rubybreaker 0.0.5 → 0.0.6
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- data/ABOUT.md +20 -0
- data/NEWS +5 -0
- data/README.md +16 -352
- data/Rakefile +30 -16
- data/TOPICS.md +55 -0
- data/TUTORIAL.md +291 -0
- data/VERSION +1 -1
- data/bin/rubybreaker +32 -14
- data/lib/rubybreaker/runtime/monitor.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/rubybreaker/runtime.rb +41 -21
- data/lib/rubybreaker/task.rb +15 -9
- data/lib/rubybreaker/test/rspec.rb +3 -3
- data/lib/rubybreaker/test/testcase.rb +3 -3
- data/lib/rubybreaker.rb +31 -16
- data/test/integrated/{tc_both_broken_breakable.rb → tc_both_documented_and_undocumented.rb} +3 -4
- data/test/integrated/tc_class_methods.rb +1 -1
- data/test/integrated/tc_inherit_broken.rb +1 -1
- data/test/integrated/tc_method_missing.rb +1 -1
- data/test/integrated/tc_namespace.rb +1 -1
- data/test/integrated/tc_simple1.rb +1 -1
- data/test/testtask/tc_testtask.rb +2 -2
- data/test/ts_integrated.rb +1 -1
- data/test/ts_rspec.rb +1 -1
- data/webpage/about.html +50 -0
- data/webpage/footer.html +6 -1
- data/webpage/header.html +9 -3
- data/webpage/images/logo.png +0 -0
- data/webpage/images/title.png +0 -0
- data/webpage/index.html +31 -367
- data/webpage/rdoc/Object.html +3 -103
- data/webpage/rdoc/Rake/RubyBreakerTestTask.html +80 -18
- data/webpage/rdoc/Rake.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Breakable.html +4 -8
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Broken.html +4 -8
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Context.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Errors/InternalError.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Errors/InvalidSubtypeCheck.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Errors/InvalidTypeConstruction.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Errors/SubtypeFailure.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Errors/TypeError.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Errors/UserError.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Errors.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/ObjectPosition.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Position.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/RDocSupport.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/RubyTypeUtils.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/Inspector.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/MethodInfo.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/Monitor.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/MonitorInstaller.html +10 -14
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/MonitorSwitch.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/MonitorUtils.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/ObjectWrapper.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/Pluggable.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/TypeSigParser.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/TypeSigUnparser.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime/TypeSystem.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Runtime.html +42 -39
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeComparer.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/AnyType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/BlockType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/DuckType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/FusionType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/MethodListType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/MethodType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/NilType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/NominalType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/OptionalType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/OrType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/SelfType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/Type.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs/VarLengthType.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeDefs.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/TypeUnparser.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Typing.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker/Util.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/RubyBreaker.html +48 -15
- data/webpage/rdoc/Test/Unit.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/Test.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/created.rid +18 -17
- data/webpage/rdoc/index.html +3 -7
- data/webpage/rdoc/js/search_index.js +1 -1
- data/webpage/rdoc/table_of_contents.html +28 -36
- data/webpage/rubybreaker.css +8 -6
- data/webpage/topics.html +85 -0
- data/webpage/tutorial.html +331 -0
- metadata +14 -8
- data/lib/rubybreaker/doc.rb +0 -3
- data/webpage/rdoc/Kernel.html +0 -286
- data/webpage/rdoc/Test/Unit/TestCase.html +0 -309
data/ABOUT.md
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# About
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RubyBreaker has its root in Rubydust (which stands for Ruby Dynamic
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Unraveling of Static Types), an academic research project designed and
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implemented at University of Maryland. However, unlike Rubydust,
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RubyBreaker aims to be a practical documentation tool for Ruby rather than a
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full-scale type inference tool. Although it is certainly possible that
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RubyBreaker evolves into something more solid in its type system, the
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primary goal of this project is to help Ruby programmers practically as much
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as possible.
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## Acknowledgment
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The term, "Fusion Type," is first coined by Professor Michael W. Hicks at
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University of Maryland and represents an object using a structural type with
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respect to a nominal type.
