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2

I know it's by design that you can't control what happens when an object is destroyed. I am also aware of defining some class method as a finalizer.

However is the ruby idiom for C++'s RAII (Resources are initialized in constructor, closed in destructor)? How do people manage resources used inside objects even when errors or exceptions happen?

Using ensure works:

f = File.open("testfile")
begin
  # .. process
rescue
  # .. handle error
ensure
  f.close unless f.nil?
end

but users of the class have to remember to do the whole begin-rescue-ensure chacha everytime the open method needs to be called.

So for example, I'll have the following class:

class SomeResource
 def initialize(connection_string)
   @resource_handle = ...some mojo here...
 end

 def do_something()
   begin
    @resource_handle.do_that()
    ...
   rescue
    ...
   ensure
 end

 def close
  @resource_handle.close
 end

end

The resource_handle won't be closed if the exception is cause by some other class and the script exits.

Or is the problem more of I'm still doing this too C++-like?

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3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

So that users don't "have to remember to do the whole begin-rescue-ensure chacha" combine rescue/ensure with yield.

class SomeResource
  ...
  def SomeResource.use(*resource_args)
    # create resource
    resource = SomeResource.new(*resource_args) # pass args direct to constructor
    # export it
    yield resource
  rescue
    # known error processing
    ...
  ensure
    # close up when done even if unhandled exception thrown from block
    resource.close
  end
  ...
end

Client code can use it as follows:

SomeResource.use(connection_string) do | resource |
  resource.do_something
  ... # whatever else
end
# after this point resource has been .close()d

In fact this is how File.open operates - making the first answer confusing at best (well it was to my work colleagues).

File.open("testfile") do |f|
  # .. process - may include throwing exceptions
end
# f is guaranteed closed after this point even if exceptions are 
# thrown during processing
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vote up 7 vote down

How about yielding a resource to a block? Example:

File.open("testfile") do |f|
  begin
    # .. process
  rescue
    # .. handle error
  end
end
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In fact, File#open called with a block has an 'ensures' block, which properly closes the file, whatever happens. So yes, you can have rescue/ensure blocks, but they are optional. – webmat Oct 25 '08 at 6:39
Exactly. With this idiom, you only have to implement the ensure block once per type of resource, rather than in all code that uses the resource. – bk1e Nov 2 '08 at 16:40
vote up 0 vote down

See http://www.rubycentral.com/pickaxe/tut_exceptions.html

In Ruby, you would use an ensure statement:

f = File.open("testfile")
begin
  # .. process
rescue
  # .. handle error
ensure
  f.close unless f.nil?
end

This will be familiar to users of Python, Java, or C# in that it works like try / catch / finally.

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1  
While this works, you have to depend on someone that is using your class to do the right thing. They have to remember to do the whole begin-rescue-ensure chacha everytime the open method needs to be called. I'm editing the question to make this clearer, but thanks for the answer :) – moogs Oct 18 '08 at 5:51

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