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  3. I might need to optimize this XD

I might need to optimize this XD

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  • L Lost User

    honey the codewitch wrote:

    Yes I do and the performance is god awful.

    I agree, and that's why I run FireFox :D

    honey the codewitch wrote:

    Plus each fiber only lives for the duration of one character.

    So, light weight threads that are short-lived? How would it compare to a threadpool, cutting back on creation cost and feeding the threads as they become available?

    Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^] "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

    H Offline
    H Offline
    honey the codewitch
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    They're already allocated since they're simple structs sitting inside an array. The only field that gets set are two simple 32 bit fields on the struct =) Since they're allocated this way, at least unless .NET sucks in this arena (i haven't checked the IL) they don't need to be recycled - they're permanent instances. Furthermore, the fibers get used at maximum - they are never idle, ergo, a threadpool won't benefit me.

    Real programmers use butterflies

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • H honey the codewitch

      Yes I do and the performance is god awful. This is for a compound regular expression rather than a web browser, so this is more than a little excessive. Normally the machine will spawn like 2 or 3 while it's doing normal character scans, but when it has to split it quickly grows. The reason it spawns more than one is disjunctions in the regex, like foo|bar - it spawns a fiber to scan each one. In truth it spawns slightly more than 1 fiber on average because save points spawn a fiber. Plus each fiber only lives for the duration of one character.

      Real programmers use butterflies

      Greg UtasG Offline
      Greg UtasG Offline
      Greg Utas
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      honey the codewitch wrote:

      the performance is god awful

      Ah yes, the rarely appropriate Thread Per Request pattern. Almost always better is a work queue served by a single thread, or a pool if blocking is an issue. Threads eat up memory, add context switching overhead, and introduce critical regions. I recently discovered how often Windows schedules a new thread, and I'm still flabbergasted. Fibers, being lighter weight, shouldn't be as bad, but evidently it's still plenty bad.

      honey the codewitch wrote:

      each fiber only lives for the duration of one character

      :omg: :wtf: X|

      <p><a href="https://github.com/GregUtas/robust-services-core/blob/master/README.md">Robust Services Core</a>
      <em>The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.</em></p>

      H 1 Reply Last reply
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      • Greg UtasG Greg Utas

        honey the codewitch wrote:

        the performance is god awful

        Ah yes, the rarely appropriate Thread Per Request pattern. Almost always better is a work queue served by a single thread, or a pool if blocking is an issue. Threads eat up memory, add context switching overhead, and introduce critical regions. I recently discovered how often Windows schedules a new thread, and I'm still flabbergasted. Fibers, being lighter weight, shouldn't be as bad, but evidently it's still plenty bad.

        honey the codewitch wrote:

        each fiber only lives for the duration of one character

        :omg: :wtf: X|

        H Offline
        H Offline
        honey the codewitch
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        The fibers are already allocated since they're simple structs sitting inside an array. The only field that gets set are two simple 32 bit fields on the struct =) Since they're allocated this way, at least unless .NET sucks in this arena (i haven't checked the IL) they don't need to be recycled - they're permanent instances. So a threadpool doesn't buy me anything. These aren't traditional threads.

        Real programmers use butterflies

        Greg UtasG 1 Reply Last reply
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        • H honey the codewitch

          The fibers are already allocated since they're simple structs sitting inside an array. The only field that gets set are two simple 32 bit fields on the struct =) Since they're allocated this way, at least unless .NET sucks in this arena (i haven't checked the IL) they don't need to be recycled - they're permanent instances. So a threadpool doesn't buy me anything. These aren't traditional threads.