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## Copyright
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Copyright (c) 2012 Jong-hoon (David) An. All Rights Reserved.
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data/NEWS
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# VERSION 0.0.6
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* Running RubyBreaker in shell mode does not require manual code change.
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* Official RubyBreaker logo!
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* Deprecating breakable(). Use break() instead.
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# VERSION 0.0.5
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* Rake::RubyBreakerTestTask is supported.
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* Manual modification is no longer required if run as a Rake task.
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data/README.md
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* * *
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# Introduction
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RubyBreaker is a dynamic type documentation tool written in pure Ruby. It
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provides the framework for dynamically instrumenting a Ruby program to
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monitor objects during
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monitor objects during the execution and document the observed type
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information. In other words, RubyBreaker "breaks" Ruby code out of its
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obscurity and wildness (as in "code breaking" or "horse
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obscurity and wildness (as in "code breaking" or "horse breaking") by
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auto-documenting type information. The type documentation generated by
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RubyBreaker is also an executable Ruby code that can be used as an input to
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subsequent analyses.
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The primary goal of RubyBreaker is to assign a type signature to every
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method in selected modules and classes. A type signature is written in the
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RubyBreaker Type Annotation Language which resembles the documentation style
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used in Ruby
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used in Ruby Core Library Doc. No manual code change is required. Overall,
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this tool should help Ruby programmers document their code more rigorously
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and effectively.
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Currently, RubyBreaker *cannot*
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* Auto-
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*
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*
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* Auto-document block arguments (inherent)
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* Perform early dynamic type checks
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* Support parametric polymorphic types
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* Support RDoc or YARD output format
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To contribute to the project, visit RubyBreaker's
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[GitHub page](http://github.com/rockalizer/rubybreaker) and
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[RubyGems page](http://rubygems.org/gems/rubybreaker).
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be found
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[RubyGems page](http://rubygems.org/gems/rubybreaker). The web version of
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this document can be found
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[here](http://rockalizer.webfactional.com/projects/rubybreaker).
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## Requirements
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$ gem install rubybreaker
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* * *
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# Tutorial
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This tutorial will describe the basic usage of the tool, the RubyBreaker
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Type Annotation Language, and the RubyBreaker Type System.
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## Usage
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RubyBreaker takes advantage of test cases that already come with the source
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program. It is recommended that RubyBreaker is run as a Rake task, which
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requires a minimum code change in the Rakefile and no code change in the
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source program. If not used as a Rake task, it requires a minimum code
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change in each test case or the source program but should not affect the
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development process much. Let's briefly see how RubyBreaker can be run
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directly as a command-line program to understand the general concept of the
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tool. We will explain how to use RubyBreaker in a Rakefile later.
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$ rubybreaker -v prog.rb
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This runs RubyBreaker in verbose mode on `prog.rb`. Note that RubyBreaker
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will actually run `prog.rb` (by simply `require`ing the program file).
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Somewhere in the program, there has to be a _program entry point_ to
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indicate where the _monitoring_ of objects starts. Let's assume `prog.rb`
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as the following:
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require "rubybreaker" # required if using "ruby" instead
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class A
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def foo(x)
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x.to_s
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end
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end
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class B
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def bar(y,z)
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y.foo(z)
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end
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end
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RubyBreaker.run(A, B)
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A.new.foo(1)
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This example will show how `A#foo` method is given a type by RubyBreaker.
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After running `rubybreaker -v prog.rb`, the following output will be
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generated and saved into `prog.rubybreaker.rb`.
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# This file is auto-generated by RubyBreaker
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require "rubybreaker"
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class A
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typesig("foo(fixnum[to_s]) -> string")
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end
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Here, the `typesig` method call registers `foo` as a method type that takes
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an object that has `Fixnum#to_s` method and returns a `String`. This
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method is made available by importing `rubybreaker`. Now, assume that an
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additional code, `B.new.bar(A.new,1)`, is added at the end of `prog.rb`. The
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subsequent run will generate the following result:
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# This file is auto-generated by RubyBreaker
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require "rubybreaker"
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class A
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typesig("foo(fixnum[to_s]) -> string")
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end
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class B
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typesig("bar(a[foo], fixnum[to_s]) -> string")
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end
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Keep in mind that RubyBreaker is designed to gather type information based
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on the _actual_ execution of the source program. This means the program
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should be equipped with test cases that have a reasonable program path
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coverage. Additionally, RubyBreaker assumes that test runs are correct and
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the program behaves correctly (for those test runs) as intended by the
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programmer. This assumption is not a strong requirement, but is necessary to
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obtain precise and accurate type information.
