scout 5.7.3.pre.2 → 5.7.4

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Files changed (110) hide show
  1. data/CHANGELOG.markdown +4 -0
  2. data/lib/scout/version.rb +1 -1
  3. data/vendor/json_pure/.gitignore +12 -0
  4. data/vendor/json_pure/.travis.yml +20 -0
  5. data/vendor/json_pure/CHANGES +282 -0
  6. data/vendor/json_pure/COPYING +58 -0
  7. data/vendor/json_pure/COPYING-json-jruby +57 -0
  8. data/vendor/json_pure/GPL +340 -0
  9. data/vendor/json_pure/Gemfile +11 -0
  10. data/vendor/json_pure/README-json-jruby.markdown +33 -0
  11. data/vendor/json_pure/README.rdoc +358 -0
  12. data/vendor/json_pure/Rakefile +412 -0
  13. data/vendor/json_pure/TODO +1 -0
  14. data/vendor/json_pure/VERSION +1 -0
  15. data/vendor/json_pure/data/example.json +1 -0
  16. data/vendor/json_pure/data/index.html +38 -0
  17. data/vendor/json_pure/data/prototype.js +4184 -0
  18. data/vendor/json_pure/diagrams/.keep +0 -0
  19. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/fbuffer/fbuffer.h +181 -0
  20. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/generator/depend +1 -0
  21. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/generator/extconf.rb +14 -0
  22. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/generator/generator.c +1435 -0
  23. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/generator/generator.h +148 -0
  24. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/parser/depend +1 -0
  25. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/parser/extconf.rb +13 -0
  26. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/parser/parser.c +2204 -0
  27. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/parser/parser.h +77 -0
  28. data/vendor/json_pure/ext/json/ext/parser/parser.rl +927 -0
  29. data/vendor/json_pure/install.rb +23 -0
  30. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/ByteListTranscoder.java +167 -0
  31. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/Generator.java +444 -0
  32. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/GeneratorMethods.java +232 -0
  33. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/GeneratorService.java +43 -0
  34. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/GeneratorState.java +543 -0
  35. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/OptionsReader.java +114 -0
  36. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/Parser.java +2644 -0
  37. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/Parser.rl +968 -0
  38. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/ParserService.java +35 -0
  39. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/RuntimeInfo.java +121 -0
  40. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/StringDecoder.java +167 -0
  41. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/StringEncoder.java +106 -0
  42. data/vendor/json_pure/java/src/json/ext/Utils.java +89 -0
  43. data/vendor/json_pure/json-java.gemspec +23 -0
  44. data/vendor/json_pure/json.gemspec +37 -0
  45. data/vendor/json_pure/json_pure.gemspec +39 -0
  46. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json.rb +62 -0
  47. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/bigdecimal.rb +28 -0
  48. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/complex.rb +22 -0
  49. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/core.rb +11 -0
  50. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/date.rb +34 -0
  51. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/date_time.rb +50 -0
  52. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/exception.rb +31 -0
  53. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/ostruct.rb +31 -0
  54. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/range.rb +29 -0
  55. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/rational.rb +22 -0
  56. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/regexp.rb +30 -0
  57. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/struct.rb +30 -0
  58. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/symbol.rb +25 -0
  59. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/add/time.rb +38 -0
  60. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/common.rb +487 -0
  61. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/ext.rb +21 -0
  62. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/ext/.keep +0 -0
  63. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/generic_object.rb +70 -0
  64. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/pure.rb +21 -0
  65. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/pure/generator.rb +522 -0
  66. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/pure/parser.rb +359 -0
  67. data/vendor/json_pure/lib/json/version.rb +8 -0
  68. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail1.json +1 -0
  69. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail10.json +1 -0
  70. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail11.json +1 -0
  71. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail12.json +1 -0
  72. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail13.json +1 -0
  73. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail14.json +1 -0
  74. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail18.json +1 -0
  75. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail19.json +1 -0
  76. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail2.json +1 -0
  77. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail20.json +1 -0
  78. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail21.json +1 -0
  79. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail22.json +1 -0
  80. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail23.json +1 -0
  81. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail24.json +1 -0
  82. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail25.json +1 -0
  83. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail27.json +2 -0
  84. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail28.json +2 -0
  85. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail3.json +1 -0
  86. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail4.json +1 -0
  87. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail5.json +1 -0
  88. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail6.json +1 -0
  89. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail7.json +1 -0
  90. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail8.json +1 -0
  91. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/fail9.json +1 -0
  92. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/pass1.json +56 -0
  93. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/pass15.json +1 -0
  94. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/pass16.json +1 -0
  95. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/pass17.json +1 -0
  96. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/pass2.json +1 -0
  97. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/pass26.json +1 -0
  98. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/fixtures/pass3.json +6 -0
  99. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/setup_variant.rb +11 -0
  100. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json.rb +545 -0
  101. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json_addition.rb +196 -0
  102. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json_encoding.rb +65 -0
  103. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json_fixtures.rb +35 -0
  104. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json_generate.rb +322 -0
  105. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json_generic_object.rb +75 -0
  106. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json_string_matching.rb +39 -0
  107. data/vendor/json_pure/tests/test_json_unicode.rb +72 -0
  108. data/vendor/json_pure/tools/fuzz.rb +139 -0
  109. data/vendor/json_pure/tools/server.rb +62 -0
  110. metadata +111 -4
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+
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+ You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
327
+ school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
328
+ necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
329
+
330
+ Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
331
+ `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
332
+
333
+ <signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
334
+ Ty Coon, President of Vice
335
+
336
+ This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
337
+ proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
338
+ consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
339
+ library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
340
+ Public License instead of this License.