          Real programmers use butterflies

          Greg UtasG Offline
          Greg UtasG Offline
          Greg Utas
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          These sound like really lightweight fibers, so .NET must suck at handling them. :)

          <p><a href="https://github.com/GregUtas/robust-services-core/blob/master/README.md">Robust Services Core</a>
          <em>The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.</em></p>

          H 1 Reply Last reply
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          • Greg UtasG Greg Utas

            These sound like really lightweight fibers, so .NET must suck at handling them. :)

            H Offline
            H Offline
            honey the codewitch
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            No, the issue is most fibers resolve to examination of a single character in the input so if you have 10 of them the same character gets examined as much as 10 times. This is a byproduct of the design of a Pike VM, itself an artifact of the way NFA expressions work so there's very little to be done about it except convert to a DFA (the optimization process) Reduce the fibers and it speeds right up:

            NFA ran with 10 max fibers and 3.5 average char passes
            NFA+DFA (optimized) ran with 6 max fibers and 2.5 average char passes
            DFA ran with 2.5 max fibers and 1 average char passes
            Pass #1
            NFA: Lexed in 1.575287 msec
            NFA+DFA (optimized): Lexed in 1.054843 msec
            DFA: Lexed in 0.901254 msec
            Pass #2
            NFA: Lexed in 1.529819 msec
            NFA+DFA (optimized): Lexed in 1.100836 msec
            DFA: Lexed in 0.830835 msec
            Pass #3
            NFA: Lexed in 1.523334 msec
            NFA+DFA (optimized): Lexed in 1.049213 msec
            DFA: Lexed in 0.851737 msec
            Pass #4
            NFA: Lexed in 1.400265 msec
            NFA+DFA (optimized): Lexed in 1.03485 msec
            DFA: Lexed in 0.829009 msec

            Real programmers use butterflies

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • L Lost User

              honey the codewitch wrote:

              Yes I do and the performance is god awful.

              I agree, and that's why I run FireFox :D

              honey the codewitch wrote:

              Plus each fiber only lives for the duration of one character.

              So, light weight threads that are short-lived? How would it compare to a threadpool, cutting back on creation cost and feeding the threads as they become available?

              Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^] "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.

              J Offline
              J Offline
              Jon McKee
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Eddy Vluggen wrote:

              So, light weight threads that are short-lived?

              Kinda. Their primary purpose is non-preemptive/cooperative multitasking instead of preemptive multitasking like threads. The best analogy I've seen is co-routines.

              H 1 Reply Last reply
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              • J Jon McKee

                Eddy Vluggen wrote:

                So, light weight threads that are short-lived?

                Kinda. Their primary purpose is non-preemptive/cooperative multitasking instead of preemptive multitasking like threads. The best analogy I've seen is co-routines.

                H Offline
                H Offline
                honey the codewitch
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Yep. That's about the long and short of it.

                private struct _Fiber
                {
                public readonly int[][] Program;
                public readonly int Index;
                public int[] Saved;
                public _Fiber(int[][] program, int index,int[] saved)
                {
                Program = program;
                Index = index;
                Saved = saved;
                }
                public _Fiber(_Fiber fiber, int index,int[] saved)
                {
                Program = fiber.Program;
                Index = index;
                Saved = saved;
                }
                }

                All it contains is a pointer to the program array which all fibers share, the current instruction pointer, and any saved cursor position (only used in the event of the "save" instruction) Creating them is cheap since I just use a straight array to hold them all and it basically never gets resized, so all of them are already "live" just waiting to have their fields filled in.

                Real programmers use butterflies

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • H honey the codewitch

                  L0001: jmp L0002, L0010, L0021, L0029, L0040, L0050, L0059, L0070, L0082, L0092, L0101, L0109, L0115, L0121, L0133, L0142, L0149, L0157, L0167, L0174, L0185, L0190, L0198, L0209, L0213, L0219, L0223, L0233, L0241, L0247, L0256, L0264, L0272, L0278, L0285, L0292, L0297, L0302, L0306, L0311, L0315, L0319, L0323, L0327, L0331, L0335, L0339, L0343, L0347, L0352, L0357, L0361, L0366, L0371, L0375, L0380, L0384, L0389, L0393, L0398, L0402, L0407, L0412, L0416, L0421, L0426, L0430, L0435, L0440, L0444, L0449, L0453, L0458, L0492, L0499, L0506, L0513, L0520, L0527, L0537, L0546, L0554, L0561, L0568, L0574, L0583, L0591, L0598, L0606, L0616, L0625, L0633, L0640, L0647, L0656, L0665, L0671, L0681, L0690, L0696, L0702, L0708, L0716, L0728, L0753, L0768, L0773