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### Using Ruby Unit Testing Framework
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Instead of manually inserting the entry point indicator into the program,
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you can take advantage of Ruby's built-in testing framework. This is
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preferred to modifying the source program directly, especially for the long
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term program maintainability. But no worries! This method is as simple as
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the previous one.
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require "test/unit"
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require "rubybreaker" # This should come after test/unit.
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class TestClassA < Test::Unit::TestCase
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def setup()
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RubyBreaker.breakable(Class1, Class2, ...)
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...
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end
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# ...tests!...
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end
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That's it! The only requirements are to indicate to RubyBreaker which modules
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and classes to "break" and to place `require rubybreaker` _after_
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`require test/unit`.
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### Using RSpec
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The requirement is same for RSpec but use `before` instead of `setup` to
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specify which modules and classes to "break".
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require "rspec"
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require "rubybreaker"
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describe "TestClassA Test"
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before { RubyBreaker.breakable(Class1, Class2, ...) }
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...
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# ...tests!...
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end
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### Using Rakefile
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By running RubyBreaker along with the Rakefile, you can avoid modifying the
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source program at all. (You no longer need to import `rubybreaker` in the
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test cases neither.) Therefore, this is the recommended way to use
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RubyBreaker. The following code snippet describes how it can be done:
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require "rubybreaker/task"
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...
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desc "Run RubyBreaker"
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Rake::RubyBreakerTestTask.new(:"rubybreaker") do |t|
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t.libs << "lib"
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t.test_files = ["test/foo/tc_foo1.rb"]
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# ...Other test task options..
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t.rubybreaker_opts << "-v" # run in verbose mode
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t.breakable = ["Class1", "Class2", ...] # specify what to monitor
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end
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Note that `RubyBrakerTestTask` can simply replace your `TestTask` block in
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Rakefile. In fact, the former is a subclass of the latter and includes all
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features supported by the latter. The only additional options are
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`rubybreaker_opts` which is RubyBreaker's command-line options and
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`breakable` which specifies which modules and classes to monitor. Since
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`Class1` and `Class2` are not _recognized_ by this Rakefile, you must use
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string literals to specify modules and classes (and with full namespace).
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If this is the route you are taking, there needs no editing of the source
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program whatsoever. This task will take care of instrumenting the specified
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modules and classes at proper moments.
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## Type Annotation
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The annotation language used in RubyBreaker resembles the method
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documentation used by Ruby Standard Library Doc. Each type signature
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defines a method type using the name, argument types, block type, and return
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type. But, let us consider a simple case where there is one argument type
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and a return type.
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class A
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...
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typesig("foo(fixnum) -> string")
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end
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In RubyBreaker, a type signature is recognized by the meta-class level
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method `typesig` which takes a string as an argument. This string is the
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actual type signature written in the Ruby Type Annotation Language. This
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language is designed to reflect the common documentation practice used by
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RubyDoc. It starts with the name of the method. In the above example, `foo`
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is currently being given a type. The rest of the signature takes a typical
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method type symbol, `(x) -> y` where `x` is the argument type and `y` is the
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return type. In the example shown above, the method takes a `Fixnum` object
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and returns a `String` object. Note that these types are in lowercase,
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indicating they are objects and not modules or classes themselves.
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There are several types that represent an object: nominal, duck, fusion,
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nil, 'any', 'or', optional, variable-length, and block. Each type signature
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itself represents a method type or a method list type (explained below).
