki_page_references # [@page_name] + @revisions.last[:contents].scan(/\b(?:[A-Z]+[a-z]+){2,}/) # end # # # ... # end # # # create a new page... # home_page = WikiPage.new( "HomePage", "James Edward Gray II", # "A page about the JoysOfDocumentation..." ) # # # then we want to update page data and the index together, or not at all... # wiki = PStore.new("wiki_pages.pstore") # wiki.transaction do # begin transaction; do all of this or none of it # # store page... # wiki[home_page.page_name] = home_page # # ensure that an index has been created... # wiki[:wiki_index] ||= Array.new # # update wiki index... # wiki[:wiki_index].push(*home_page.wiki_page_references) # end # commit changes to wiki data store file # # ### Some time later... ### # # # read wiki data... # wiki.transaction(true) do # begin read-only transaction, no changes allowed # wiki.roots.each do |data_root_name| # p data_root_name # p wiki[data_root_name] # end # end # # == Transaction modes # # By default, file integrity is only ensured as long as the operating system # (and the underlying hardware) doesn't raise any unexpected I/O errors. If an # I/O error occurs while PStore is writing to its file, then the file will # become corrupted. # # You can prevent this by setting <em>pstore.ultra_safe = true</em>. # However, this results in a minor performance loss, and only works on platforms # that support atomic file renames. Please consult the documentation for # +ultra_safe+ for details. # # Needless to say, if you're storing valuable data with PStore, then you should # backup the PStore files from time to time. class PStore RDWR_ACCESS = {mode: IO::RDWR | IO::CREAT | IO::BINARY, encoding: Encoding::ASCII_8BIT}.freeze RD_ACCESS = {mode: IO::RDONLY | IO::BINARY, encoding: Encoding::ASCII_8BIT}.freeze WR_ACCESS = {mode: IO::WRONLY | IO::CREAT | IO::TRUNC | IO::BINARY, encoding: Encoding::ASCII_8BIT}.freeze # The error type thrown by all PStore methods. class Error < StandardError end # Whether PStore should do its best to prevent file corruptions, even when under # unlikely-to-occur error conditions such as out-of-space conditions and other # unusual OS filesystem errors. Setting this flag comes at the price in the form # of a performance loss. # # This flag only has effect on platforms on which file renames are atomic (e.g. # all POSIX platforms: Linux, MacOS X, FreeBSD, etc). The default value is false. attr_accessor :ultra_safe # # To construct a PStore object, pass in the _file_ path where you would like # the data to be stored. # # PStore objects are always reentrant. But if _thread_safe_ is set to true, # then it will become thread-safe at the cost of a minor performance hit. # def initialize(file, thread_safe = false) dir = File::dirname(file) unless File::directory? dir raise PStore::Error, format("directory %s does not exist", dir) end if File::exist? file and not File::readable? file raise PStore::Error, format("file %s not readable", file) end @filename = file @abort = false @ultra_safe = false @thread_safe = thread_safe @lock = Mutex.new end # Raises PStore::Error if the calling code is not in a PStore#transaction. def in_transaction raise PStore::Error, "not in transaction" unless @lock.locked? end # # Raises PStore::Error if the calling code is not in a PStore#transaction or # if the code is in a read-only PStore#transaction. # def in_transaction_wr() in_transaction() raise PStore::Error, "in read-only transaction" if @rdonly end private :in_transaction, :in_transaction_wr # # Retrieves a value from the PStore file data, by _name_. The hierarchy of # Ruby objects stored under that root _name_ will be returned. # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction. It will # raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def [](name) in_transaction @table[name] end # # This method is just like PStore#[], save that you may also provide a # _default_ value for the object. In the event the specified _name_ is not # found in the data store, your _default_ will be returned instead. If you do # not specify a default, PStore::Error will be raised if the object is not # found. # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction. It will # raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def fetch(name, default=PStore::Error) in_transaction unless @table.key? name if default == PStore::Error raise PStore::Error, format("undefined root name `%s'", name) else return default end end @table[name] end # # Stores an individual Ruby object or a hierarchy of Ruby objects in the data # store file under the root _name_. Assigning to a _name_ already in the data # store clobbers the old data. # # == Example: # # require "pstore" # # store = PStore.new("data_file.pstore") # store.transaction do # begin transaction # # load some data into the store... # store[:single_object] = "My data..." # store[:obj_heirarchy] = { "Kev Jackson" => ["rational.rb", "pstore.rb"], # "James Gray" => ["erb.rb", "pstore.rb"] } # end # commit changes to data store file # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction and it cannot # be read-only. It will raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def []=(name, value) in_transaction_wr() @table[name] = value end # # Removes an object hierarchy from the data store, by _name_. # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction and it cannot # be read-only. It will raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def delete(name) in_transaction_wr() @table.delete name end # # Returns the names of all object hierarchies currently in the store. # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction. It will # raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def roots in_transaction @table.keys end # # Returns true if the supplied _name_ is currently in the data store. # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction. It will # raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def root?