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How the Ruby heap is implemented October 12, 2007 at 2:44 pm · Filed under Ruby It’s been a while since I’ve worked on Ruby’s garbage collector, and my memory about it is getting dusty. At the time, I noticed that there’s very little documentation about the Ruby interpreter implementation. There are little pieces of comments here and there, and a few slides and emails all over the Internet, but
Since the initial release of the teaser screencast, a lot of people have asked about Passenger’s (a.k.a. mod_rails) performance compared to Mongrel and Thin. Here’s the benchmark that you’ve all been waiting for. In this benchmark, we compare the following software: Phusion Passenger (mod_rails), latest development version Mongrel 1.1.4 Thin 0.7.1 System specification: Intel Core 2 Duo, T5300 @ 1
It’s a well-known stereotype that “Ruby is slow”. People say it on Slashdot. People say it on OSNews. People say it on my MSN contact list. A few quotes: “If you care even a little about performance, you don’t use Ruby.” “You thought Python is slow? Well Ruby is even slower!” Another stereotype we hear is that “Ruby on Rails doesn’t scale”. Most of the people who say that seem to use PHP, so they
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