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
1
+ # vim: set ft=ruby:
2
+
3
+ source 'https://rubygems.org'
4
+
5
+ gemspec :name => 'json'
6
+ gemspec :name => 'json_pure'
7
+ gemspec :name => 'json-java'
8
+
9
+ gem 'utils'
10
+ gem 'test-unit'
11
+ gem 'debugger', :platform => :mri_19
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
1
+ JSON-JRuby
2
+ ==========
3
+
4
+ JSON-JRuby is a port of Florian Frank's native
5
+ [`json` library](http://json.rubyforge.org/) to JRuby.
6
+ It aims to be a perfect drop-in replacement for `json_pure`.
7
+
8
+
9
+ Development version
10
+ ===================
11
+
12
+ The latest version is available from the
13
+ [Git repository](http://github.com/mernen/json-jruby/tree):
14
+
15
+ git clone git://github.com/mernen/json-jruby.git
16
+
17
+
18
+ Compiling
19
+ =========
20
+
21
+ You'll need JRuby version 1.2 or greater to build JSON-JRuby.
22
+ Its path must be set on the `jruby.dir` property of
23
+ `nbproject/project.properties` (defaults to `../jruby`).
24
+
25
+ Additionally, you'll need [Ant](http://ant.apache.org/), and
26
+ [Ragel](http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~thurston/ragel/) 6.4 or greater.
27
+
28
+ Then, from the folder where the sources are located, type:
29
+
30
+ ant clean jar
31
+
32
+ to clean any leftovers from previous builds and generate the `.jar` files.
33
+ To generate a RubyGem, specify the `gem` action rather than `jar`.
@@ -0,0 +1,358 @@
1
+ = JSON implementation for Ruby {<img src="https://secure.travis-ci.org/flori/json.png" />}[http://travis-ci.org/flori/json]
2
+
3
+ == Description
4
+
5
+ This is a implementation of the JSON specification according to RFC 4627
6
+ http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt . Starting from version 1.0.0 on there
7
+ will be two variants available:
8
+
9
+ * A pure ruby variant, that relies on the iconv and the stringscan
10
+ extensions, which are both part of the ruby standard library.
11
+ * The quite a bit faster C extension variant, which is in parts implemented
12
+ in C and comes with its own unicode conversion functions and a parser
13
+ generated by the ragel state machine compiler
14
+ http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~thurston/ragel .
15
+
16
+ Both variants of the JSON generator generate UTF-8 character sequences by
17
+ default. If an :ascii_only option with a true value is given, they escape all
18
+ non-ASCII and control characters with \uXXXX escape sequences, and support
19
+ UTF-16 surrogate pairs in order to be able to generate the whole range of
20
+ unicode code points.
21
+
22
+ All strings, that are to be encoded as JSON strings, should be UTF-8 byte
23
+ sequences on the Ruby side. To encode raw binary strings, that aren't UTF-8
24
+ encoded, please use the to_json_raw_object method of String (which produces
25
+ an object, that contains a byte array) and decode the result on the receiving
26
+ endpoint.
27
+
28
+ The JSON parsers can parse UTF-8, UTF-16BE, UTF-16LE, UTF-32BE, and UTF-32LE
29
+ JSON documents under Ruby 1.8. Under Ruby 1.9 they take advantage of Ruby's
30
+ M17n features and can parse all documents which have the correct
31
+ String#encoding set. If a document string has ASCII-8BIT as an encoding the
32
+ parser attempts to figure out which of the UTF encodings from above it is and
33
+ trys to parse it.
