In ruby all classes are objects of class Class. Since classes are also objects, does a Ruby VM follow the same Garbage Collection strategy for class objects? What determines that a class object is safe for garbage collection?
An even more concrete example, similar to Andrew Cholakian's answer is to use ObjectSpace. For example:
2.1.1 :001 > ObjectSpace.count_objects[:T_CLASS]
=> 884
2.1.1 :002 > 10000.times { Class.new }
=> 10000
2.1.1 :003 > ObjectSpace.count_objects[:T_CLASS]
=> 20884
2.1.1 :004 > GC.start
=> nil
2.1.1 :005 > ObjectSpace.count_objects[:T_CLASS]
=> 884
This shows that anonymous classes (not saved in a constant anywhere or used by any instances of those classes) do indeed get garbage collected.
I tested this out, the answer is it looks like it does.
irb(main):001:0> x = [] #Memory Usage = 12MB
=> []
irb(main):002:0> 120000.times {x << Class.new} #Memory usage now at 41 MB
=> 120000
irb(main):013:0> x = []
=> []
irb(main):011:0> GC.start() #Memory usage now at 13MB
=> nil
When there is nothing linking to the object, then it's safe to get rid of it. As far as -when- garbage collection is run, that is beyond my knowledge.
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1This is true in general, but classes can be seen as a special case. For example if a class has no instances and is not subclassed by any other class it has no 'links' (as you say) but is it really safe to GC? What if someone intends to build an instance from it at a later date. I do not think the situation is as clear-cut for classes as you make out :) – horseyguy Feb 15 '10 at 15:06
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@banister: This is exactly the case I wanted to point out amongst other special cases where a GC might have to treat a class object in a special way – Vaibhav Gumashta Feb 15 '10 at 15:23
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1Fair enough. A class is nothing but a constant, isn't it? And you can't get rid of a constant, since it's a variable within an environment (even if it's the 'main' object of IRB, or the runtime), until the environment is done. "class String" is the same thing as "String = Class.new". – Trevoke Feb 15 '10 at 15:30
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@Trevoke: Oops! A class is not a constant; it's the "class name" that is a constant – Vaibhav Gumashta Feb 15 '10 at 15:36
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I have no idea what the answer is, but could you not find out by experimentation? Have a look at the pickaxe. I'm sure that this is a very naive test, and someone can do better, but you get the idea:
puts "program start"
include ObjectSpace
class SfbdTest
def initialize(a)
@a = a
end
end
define_finalizer(SfbdTest, proc{|id| puts "GC on class"} )
puts "creating instance"
x = SfbdTest.new(1)
define_finalizer(x, proc{|id| puts "GC on instance"} )
puts "zombie-ing instance"
x = nil
puts "forcing GC"
GC.start()
puts "program end"
Produces:
sfbd@thing:~$ ruby -w test.rb
program start
creating instance
zombie-ing instance
forcing GC
program end
GC on instance
GC on class
sfbd@thing:~$
Looks like it needs a thread, but unfortunately I'm supposed to be working, sorry...