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August 21, 2009 23:21
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Title | |
[Please provide a descriptive (but short) title for your session.] | |
???: Embedding Ruby for Fun and Profit | |
???: Write native code so you don't have to. | |
Description | |
[Provide a short summary description of your session topic. This will | |
be posted publicly if your proposal is accepted.] | |
Life is too short to write native code. It takes too long, it works | |
differently on different computers, you have to use a compiler, and | |
it's really difficult to do whilst inebriated. Whatever should we do? | |
One answer is to stop writing native code by embedding a high level | |
language. Ruby turns out to be ideal for embedding: the runtime is | |
very small, the standard library is quite complete, and the community | |
rocks. The downside? Embedding ruby can be extremely challenging | |
given the absence of up to date documentation and the minefield of an | |
API for the embedder. | |
This talk will be presented by Martin Robinson of the Titanium project | |
(by Accelerator) and Lloyd Hilaiel of the BrowserPlus project (by | |
Yahoo!). These two people working on open source projects which embed | |
ruby will share with you their experience in polishing ruby to a high | |
shine inside their projects, and give the tools you'd need to do the | |
same. | |
Abstract | |
There are only a handful of projects about the web that embed ruby, | |
some these include BrowserPlus, Titanium, SketchUp, mod_ruby, | |
(mrobison: any others that come to mind?). The act of embedding is very | |
much a black art, those who practice the art are few and far between. | |
This talk, while niche, would lay bare the state of the art of embedding | |
ruby, and would be presented by two of the leading "ruby inside" open | |
source projects. | |
In this talk the onion will be peeled from the outside in with two | |
interleaved perspectives on each topic, and we'll be careful to set | |
context along the way so that even folks without experience with ruby | |
internals will be able to take away an understanding of the process. The | |
talk is broken roughly into 5 sections | |
"The Finished Product" We'll set context by viewing high level | |
demonstrations of a BrowserPlus and Titanium in action. We'll briefly | |
the benefits and drawbacks of leveraging the ruby language. | |
This will be as terse as possible to deliver a concrete idea of the context | |
in which ruby is embedded without overly focusing on the specific projects. | |
"The Developer API" Both projects expose a ruby API to developers, and well | |
dig into the specifics of crafting this API. We'll cover some of the design | |
decisions that went into the ruby/developer contact points, as well as | |
explain and motivate differences from "standard" ruby. Finally we'll talk | |
about the way these APIs are presented and discovered by developers. | |
"How It works" We'll walk through a high level description of how ruby fits | |
into these two projects. | |
"Doing" Having set context, we'll walk through the key aspects of the | |
task of embedding ruby, and again, every question will be answered in | |
duplicate, giving two perspectives for observers to choose from: | |
* Ruby 1.8 or 1.9? | |
* Diet Ruby - | |
* How do I get the built libraries and headers? | |
* Does ruby run in a separate process? | |
* How do I support Multiple evaluation contexts? | |
* Ruby threads vs native threads? Threaded AND Embedded? | |
* Data conversion, how do I get data back and forth between ruby and | |
native code? | |
... | |
Presenters | |
Martin Robinson <[email protected]> | |
Lloyd Hilaiel <[email protected]> |
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