Class representing a drb server instance.
A DRbServer must be running in the local process before any incoming dRuby calls can be accepted, or any local objects can be passed as dRuby references to remote processes, even if those local objects are never actually called remotely. You do not need to start a DRbServer in the local process if you are only making outgoing dRuby calls passing marshalled parameters.
Unless multiple servers are being used, the local DRbServer is normally started by calling DRb.start_service.
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INSECURE_METHOD | = | [ :__send__ ] |
List of insecure methods. These methods are not callable via dRuby. |
[R] | config | The configuration of this DRbServer |
[R] | front | The front object of the DRbServer. This object receives remote method calls made on the server's URI alone, with an object id. |
[R] | safe_level | The safe level for this server. This is a number corresponding to $SAFE. The default #safe_level is 0 |
[R] | thread | The main thread of this DRbServer. This is the thread that listens for and accepts connections from clients, not that handles each client's request-response session. |
[R] | uri |
Set the default value for the :argc_limit option.
See new(). The initial default value is 256.
Set the default value for the :load_limit option.
See new(). The initial default value is 25 MB.
Set the default safe level to level
.
The default safe level is 0
See new for more information.
Create a new DRbServer instance.
uri
is the URI to bind to. This is
normally of the form 'druby://<hostname>:<port>' where
<hostname> is a hostname of the local machine. If nil, then the
system's default hostname will be bound to, on a port selected by the
system; these value can be retrieved from the uri
attribute.
'druby:' specifies the default dRuby transport protocol: another
protocol, such as 'drbunix:', can be specified instead.
front
is the front object for the server, that is, the object
to which remote method calls on the server will be passed. If nil, then
the server will not accept remote method calls.
If config_or_acl
is a hash, it is the configuration to use for
this server. The following options are recognised:
- :idconv
-
an id-to-object conversion object. This defaults to an instance of the class DRb::DRbIdConv.
- :verbose
-
if true, all unsuccessful remote calls on objects in the server will be logged to $stdout. false by default.
- :tcp_acl
-
the access control list for this server. See the ACL class from the main dRuby distribution.
- :load_limit
-
the maximum message size in bytes accepted by the server. Defaults to 25 MB (26214400).
- :argc_limit
-
the maximum number of arguments to a remote method accepted by the server. Defaults to 256.
- :safe_level
-
The safe level of the DRbServer. The attribute sets $SAFE for methods performed in the main_loop. Defaults to 0.
The default values of these options can be modified on a class-wide basis by the class methods default_argc_limit, default_load_limit, default_acl, default_id_conv, and verbose=
If config_or_acl
is not a hash, but is not nil, it is assumed
to be the access control list for this server. See the :tcp_acl option for
more details.
If no other server is currently set as the primary server, this will become the primary server.
The server will immediately start running in its own thread.
# File lib/drb/drb.rb, line 1361 def initialize(uri=nil, front=nil, config_or_acl=nil) if Hash === config_or_acl config = config_or_acl.dup else acl = config_or_acl || @@acl config = { :tcp_acl => acl } end @config = self.class.make_config(config) @protocol = DRbProtocol.open_server(uri, @config) @uri = @protocol.uri @exported_uri = [@uri] @front = front @idconv = @config[:idconv] @safe_level = @config[:safe_level] @grp = ThreadGroup.new @thread = run DRb.regist_server(self) end
Get the default value of the :verbose option.
Set the default value of the :verbose option.
See new(). The initial default value is false.
Is this server alive?
Check that a method is callable via dRuby.
obj
is the object we want to invoke the method on.
msg_id
is the method name, as a Symbol.
If the method is an insecure method (see insecure_method?) a SecurityError is thrown. If the method is private or undefined, a NameError is thrown.
# File lib/drb/drb.rb, line 1500 def check_insecure_method(obj, msg_id) return true if Proc === obj && msg_id == :__drb_yield raise(ArgumentError, "#{any_to_s(msg_id)} is not a symbol") unless Symbol == msg_id.class raise(SecurityError, "insecure method `#{msg_id}'") if insecure_method?(msg_id) if obj.private_methods.include?(msg_id) desc = any_to_s(obj) raise NoMethodError, "private method `#{msg_id}' called for #{desc}" elsif obj.protected_methods.include?(msg_id) desc = any_to_s(obj) raise NoMethodError, "protected method `#{msg_id}' called for #{desc}" else true end end
Stop this server.
Convert a local object to a dRuby reference.
Convert a dRuby reference to the local object it refers to.
Get whether the server is in verbose mode.
In verbose mode, failed calls are logged to stdout.