                  Each JMP operand spawns a fiber (basically a thread). I haven't counted how many are spawned here, but 70-80 or so? I think maybe this code is a bit heavy handed. This is just to match a (quite complicated) regular expression

                  Real programmers use butterflies

                  J Offline
                  J Offline
                  Jorgen Andersson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  If I have understood it correctly: yield uses fibers, foreach uses yield. So try to swap a few well chosen foreach loops for classic for loops and see what happens.

                  Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                  H 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • J Jorgen Andersson

                    If I have understood it correctly: yield uses fibers, foreach uses yield. So try to swap a few well chosen foreach loops for classic for loops and see what happens.

                    Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                    H Offline
                    H Offline
                    honey the codewitch
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    I'm not using any foreach loops. I've already optimized the VM itself to within an inch of its life

                    Real programmers use butterflies

                    J 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • H honey the codewitch

                      I'm not using any foreach loops. I've already optimized the VM itself to within an inch of its life

                      Real programmers use butterflies

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      Jorgen Andersson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      How about Linq?

                      Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                      H 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • J Jorgen Andersson

                        How about Linq?

                        Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                        H Offline
                        H Offline
                        honey the codewitch
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        I thought the goal was to speed this up?

                        Real programmers use butterflies

                        J 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • H honey the codewitch

                          L0001: jmp L0002, L0010, L0021, L0029, L0040, L0050, L0059, L0070, L0082, L0092, L0101, L0109, L0115, L0121, L0133, L0142, L0149, L0157, L0167, L0174, L0185, L0190, L0198, L0209, L0213, L0219, L0223, L0233, L0241, L0247, L0256, L0264, L0272, L0278, L0285, L0292, L0297, L0302, L0306, L0311, L0315, L0319, L0323, L0327, L0331, L0335, L0339, L0343, L0347, L0352, L0357, L0361, L0366, L0371, L0375, L0380, L0384, L0389, L0393, L0398, L0402, L0407, L0412, L0416, L0421, L0426, L0430, L0435, L0440, L0444, L0449, L0453, L0458, L0492, L0499, L0506, L0513, L0520, L0527, L0537, L0546, L0554, L0561, L0568, L0574, L0583, L0591, L0598, L0606, L0616, L0625, L0633, L0640, L0647, L0656, L0665, L0671, L0681, L0690, L0696, L0702, L0708, L0716, L0728, L0753, L0768, L0773

                          Each JMP operand spawns a fiber (basically a thread). I haven't counted how many are spawned here, but 70-80 or so? I think maybe this code is a bit heavy handed. This is just to match a (quite complicated) regular expression

                          Real programmers use butterflies

                          Z Offline
                          Z Offline
                          ZTransform
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          Lounge?

                          H J 2 Replies Last reply
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                          • H honey the codewitch

                            I thought the goal was to speed this up?

                            Real programmers use butterflies

                            J Offline
                            J Offline
                            Jorgen Andersson
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            I didn't tell you to use it, I'm just looking for problems. :-)

                            Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                            H 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Z ZTransform

                              Lounge?

                              H Offline
                              H Offline
                              honey the codewitch
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              Yes, this is the Lounge.

                              Real programmers use butterflies

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                              • J Jorgen Andersson

                                I didn't tell you to use it, I'm just looking for problems. :-)

                                Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                                H Offline
                                H Offline
                                honey the codewitch
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                Look away. Here's almost all of it. The stuff you don't see is very thin