34
+
35
+ == Installation
36
+
37
+ It's recommended to use the extension variant of JSON, because it's faster than
38
+ the pure ruby variant. If you cannot build it on your system, you can settle
39
+ for the latter.
40
+
41
+ Just type into the command line as root:
42
+
43
+ # rake install
44
+
45
+ The above command will build the extensions and install them on your system.
46
+
47
+ # rake install_pure
48
+
49
+ or
50
+
51
+ # ruby install.rb
52
+
53
+ will just install the pure ruby implementation of JSON.
54
+
55
+ If you use Rubygems you can type
56
+
57
+ # gem install json
58
+
59
+ instead, to install the newest JSON version.
60
+
61
+ There is also a pure ruby json only variant of the gem, that can be installed
62
+ with:
63
+
64
+ # gem install json_pure
65
+
66
+ == Compiling the extensions yourself
67
+
68
+ If you want to build the extensions yourself you need rake:
69
+
70
+ You can get it from rubyforge:
71
+ http://rubyforge.org/projects/rake
72
+
73
+ or just type
74
+
75
+ # gem install rake
76
+
77
+ for the installation via rubygems.
78
+
79
+ If you want to create the parser.c file from its parser.rl file or draw nice
80
+ graphviz images of the state machines, you need ragel from: http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~thurston/ragel
81
+
82
+
83
+ == Usage
84
+
85
+ To use JSON you can
86
+ require 'json'
87
+ to load the installed variant (either the extension 'json' or the pure
88
+ variant 'json_pure'). If you have installed the extension variant, you can
89
+ pick either the extension variant or the pure variant by typing
90
+ require 'json/ext'
91
+ or
92
+ require 'json/pure'
93
+
94
+ Now you can parse a JSON document into a ruby data structure by calling
95
+
96
+ JSON.parse(document)
97
+
98
+ If you want to generate a JSON document from a ruby data structure call
99
+ JSON.generate(data)
100
+
101
+ You can also use the pretty_generate method (which formats the output more
102
+ verbosely and nicely) or fast_generate (which doesn't do any of the security
103
+ checks generate performs, e. g. nesting deepness checks).
104
+
105
+ To create a valid JSON document you have to make sure, that the output is
106
+ embedded in either a JSON array [] or a JSON object {}. The easiest way to do
107
+ this, is by putting your values in a Ruby Array or Hash instance.
108
+
109
+ There are also the JSON and JSON[] methods which use parse on a String or
110
+ generate a JSON document from an array or hash:
111
+
112
+ document = JSON 'test' => 23 # => "{\"test\":23}"
113
+ document = JSON['test'] => 23 # => "{\"test\":23}"
114
+
115
+ and
116
+
117
+ data = JSON '{"test":23}' # => {"test"=>23}
118
+ data = JSON['{"test":23}'] # => {"test"=>23}
119
+
120
+ You can choose to load a set of common additions to ruby core's objects if
121
+ you
122
+ require 'json/add/core'
123
+
124
+ After requiring this you can, e. g., serialise/deserialise Ruby ranges:
125
+
126
+ JSON JSON(1..10) # => 1..10
127
+
128
+ To find out how to add JSON support to other or your own classes, read the
129
+ section "More Examples" below.
130
+
131
+ To get the best compatibility to rails' JSON implementation, you can
132
+ require 'json/add/rails'
133
+
134
+ Both of the additions attempt to require 'json' (like above) first, if it has
135
+ not been required yet.
136
+
137
+ == More Examples
138
+
139
+ To create a JSON document from a ruby data structure, you can call
140
+ JSON.generate like that:
141
+
142
+ json = JSON.generate [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]
143
+ # => "[1,2,{\"a\":3.141},false,true,null,\"4..10\"]"
144
+
145
+ To get back a ruby data structure from a JSON document, you have to call
146
+ JSON.parse on it:
147
+
148
+ JSON.parse json
149
+ # => [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, "4..10"]
150
+
151
+ Note, that the range from the original data structure is a simple
152
+ string now. The reason for this is, that JSON doesn't support ranges
153
+ or arbitrary classes. In this case the json library falls back to call
154
+ Object#to_json, which is the same as #to_s.to_json.
