Is evacuate for StgMutArrPtrs and StgArrPtrs expensive to GC?
Carter Schonwald
carter.schonwald
Tue Oct 1 20:50:25 UTC 2013
awesome!
please let us know when some of the info is available publicly, perhaps so
other folks can help out wiht experimentation
On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 4:30 PM, Andrew Farmer <afarmer at ittc.ku.edu> wrote:
> I did indeed implement dynamic nursery sizing and did some preliminary
> benchmarking. The headline figure: 15% speedup on the nofib/gc benchmarks,
> though the variance was pretty large, and there were some slowdowns.
>
> My scheme was very simple... I kept track of the size and rough collection
> time of the previous three collections and did a sort of crude binary
> search to find a minimum in the search space. I did it this way because it
> was simple and required constant time and memory to make a decision. Though
> one of the conclusions was that collection time was a bad metric, due to
> the way the RTS re-uses blocks. As Simon pointed out, tracking retainment
> or some other metric would probably be better, but I need to explore it.
> Another result: the default size is almost always too small (at least for
> the nofib programs). CPUs come with huge caches, and using the RTS flag -A
> to set the allocation area to be roughly the size of the L3 cache usually
> gave pretty decent speedups.
>
> I did this for a class project, and had to put it down to focus on other
> things, and just haven't picked it back up. I still have a patch laying
> around, and several pages of notes with ideas for improvement in both the
> metric and search. I'm hoping to pick it back up again in a couple months,
> with an eye on a workshop paper, and a real patch for 7.10.
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 3:36 AM, Simon Marlow <marlowsd at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> It's typical for benchmarks that allocate a large data structure to spend
>> a lot of time in the GC. The data gets copied twice - once in the young
>> generation and then again when promoted to the old generation. You can
>> make this kind of benchmark much faster by just using a bigger allocation
>> area.
>>
>> There's nothing inherently costly about StgMutArrPtrs compared to other
>> objects, except that they are variable size and therefore we can't unroll
>> the copy loop, but I don't think that's a big effect. The actual copying
>> is the major cost.
>>
>> The way to improve this kind of benchmark would be to add some heuristics
>> for varying the nursery size based on the quantity of data retained, for
>> example. I think there's a lot of room for improvement here, but someone
>> needs to do some careful benchmarking and experimentation. Andrew Farmer
>> did some work on this and allegedly got good results but we never saw the
>> code (hint hint!).
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Simon
>>
>>
>> On 1 October 2013 06:43, Johan Tibell <johan.tibell at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> The code for 'allocate' in rts/sm/Storage.c doesn't seem that
>>> expensive. An extra branch compared to inline allocation and
>>> allocation is done in the next nursery block (risking fragmentation?).
>>>
>>> -- Johan
>>>
>>> On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 9:50 PM, Johan Tibell <johan.tibell at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>> > Hi,
>>> >
>>> > When I benchmark Data.HashMap.insert from unordered-containers
>>> > (inserting the keys [0..10000]) the runtime is dominated by GC:
>>> >
>>> > $ cat Test.hs
>>> > module Main where
>>> >
>>> > import Control.DeepSeq
>>> > import Control.Exception
>>> > import Control.Monad
>>> > import qualified Data.HashMap.Strict as HM
>>> > import Data.List (foldl')
>>> >
>>> > main = do
>>> > let ks = [0..10000] :: [Int]
>>> > evaluate (rnf ks)
>>> > forM_ ([0..1000] :: [Int]) $ \ x -> do
>>> > evaluate $ HM.null $ foldl' (\ m k -> HM.insert k x m)
>>> HM.empty ks
>>> >
>>> > $ perf record -g ./Test +RTS -s
>>> > 6,187,678,112 bytes allocated in the heap
>>> > 3,309,887,128 bytes copied during GC
>>> > 1,299,200 bytes maximum residency (1002 sample(s))
>>> > 118,816 bytes maximum slop
>>> > 5 MB total memory in use (0 MB lost due to
>>> fragmentation)
>>> >
>>> > Tot time (elapsed) Avg pause Max
>>> pause
>>> > Gen 0 11089 colls, 0 par 1.31s 1.30s 0.0001s
>>> 0.0005s
>>> > Gen 1 1002 colls, 0 par 0.49s 0.51s 0.0005s
>>> 0.0022s
>>> >
>>> > INIT time 0.00s ( 0.00s elapsed)
>>> > MUT time 1.02s ( 1.03s elapsed)
>>> > GC time 1.80s ( 1.80s elapsed)
>>> > EXIT time 0.00s ( 0.00s elapsed)
>>> > Total time 2.82s ( 2.84s elapsed)
>>> >
>>> > %GC time 63.7% (63.5% elapsed)
>>> >
>>> > Alloc rate 6,042,264,963 bytes per MUT second
>>> >
>>> > Productivity 36.3% of total user, 36.1% of total elapsed
>>> >
>>> > $ perf report
>>> > 41.46% Test Test [.] evacuate
>>> > 15.47% Test Test [.] scavenge_block
>>> > 11.04% Test Test [.] s3cN_info
>>> > 8.74% Test Test [.] s3aZ_info
>>> > 3.59% Test Test [.] 0x7ff5
>>> > 2.83% Test Test [.] scavenge_mut_arr_ptrs
>>> > 2.69% Test libc-2.15.so [.] 0x147fd9
>>> > 2.51% Test Test [.] allocate
>>> > 2.00% Test Test [.] s3oo_info
>>> > 0.91% Test Test [.] todo_block_full
>>> > 0.87% Test Test [.] hs_popcnt64
>>> > 0.80% Test Test [.] s3en_info
>>> > 0.62% Test Test [.] s3el_info
>>> >
>>> > Is GC:ing StgMutArrPtrs and StgArrPtrs, which I create a lot of, more
>>> > expensive than GC:ing normal heap objects (i.e. for standard data
>>> > types)?
>>> >
>>> > -- Johan
>>>
>>
>>
>
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