Unicorn is a Rack HTTP server to serve Ruby web applications on UNIX environment. It is optimised to be used with nginx. It is based on now deprecated Mongrel 1.1.5 from 2008.

Unicorn
Original author(s)Eric Wong
Developer(s)Unicorn developers
Initial releaseMarch 11, 2009; 15 years ago (2009-03-11)
Stable release
6.1.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 25 December 2021; 2 years ago (25 December 2021)
Repositoryyhbt.net/unicorn/
Written inRuby
Operating systemCross-platform
Available inEnglish
TypeWeb server
LicenseGPLv2+ or Ruby 1.8
Websiteyhbt.net/unicorn/ Edit this at Wikidata

Architecture

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Unicorn uses a master/worker architecture, where a master process forks worker processes and controls them. The application runs in a single thread.[2]

Reception and use

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Unicorn was considered as “one of the most popular servers for Rails”.[3][2]

Twitter started to test Unicorn in 2010.[4]

This server is shipped with Discourse. Their system administrator Sam Saffron noted Unicorn was reliable, as it reaps unresponsive workers.[5]

Unicorn inspired other projects like Gunicorn, a fork to run Python applications.

As of 2018, projects tend to favour Puma.[6] The Heroku hosting provider recommends since 2015 to migrate from Unicorn to Puma.[7] Deliveroo published a benchmark comparing the two servers and concluded “Puma performs better than Unicorn in all tests that were either heavily IO-bound or that interleaved IO and CPU work”, but that Unicorn was still slightly better performing in pure CPU situations.[8] GitLab switched to Puma from Unicorn in 2020.[9]

References

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  1. ^ "Rack HTTP server for Unix and fast clients".
  2. ^ a b Fulton, Hal; Arko, André (11 February 2015). The Ruby Way: Solutions and Techniques in Ruby Programming. Addison-Wesley Professional. p. 566. ISBN 978-0321714633.
  3. ^ Bylina, H.N. (2014). Ruby Programming Language. Ruby on Rails framework (PDF). XX International conference for students and young scientists «MODERN TECHNIQUE AND TECHNOLOGIES». Tomsk: IOP Publishing.
  4. ^ "Unicorn Power". 30 March 2010.
  5. ^ "Why did you move to runit + Unicorn". February 2015.
  6. ^ "Category: Web Servers". The Ruby Toolbox. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
  7. ^ "Puma is Now the Recommended Ruby Webserver". 23 January 2015.
  8. ^ Pavese, Tommaso (21 December 2016). "Unicorn vs Puma: Rails server benchmarks". Deliveroo.engineering.
  9. ^ "How we migrated application servers from Unicorn to Puma". GitLab. Retrieved 2022-01-24.
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