155
+
156
+ It's possible to add JSON support serialization to arbitrary classes by
157
+ simply implementing a more specialized version of the #to_json method, that
158
+ should return a JSON object (a hash converted to JSON with #to_json) like
159
+ this (don't forget the *a for all the arguments):
160
+
161
+ class Range
162
+ def to_json(*a)
163
+ {
164
+ 'json_class' => self.class.name, # = 'Range'
165
+ 'data' => [ first, last, exclude_end? ]
166
+ }.to_json(*a)
167
+ end
168
+ end
169
+
170
+ The hash key 'json_class' is the class, that will be asked to deserialise the
171
+ JSON representation later. In this case it's 'Range', but any namespace of
172
+ the form 'A::B' or '::A::B' will do. All other keys are arbitrary and can be
173
+ used to store the necessary data to configure the object to be deserialised.
174
+
175
+ If a the key 'json_class' is found in a JSON object, the JSON parser checks
176
+ if the given class responds to the json_create class method. If so, it is
177
+ called with the JSON object converted to a Ruby hash. So a range can
178
+ be deserialised by implementing Range.json_create like this:
179
+
180
+ class Range
181
+ def self.json_create(o)
182
+ new(*o['data'])
183
+ end
184
+ end
185
+
186
+ Now it possible to serialise/deserialise ranges as well:
187
+
188
+ json = JSON.generate [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]
189
+ # => "[1,2,{\"a\":3.141},false,true,null,{\"json_class\":\"Range\",\"data\":[4,10,false]}]"
190
+ JSON.parse json
191
+ # => [1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10]
192
+
193
+ JSON.generate always creates the shortest possible string representation of a
194
+ ruby data structure in one line. This is good for data storage or network
195
+ protocols, but not so good for humans to read. Fortunately there's also
196
+ JSON.pretty_generate (or JSON.pretty_generate) that creates a more readable
197
+ output:
198
+
199
+ puts JSON.pretty_generate([1, 2, {"a"=>3.141}, false, true, nil, 4..10])
200
+ [
201
+ 1,
202
+ 2,
203
+ {
204
+ "a": 3.141
205
+ },
206
+ false,
207
+ true,
208
+ null,
209
+ {
210
+ "json_class": "Range",
211
+ "data": [
212
+ 4,
213
+ 10,
214
+ false
215
+ ]
216
+ }
217
+ ]
218
+
219
+ There are also the methods Kernel#j for generate, and Kernel#jj for
220
+ pretty_generate output to the console, that work analogous to Core Ruby's p and
221
+ the pp library's pp methods.
222
+
223
+ The script tools/server.rb contains a small example if you want to test, how
224
+ receiving a JSON object from a webrick server in your browser with the
225
+ javasript prototype library http://www.prototypejs.org works.
226
+
227
+ == Speed Comparisons
228
+
229
+ I have created some benchmark results (see the benchmarks/data-p4-3Ghz
230
+ subdir of the package) for the JSON-parser to estimate the speed up in the C
231
+ extension:
232
+
233
+ Comparing times (call_time_mean):
234
+ 1 ParserBenchmarkExt#parser 900 repeats:
235
+ 553.922304770 ( real) -> 21.500x
236
+ 0.001805307
237
+ 2 ParserBenchmarkYAML#parser 1000 repeats:
238
+ 224.513358139 ( real) -> 8.714x
239
+ 0.004454078
240
+ 3 ParserBenchmarkPure#parser 1000 repeats:
241
+ 26.755020642 ( real) -> 1.038x
242
+ 0.037376163
243
+ 4 ParserBenchmarkRails#parser 1000 repeats:
244
+ 25.763381731 ( real) -> 1.000x
245
+ 0.038814780
246
+ calls/sec ( time) -> speed covers
247
+ secs/call
248
+
249
+ In the table above 1 is JSON::Ext::Parser, 2 is YAML.load with YAML
250
+ compatbile JSON document, 3 is is JSON::Pure::Parser, and 4 is
251
+ ActiveSupport::JSON.decode. The ActiveSupport JSON-decoder converts the
252
+ input first to YAML and then uses the YAML-parser, the conversion seems to
253
+ slow it down so much that it is only as fast as the JSON::Pure::Parser!