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### Nominal Type
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This is the simplest and most intuitive way to represent an object. For
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instance, `fixnum` is an object of type `Fixnum`. Use lower-case letters and
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underscores instead of _camelized_ name. `MyClass`, for example would be
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`my_class` in RubyBreaker type signatures. There is no particular
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reason for this convention other than it is the common practice used in
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RubyDoc. Use `/` to indicate the namespace delimiter `::`. For example,
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`NamspaceA::ClassB` would be represented by `namespace_a/class_b` in
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a RubyBreaker type signature.
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### Self Type
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This type is similar to the nominal type but is referring to the current
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object--that is, the receiver of the method being typed. RubyBreaker will
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auto-document the return type as a self type if the return value is the same
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as the receiver of that call. It is also recommended to use this type over
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a nominal type (if the return value is `self`) since it depicts more
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precise return type.
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### Duck Type
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This type is inspired by the Ruby Language's duck typing, _"if it
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walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck."_ Using this
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type, an object can be represented simply by a list of method names. For
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example `[walks, quacks]` is an object that has `walks` and `quacks`
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methods. Note that these method names do *not* reveal any type
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information for themselves.
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### Fusion Type
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Duck type is very flexible but can be too lenient when trying to restrict
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the type of an object. RubyBreaker provides a type called *the fusion type*
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which lists method names but with respect to a nominal type. For
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example, `fixnum[to_f, to_s]` represents an object that has methods `to_f`
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and `to_s` whose types are same as those of `Fixnum`. This is more
|
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restrictive (precise) than `[to_f, to_s]` because the two methods must have
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the same types as `to_f` and `to_s` methods, respectively, in `Fixnum`.
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### Nil Type
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A nil type represents a value of nil and is denoted by `nil`.
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### Any Type
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RubyBreaker also provides a way to represent an object that is compatible with
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any type. This type is denoted by `?`. Use caution with this type because
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it should be only used for an object that requires an arbitrary yet most
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specific type--that is, `?` is a subtype of any other type, but any
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other type is not a subtype of `?`. This becomes a bit complicated for
|
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method or block argument types because of their contra-variance
|
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|
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characteristic. Please refer to the section *Subtyping*.
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### Or Type
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|
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|
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Any above types can be "or"ed together, using `||`, to represent an object
|
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that can be either one or the other. It _does_ not represent an object that
|
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has to be both (which is not supported by RubyBreaker).
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-
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### Optional Argument Type and Variable-Length Argument Type
|
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|
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Another useful features of Ruby are the optional argument type and the
|
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-
variable-length argument type. The former represents an argument that has a
|
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|
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default value (and therefore does not have to be provided). The latter
|
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represents zero or more arguments of the same type. These are denoted by
|
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|
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suffices, `?` and `*`, respectively.
|
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|
-
|
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|
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### Block Type
|
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|
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|
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One of the Ruby's prominent features is the block argument. It allows
|
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|
-
the caller to pass in a piece of code to be executed inside the callee. This
|
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code block can be executed by the Ruby construct, `yield`, or by directly
|
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|
-
calling the `call` method of the block object. In RubyBreaker, this type can
|
286
|
-
be respresented by curly brackets. For instance, `{|fixnum,string| ->
|
287
|
-
string}` represents a block that takes two arguments--one `Fixnum` and one
|
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|
-
`String`--and returns a `String`.
|
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|
-
|
290
|
-
RubyBreaker does supports nested blocks as Ruby 1.9 finally allows them.
|
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|
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However, *keep in mind* that RubyBreaker *cannot* automatically document the
|
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|
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block types due to `yield` being a language construct rather than a method,
|
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|
-
which means it cannot be captured by meta-programming!