(name) in_transaction @table.key? name end # Returns the path to the data store file. def path @filename end # # Ends the current PStore#transaction, committing any changes to the data # store immediately. # # == Example: # # require "pstore" # # store = PStore.new("data_file.pstore") # store.transaction do # begin transaction # # load some data into the store... # store[:one] = 1 # store[:two] = 2 # # store.commit # end transaction here, committing changes # # store[:three] = 3 # this change is never reached # end # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction. It will # raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def commit in_transaction @abort = false throw :pstore_abort_transaction end # # Ends the current PStore#transaction, discarding any changes to the data # store. # # == Example: # # require "pstore" # # store = PStore.new("data_file.pstore") # store.transaction do # begin transaction # store[:one] = 1 # this change is not applied, see below... # store[:two] = 2 # this change is not applied, see below... # # store.abort # end transaction here, discard all changes # # store[:three] = 3 # this change is never reached # end # # *WARNING*: This method is only valid in a PStore#transaction. It will # raise PStore::Error if called at any other time. # def abort in_transaction @abort = true throw :pstore_abort_transaction end # # Opens a new transaction for the data store. Code executed inside a block # passed to this method may read and write data to and from the data store # file. # # At the end of the block, changes are committed to the data store # automatically. You may exit the transaction early with a call to either # PStore#commit or PStore#abort. See those methods for details about how # changes are handled. Raising an uncaught Exception in the block is # equivalent to calling PStore#abort. # # If _read_only_ is set to +true+, you will only be allowed to read from the # data store during the transaction and any attempts to change the data will # raise a PStore::Error. # # Note that PStore does not support nested transactions. # def transaction(read_only = false, &block) # :yields: pstore value = nil raise PStore::Error, "nested transaction" if !@thread_safe && @lock.locked? @lock.synchronize do @rdonly = read_only @abort = false file = open_and_lock_file(@filename, read_only) if file begin @table, checksum, original_data_size = load_data(file, read_only) catch(:pstore_abort_transaction) do value = yield(self) end if !@abort && !read_only save_data(checksum, original_data_size, file) end ensure file.close if !file.closed? end else # This can only occur if read_only == true. @table = {} catch(:pstore_abort_transaction) do value = yield(self) end end end value rescue ThreadError raise PStore::Error, "nested transaction" end private # Constant for relieving Ruby's garbage collector. EMPTY_STRING = "" EMPTY_MARSHAL_DATA = Marshal.dump({}) EMPTY_MARSHAL_CHECKSUM = Digest::MD5.digest(EMPTY_MARSHAL_DATA) # # Open the specified filename (either in read-only mode or in # read-write mode) and lock it for reading or writing. # # The opened File object will be returned. If _read_only_ is true, # and the file does not exist, then nil will be returned. # # All exceptions are propagated. # def open_and_lock_file(filename, read_only) if read_only begin file = File.new(filename, RD_ACCESS) begin file.flock(File::LOCK_SH) return file rescue file.close raise end rescue Errno::ENOENT return nil end else file = File.new(filename, RDWR_ACCESS) file.flock(File::LOCK_EX) return file end end # Load the given PStore file. # If +read_only+ is true, the unmarshalled Hash will be returned. # If +read_only+ is false, a 3-tuple will be returned: the unmarshalled # Hash, an MD5 checksum of the data, and the size of the data. def load_data(file, read_only) if read_only begin table = load(file) if !table.is_a?(Hash) raise Error, "PStore file seems to be corrupted." end rescue EOFError # This seems to be a newly-created file. table = {} end table else data = file.read if data.empty? # This seems to be a newly-created file. table = {} checksum = empty_marshal_checksum size = empty_marshal_data.size else table = load(data) checksum = Digest::MD5.digest(data) size = data.size if !table.is_a?(Hash) raise Error, "PStore file seems to be corrupted." end end data.replace(EMPTY_STRING) [table, checksum, size] end end def on_windows? is_windows = RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /mswin/ || RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /mingw/ || RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /bccwin/ || RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /wince/ self.class.__send__(:define_method, :on_windows?) do is_windows end is_windows end # Check whether Marshal.dump supports the 'canonical' option. This option # makes sure that Marshal.dump always dumps data structures in the same order. # This is important because otherwise, the checksums that we generate may differ. def marshal_dump_supports_canonical_option? begin Marshal.dump(nil, -1, true) result = true rescue result = false end self.class.instance_method(:marshal_dump_supports_canonical_option?) self.class.__send__(:define_method, :marshal_dump_supports_canonical_option?) do result end result end def save_data(original_checksum, original_file_size, file) # We only want to save the new data if the size or checksum has changed. # This results in less filesystem calls, which is good for performance. if marshal_dump_supports_canonical_option? new_data = Marshal.dump(@table, -1, true) else new_data = dump(@table) end new_checksum = Digest::MD5.digest(new_data) if new_data.size != original_file_size || new_checksum != original_checksum if @ultra_safe && !on_windows? # Windows doesn't support atomic file renames. save_data_with_atomic_file_rename_strategy(new_data, file) else save_data_with_fast_strategy(new_data, file) end end new_data.replace(EMPTY_STRING) end def save_data_with_atomic_file_rename_strategy(data, file) temp_filename = "#{@filename}.tmp.#{Process.pid}.#{rand 1000000}" temp_file = File.new(temp_filename, WR_ACCESS) begin temp_file.flock(File::LOCK_EX) temp_file.write(data) temp_file.flush File.rename(temp_filename, @filename) rescue File.unlink(temp_file) rescue nil raise ensure temp_file.close end end def save_data_with_fast_strategy(data, file) file.rewind file.truncate(0) file.write(data) end # This method is just a wrapped around Marshal.dump # to allow subclass overriding used in YAML::Store. def dump(table) # :nodoc: Marshal::dump(table) end # This method is just a wrapped around Marshal.load. # to allow subclass overriding used in YAML::Store. def load(content) # :nodoc: Marshal::load(content) end def empty_marshal_data EMPTY_MARSHAL_DATA end def empty_marshal_checksum EMPTY_MARSHAL_CHECKSUM end end # :enddoc: if __FILE__ == $0 db = PStore.new("/tmp/foo") db.transaction do p db.roots ary = db["root"] = [1,2,3,4] ary[1] = [1,1.5] end 1000.times do db.transaction do db["root"][0] += 1 p db["root"][0] end end db.transaction(true) do p db["root"] end end
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