Ruby MRI

Interpreter for the Ruby programming language From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Matz's Ruby Interpreter or Ruby MRI (also called CRuby) is an implementation of the Ruby programming language named after Ruby creator Yukihiro Matsumoto ("Matz"). Until the specification of the Ruby language in 2012,[3] the MRI implementation was considered the de facto reference. Starting with Ruby 1.9, and continuing with Ruby 2.x and above, the official Ruby interpreter has been YARV ("Yet Another Ruby VM").[4]

DeveloperYukihiro Matsumoto (among others)
Initial releaseAugust 4, 2003; 22 years ago (2003-08-04)[1]
Final release
1.8.7 / {May 31, 2008; 17 years ago (2008-05-31)[2]
Written inC
Quick facts Developer, Initial release ...
Ruby
DeveloperYukihiro Matsumoto (among others)
Initial releaseAugust 4, 2003; 22 years ago (2003-08-04)[1]
Final release
1.8.7 / {May 31, 2008; 17 years ago (2008-05-31)[2]
Written inC
Operating systemCross-platform
SuccessorYARV
TypeRuby programming language interpreter
LicenseRuby License
Simplified BSD License
GNU General Public License (prior to 1.9.3)
Websitewww.ruby-lang.org
Repository
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Yukihiro Matsumoto, the creator of Ruby.

Ruby 1.8 is the last version that uses MRI.

History

Yukihiro Matsumoto ("Matz") started working on Ruby on February 24, 1993, and released it to the public in 1995. "Ruby" was named as a gemstone because of a joke within Matsumoto's circle of friends alluding to the name of the Perl programming language.[5]

The 1.8 branch has been maintained until June 2013,[6] and 1.8.7 releases have been released since April 2008.[7][8] This version provides bug fixes, but also many Ruby feature enhancements.

The RubySpec project (later renamed to "The Ruby Spec Suite") has independently created a large test suite that captures Ruby behavior as a reference conformance tool. Ruby MRI 1.9.2 passed over 99% of RubySpec.,[9] MRI Ruby 2.2 crashed on one of the tests.[10]

Licensing terms

Prior to release 1.9.3, the Ruby interpreter and libraries were distributed as dual-licensed free and open source software, under the GNU General Public License or the Ruby License.[11] In release 1.9.3, Ruby's License has been changed from a dual license with GPLv2 to a dual license with the 2-clause BSD license.[12]

Operating systems

Ruby MRI is available for the following operating systems (supported Ruby versions can be different):

This list may not be exhaustive.

PowerPC64 performance
Since version 2.2.1,[13] Ruby MRI performance on PowerPC64 was improved.[14][15][16]

Limitations

Commonly noted limitations include:

Backward compatibility
Version 1.9 and 1.8 have slight semantic differences.[17] The release of Ruby 2.0 sought to avoid such a conflict between different versions.[18]

Threaded programs cannot use more than a single CPU core due to the Global interpreter lock.

See also

References

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