|
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|
-
|
295
|
-
### Method Type and Method List Types
|
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|
-
|
297
|
-
Method type is similar to the block type, but it represents an actual method
|
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|
-
and not a block object. It is the "root" type that the type annotation
|
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|
-
language supports, along with method list types. Method _list_ type is a
|
300
|
-
collection of method types to represent more than one type information for
|
301
|
-
the given method. Why would this type be needed? Consider the following Ruby
|
302
|
-
code:
|
303
|
-
|
304
|
-
def foo(x)
|
305
|
-
case x
|
306
|
-
when Fixnum
|
307
|
-
1
|
308
|
-
when String
|
309
|
-
"1"
|
310
|
-
end
|
311
|
-
end
|
312
|
-
|
313
|
-
There is no way to document the type of `foo` without using a method list
|
314
|
-
type. Let's try to give a method type to `foo` without a method list. The
|
315
|
-
closest we can come up with would be `foo(fixnum or string) -> fixnum and
|
316
|
-
string`. But RubyBreaker does not have the "and" type in the type annotation
|
317
|
-
language because it gives me an headache! (By the way, it needs to be an
|
318
|
-
"and" type because the caller must handle both `Fixnum` and `String` return
|
319
|
-
values.)
|
320
|
-
|
321
|
-
It is a dilemma because Ruby programmers actually enjoy using this kind of
|
322
|
-
dynamic type checks in their code. To alleviate this headache, RubyBreaker
|
323
|
-
supports the method list type to represent different scenarios depending on
|
324
|
-
the argument types. Thus, the `foo` method shown above can be given the
|
325
|
-
following method list type:
|
326
|
-
|
327
|
-
typesig("foo(fixnum) -> fixnum")
|
328
|
-
typesig("foo(string) -> string")
|
329
|
-
|
330
|
-
These two type signatures simply tell RubyBreaker that `foo` has two method
|
331
|
-
types--one for a `Fixnum` argument and another for a `String` argument.
|
332
|
-
Depending on the argument type, the return type is determined. In this
|
333
|
-
example, a `Fixnum` is returned when the argument is also a `Fixnum` and a
|
334
|
-
`String` is returned when the argument is also a `String`. When
|
335
|
-
automatically documenting such a type, RubyBreaker looks for the (subtyping)
|
336
|
-
compatibility between the return types and "promote" the method type to a
|
337
|
-
method list type by spliting the type signature into two (or more in
|
338
|
-
subsequent "promotions").
|
339
|
-
|
340
|
-
## Type System
|
341
|
-
|
342
|
-
RubyBreaker comes with its own type system to auto-document the type
|
343
|
-
information. Each method in a "breakable" module is dynamically instrumented
|
344
|
-
to be monitored during runtime. This monitoring code observes the types of
|
345
|
-
the arguments, block, and return value of each method. Once this information
|
346
|
-
is gathered, RubyBreaker will compare it to the information gathered so far.
|
347
|
-
If these two types are "compatiable", RubyBreaker will choose more general
|
348
|
-
type of the two. Otherwise, RubyBreaker will use the method list type to
|
349
|
-
accommodate two "incompatible" types.
|
350
|
-
|
351
|
-
### Subtyping and Subclassing
|
352
|
-
|
353
|
-
RubyBreaker uses subtyping to choose one from the two "compatible" types.
|
354
|
-
Two types are "compatible" if one is subtype of another. This means that the
|
355
|
-
_subtype_ can be represented using the _supertype_ instead. This is why
|
356
|
-
RubyBrekaer chooses the latter to document both types. RubyBreaker relies on
|
357
|
-
subclassing of Ruby to determine a subtyping relationship between two types.
|
358
|
-
For example, `Fixnum` is considered to be subtype of `Numeric` since the
|
359
|
-
former is subclass of the latter. (Strictly speaking, `Fixnum` is not really
|
360
|
-
subtype of `Numeric` because some methods are overriden in `Fixnum` with
|
361
|
-
method types that are not subtype of the counterparts in `Numeric`. But,
|
362
|
-
RubyBreaker is lenient and considers them compatible--that is, `Numeric` can
|
363
|
-
represent any `Fixnum`.
|
364
|
-
|
365
|
-
### Pluggable Type System (Advanced)
|
366
|
-
|
367
|
-
Yes, RubyBreaker was designed with the replaceable type system in mind. In
|
368
|
-
other words, anyone can write his own type system and plug it into
|
369
|
-
RubyBreaker. *Technical documentation coming soon...*
|
370
|
-
|
371
|
-
* * *
|
372
|
-
|
373
|
-
# Acknowledgment
|
374
|
-
|
375
|
-
The term, "Fusion Type," is first coined by Professor Michael W. Hicks at
|
376
|
-
University of Maryland and represents an object using a structural type with
|
377
|
-
respect to a nominal type.