254
+
255
+ If you look at the benchmark data you can see that this is mostly caused by
256
+ the frequent high outliers - the median of the Rails-parser runs is still
257
+ overall smaller than the median of the JSON::Pure::Parser runs:
258
+
259
+ Comparing times (call_time_median):
260
+ 1 ParserBenchmarkExt#parser 900 repeats:
261
+ 800.592479481 ( real) -> 26.936x
262
+ 0.001249075
263
+ 2 ParserBenchmarkYAML#parser 1000 repeats:
264
+ 271.002390644 ( real) -> 9.118x
265
+ 0.003690004
266
+ 3 ParserBenchmarkRails#parser 1000 repeats:
267
+ 30.227910865 ( real) -> 1.017x
268
+ 0.033082008
269
+ 4 ParserBenchmarkPure#parser 1000 repeats:
270
+ 29.722384421 ( real) -> 1.000x
271
+ 0.033644676
272
+ calls/sec ( time) -> speed covers
273
+ secs/call
274
+
275
+ I have benchmarked the JSON-Generator as well. This generated a few more
276
+ values, because there are different modes that also influence the achieved
277
+ speed:
278
+
279
+ Comparing times (call_time_mean):
280
+ 1 GeneratorBenchmarkExt#generator_fast 1000 repeats:
281
+ 547.354332608 ( real) -> 15.090x
282
+ 0.001826970
283
+ 2 GeneratorBenchmarkExt#generator_safe 1000 repeats:
284
+ 443.968212317 ( real) -> 12.240x
285
+ 0.002252414
286
+ 3 GeneratorBenchmarkExt#generator_pretty 900 repeats:
287
+ 375.104545883 ( real) -> 10.341x
288
+ 0.002665923
289
+ 4 GeneratorBenchmarkPure#generator_fast 1000 repeats:
290
+ 49.978706968 ( real) -> 1.378x
291
+ 0.020008521
292
+ 5 GeneratorBenchmarkRails#generator 1000 repeats:
293
+ 38.531868759 ( real) -> 1.062x
294
+ 0.025952543
295
+ 6 GeneratorBenchmarkPure#generator_safe 1000 repeats:
296
+ 36.927649925 ( real) -> 1.018x 7 (>=3859)
297
+ 0.027079979
298
+ 7 GeneratorBenchmarkPure#generator_pretty 1000 repeats:
299
+ 36.272134441 ( real) -> 1.000x 6 (>=3859)
300
+ 0.027569373
301
+ calls/sec ( time) -> speed covers
302
+ secs/call
303
+
304
+ In the table above 1-3 are JSON::Ext::Generator methods. 4, 6, and 7 are
305
+ JSON::Pure::Generator methods and 5 is the Rails JSON generator. It is now a
306
+ bit faster than the generator_safe and generator_pretty methods of the pure
307
+ variant but slower than the others.
308
+
309
+ To achieve the fastest JSON document output, you can use the fast_generate
310
+ method. Beware, that this will disable the checking for circular Ruby data
311
+ structures, which may cause JSON to go into an infinite loop.
312
+
313
+ Here are the median comparisons for completeness' sake:
314
+
315
+ Comparing times (call_time_median):
316
+ 1 GeneratorBenchmarkExt#generator_fast 1000 repeats:
317
+ 708.258020939 ( real) -> 16.547x
318
+ 0.001411915
319
+ 2 GeneratorBenchmarkExt#generator_safe 1000 repeats:
320
+ 569.105020353 ( real) -> 13.296x
321
+ 0.001757145
322
+ 3 GeneratorBenchmarkExt#generator_pretty 900 repeats:
323
+ 482.825371244 ( real) -> 11.280x
324
+ 0.002071142
325
+ 4 GeneratorBenchmarkPure#generator_fast 1000 repeats:
326
+ 62.717626652 ( real) -> 1.465x
327
+ 0.015944481
328
+ 5 GeneratorBenchmarkRails#generator 1000 repeats:
329
+ 43.965681162 ( real) -> 1.027x
330
+ 0.022745013
331
+ 6 GeneratorBenchmarkPure#generator_safe 1000 repeats:
332
+ 43.929073409 ( real) -> 1.026x 7 (>=3859)
333
+ 0.022763968
334
+ 7 GeneratorBenchmarkPure#generator_pretty 1000 repeats:
335
+ 42.802514491 ( real) -> 1.000x 6 (>=3859)
336
+ 0.023363113
337
+ calls/sec ( time) -> speed covers
338
+ secs/call
339
+
340
+ == Author
341
+
342
+ Florian Frank <mailto:flori@ping.de>
343
+
344
+ == License
345
+
346
+ Ruby License, see the COPYING file included in the source distribution. The
347
+ Ruby License includes the GNU General Public License (GPL), Version 2, so see
348
+ the file GPL as well.
349
+
350
+ == Download
351
+
352
+ The latest version of this library can be downloaded at
353
+
354
+ * http://rubyforge.org/frs?group_id=953
355
+
356
+ Online Documentation should be located at
357
+
358
+ * http://json.rubyforge.org