                                public static int Run(int[][] prog,LexContext input)
                                {
                                input.EnsureStarted();
                                int i,match=-1;
                                _Fiber[] currentFibers, nextFibers, tmp;
                                int currentFiberCount=0, nextFiberCount=0;
                                int[] pc;
                                // position in input
                                int sp=0;
                                // stores our captured input
                                var sb = new StringBuilder(64);
                                int[] saved, matched;
                                saved = new int[2];
                                currentFibers = new _Fiber[prog.Length];
                                nextFibers = new _Fiber[prog.Length];
                                _EnqueueFiber(ref currentFiberCount, ref currentFibers, new _Fiber(prog,0, saved), 0);
                                matched = null;
                                var cur = -1;
                                if (LexContext.EndOfInput != input.Current)
                                {
                                var ch1 = unchecked((char)input.Current);
                                if (char.IsHighSurrogate(ch1))
                                {
                                if (-1 == input.Advance())
                                throw new ExpectingException("Expecting low surrogate in unicode stream. The input source is corrupt or not valid Unicode", input.Line, input.Column, input.Position, input.FileOrUrl);
                                var ch2 = unchecked((char)input.Current);
                                cur = char.ConvertToUtf32(ch1, ch2);
                                }
                                else
                                cur = ch1;

                                }
                                		
                                while(0
                                
                                J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • Z ZTransform

                                  Lounge?

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  Jorgen Andersson
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  In the sticky post at the top: 2. Technical discussions are welcome...[^]

                                  Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • H honey the codewitch

                                    Look away. Here's almost all of it. The stuff you don't see is very thin

                                    public static int Run(int[][] prog,LexContext input)
                                    {
                                    input.EnsureStarted();
                                    int i,match=-1;
                                    _Fiber[] currentFibers, nextFibers, tmp;
                                    int currentFiberCount=0, nextFiberCount=0;
                                    int[] pc;
                                    // position in input
                                    int sp=0;
                                    // stores our captured input
                                    var sb = new StringBuilder(64);
                                    int[] saved, matched;
                                    saved = new int[2];
                                    currentFibers = new _Fiber[prog.Length];
                                    nextFibers = new _Fiber[prog.Length];
                                    _EnqueueFiber(ref currentFiberCount, ref currentFibers, new _Fiber(prog,0, saved), 0);
                                    matched = null;
                                    var cur = -1;
                                    if (LexContext.EndOfInput != input.Current)
                                    {
                                    var ch1 = unchecked((char)input.Current);
                                    if (char.IsHighSurrogate(ch1))
                                    {
                                    if (-1 == input.Advance())
                                    throw new ExpectingException("Expecting low surrogate in unicode stream. The input source is corrupt or not valid Unicode", input.Line, input.Column, input.Position, input.FileOrUrl);
                                    var ch2 = unchecked((char)input.Current);
                                    cur = char.ConvertToUtf32(ch1, ch2);
                                    }
                                    else
                                    cur = ch1;

                                    }
                                    		
                                    while(0
                                    
                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Jorgen Andersson
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    Oh, no wonder then, you're doing it on purpose... :laugh:

                                    Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                                    H 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • J Jorgen Andersson

                                      Oh, no wonder then, you're doing it on purpose... :laugh:

                                      Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                                      H Offline
                                      H Offline
                                      honey the codewitch
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      Doing what on purpose? I'm a little slow this morning. :)

                                      Real programmers use butterflies

                                      J 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • H honey the codewitch

                                        Doing what on purpose? I'm a little slow this morning. :)

                                        Real programmers use butterflies

                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        Jorgen Andersson
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        Spawning loads of fibers. Or is this auto generated code again?

                                        Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                                        H 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • J Jorgen Andersson

                                          Spawning loads of fibers. Or is this auto generated code again?

                                          Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                                          H Offline
                                          H Offline
                                          honey the codewitch
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          Well, it's not on purpose per se. I mean yes, I'm spawning a lot of them, but the idea is to keep as few active or "alive" at one time as possible. when I see a jmp with 3 operands it spawns 2 fibers in addition to a primary fiber. That's what I don't want, since every fiber has to examine the character under the cursor which leads to many examinations of the same character. There's no way to optimize this out because it's rather the point of the fiber running in the first place. Multiple examinations are a byproduct of the NFA algorithm. My goal is simply to reduce/eliminate the amount of jmps and especially the number of operands they have. A pure DFA can run by examining each character only once.

                                          Real programmers use butterflies

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