|
378
|
-
|
379
|
-
# Copyright
|
380
|
-
Copyright (c) 2012 Jong-hoon (David) An. All Rights Reserved.
|
381
|
-
|
data/Rakefile
CHANGED
@@ -19,6 +19,16 @@ rescue LoadError => e
|
|
19
19
|
puts "[WARNING] No rspec-core is installed on this computer."
|
20
20
|
end
|
21
21
|
|
22
|
+
# This method generates html pages with header and footer.
|
23
|
+
def gen_page(md_file, html_file)
|
24
|
+
dir = File.dirname(__FILE__)
|
25
|
+
header = File.read("#{dir}/webpage/header.html")
|
26
|
+
footer = File.read("#{dir}/webpage/footer.html")
|
27
|
+
body = RDiscount.new(File.read(md_file)).to_html
|
28
|
+
html = header + body + footer
|
29
|
+
File.open(html_file, "w") { |f| f.write(html) }
|
30
|
+
end
|
31
|
+
|
22
32
|
# Use rake/clean to remove generated files
|
23
33
|
CLEAN.concat(FileList["webpage/rdoc",
|
24
34
|
"rubybreaker-*.gem",
|
@@ -29,38 +39,42 @@ CLEAN.concat(FileList["webpage/rdoc",
|
|
29
39
|
# If no task specified, do test
|
30
40
|
task :default => [:test, :testtask_test]
|
31
41
|
|
42
|
+
# The complete list of tasks
|
43
|
+
all_tasks = [:parser,
|
44
|
+
:test,
|
45
|
+
:testtask_test,
|
46
|
+
:rspec,
|
47
|
+
:rdoc,
|
48
|
+
:webpage,
|
49
|
+
:gem]
|
50
|
+
|
51
|
+
# Remove rspec if RSpec is not defined (rspec is not installed)
|
52
|
+
all_tasks.delete(:rspec) if !defined?(RSpec)
|
53
|
+
|
32
54
|
desc "Do all"
|
33
|
-
task :all =>
|
34
|
-
:test,
|
35
|
-
:testtask_test,
|
36
|
-
:rspec,
|
37
|
-
:rdoc,
|
38
|
-
:webpage,
|
39
|
-
:gem] do |t|
|
40
|
-
end
|
55
|
+
task :all => all_tasks
|
41
56
|
|
42
57
|
desc "Generate gemspec"
|
43
58
|
task :gem do |t|
|
44
59
|
sh "gem build rubybreaker.gemspec"
|
45
60
|
end
|
46
61
|
|
62
|
+
desc "Generate RDoc"
|
47
63
|
Rake::RDocTask.new do |rd|
|
48
64
|
rd.rdoc_dir = "#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/webpage/rdoc"
|
49
65
|
rd.rdoc_files.include("lib/**/*.rb")
|
50
66
|
rd.rdoc_files.exclude("lib/rubybreaker/type/type_grammar.rb")
|
67
|
+
rd.options << "README.md" << "TUTORIAL.md"
|
51
68
|
end
|
52
69
|
|
53
70
|
desc "Generate the webpage"
|
54
71
|
task :webpage do |t|
|
55
72
|
if defined?(RDiscount)
|
56
73
|
dir = File.dirname(__FILE__)
|
57
|
-
|
58
|
-
|
59
|
-
|
60
|
-
|
61
|
-
footer = File.read("#{dir}/webpage/footer.html")
|
62
|
-
html = header + body + footer
|
63
|
-
File.open(output, "w") { |f| f.write(html) }
|
74
|
+
gen_page("#{dir}/README.md","#{dir}/webpage/index.html")
|
75
|
+
gen_page("#{dir}/TUTORIAL.md","#{dir}/webpage/tutorial.html")
|
76
|
+
gen_page("#{dir}/TOPICS.md","#{dir}/webpage/topics.html")
|
77
|
+
gen_page("#{dir}/ABOUT.md","#{dir}/webpage/about.html")
|
64
78
|
end
|
65
79
|
end
|
66
80
|
|
@@ -84,7 +98,7 @@ desc "Run rubybreaker testtask test"
|
|
84
98
|
Rake::RubyBreakerTestTask.new(:"testtask_test") do |t|
|
85
99
|
t.libs << "lib" << "test/tc_testtask/sample.rb"
|
86
100
|
t.test_files = ["test/testtask/tc_testtask.rb"]
|
87
|
-
t.
|
101
|
+
t.break = ["SampleClassA"]
|
88
102
|
end
|
89
103
|
|
90
104
|
if defined?(RSpec)
|
data/TOPICS.md
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
|
|
1
|
+
# Advanced Topics
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
## RubyBreaker Type System
|
4
|
+
|
5
|
+
RubyBreaker comes with its own type system to auto-document the type
|
6
|
+
information. Each method in a "breakable" module is dynamically instrumented
|
7
|
+
to be monitored during runtime. This monitoring code observes the types of
|
8
|
+
the arguments, block, and return value of each method. Once type information
|
9
|
+
for a method is gathered, RubyBreaker will compare it to the information
|
10
|
+
gathered so far for the method. If these two method types are
|
11
|
+
"compatiable", RubyBreaker will choose more general type from the two.
|
12
|
+
|
13
|
+
If two method types are not "compatible", RubyBreaker will "promote" the
|
14
|
+
method type to a method list type to accommodate more than one
|
15
|
+
"incompatible" types. Let's first understand what RubyBreaker considers two
|
16
|
+
types as "compatible".
|
17
|
+
|
18
|
+
### Subtyping and Subclassing
|
19
|
+
|
20
|
+
RubyBreaker uses _subtyping_ to determine two "compatible" method types,
|
21
|
+
which holds true if one is subtype or supertype of another. It chooses
|
22
|
+
the supertype of the two for the method because the objective is to find (1)
|
23
|
+
the most general type of the two and (2) the least general type that can
|
24
|
+
handle both. Note that, if the objective (2) is not required, we can
|
25
|
+
always use the most general method type:
|
26
|
+
|
27
|
+
(?*) -> basic_object
|
28
|
+
|
29
|
+
A method of this type takes any number of any objects and returns a
|
30
|
+
`BasicObject`. But this is _too_ general to use for type documetation.
|
31
|
+
Instead, we want to find the most specific general type possible (and
|
32
|
+
therefore, the least upper bound of the types observed for the method).
|
33
|
+
|
34
|
+
For simplicity (and practicality), RubyBreaker uses _subclassing_ to
|
35
|
+
determine subtyping for nominal types. For instance, `Fixnum` is considered
|
36
|
+
subtype of `Numeric` because the former is subclass of the latter. However,
|
37
|
+
keep in mind this is not necessarily true in the true subtyping theory
|
38
|
+
because some methods in the former override the counterparts in the latter,
|
39
|
+
resulting in different types that no longer hold the subtyping relationship.
|
40
|
+
|
41
|
+
If a method has some type information either from the manual documentation
|
42
|
+
or from the current documentation process, this information will be used
|
43
|
+
in addition to subclassing. For example, consider method types
|
44
|
+
`foo(class1[to_s]) -> string` and `foo(class2[to_s]) -> string`. Let's also
|
45
|
+
assume that classes `Class1` and `Class2` are being auto-documented. The
|
46
|
+
method `foo` will have the type `foo(class1[to_s])` if `Class1#to_s` is a
|
47
|
+
subtype of `Class2#to_s`. (The direction is not mistaken, it is due to the
|
48
|
+
contra-variant property of a method argument.) If these classes are neither
|
49
|
+
being auto-documented nor manaully documented, this holds only if `Class1`
|
50
|
+
is subclass of `Class2`.
|
51
|
+
|
52
|
+
## Writing a Custom Type System
|
53
|
+
|
54
|
+
_Coming soon_
|
55
|
+
|