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classification
Title: speed up function calls
Type: performance Stage: patch review
Components: Interpreter Core Versions: Python 3.3
process
Status: closed Resolution: out of date
Dependencies: Superseder:
Assigned To: Nosy List: BreamoreBoy, belopolsky, bob.ippolito, collinwinter, jyasskin, loewis, nnorwitz, pas, pitrou, rhettinger
Priority: low Keywords: needs review, patch

Created on 2006-05-01 06:58 by nnorwitz, last changed 2022-04-11 14:56 by admin. This issue is now closed.

Files
File name Uploaded Description Edit
speed.diff nnorwitz, 2006-05-01 06:58 v1 review
s2.diff nnorwitz, 2006-05-05 08:27 v2 review
func-speed.diff nnorwitz, 2006-05-11 07:43 v3 review
funcall.patch pitrou, 2008-01-13 23:23
Messages (12)
msg50158 - (view) Author: Neal Norwitz (nnorwitz) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-01 06:58
Results:  2.86% for 1 arg (len), 11.8% for 2 args
(min), and 1.6% for pybench.

trunk-speed$ ./python.exe -m timeit 'for x in
xrange(10000): len([])'
100 loops, best of 3: 4.74 msec per loop
trunk-speed$ ./python.exe -m timeit 'for x in
xrange(10000): min(1,2)'
100 loops, best of 3: 8.03 msec per loop

trunk-clean$ ./python.exe -m timeit 'for x in
xrange(10000): len([])'
100 loops, best of 3: 4.88 msec per loop
trunk-clean$ ./python.exe -m timeit 'for x in
xrange(10000): min(1,2)'
100 loops, best of 3: 9.09 msec per loop

pybench goes from 5688.00 down to 5598.00


Details about the patch:

There are 2 unrelated changes.  They both seem to
provide equal benefits for calling varargs C.  One is
very simple and just inlines calling a varargs C
function rather than calling PyCFunction_Call() which
does extra checks that are already known.  This moves
meth and self up one block. and breaks the C_TRACE into
2.  (When looking at the patch, this will make sense I
hope.)

The other change is more dangerous.  It modifies
load_args() to hold on to tuples so they aren't
allocated and deallocated.  The initialization is done
one time in the new func _PyEval_Init().

It allocates 64 tuples of size 8 that are never
deallocated.  The idea is that there won't be usually
be more than 64 frames with 8 or less parameters active
on the stack at any one time (stack depth).  There are
cases where this can degenerate, but for the most part,
it should only be marginally slower, but generally this
should be a fair amount faster by skipping the alloc
and dealloc and some extra work.  My decrementing the
_last_index inside the needs_free blocks, that could
improve behaviour.

This really needs comments added to the code.  But I'm
not gonna get there tonight.  I'd be interested in
comments about the code.
msg50159 - (view) Author: Neal Norwitz (nnorwitz) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-01 07:08
Logged In: YES 
user_id=33168

I should note the numbers 64 and 8 are total guesses.  It
might be good to try and determine values based on empirical
data.
msg50160 - (view) Author: Martin v. Löwis (loewis) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-01 08:27
Logged In: YES 
user_id=21627

The tuples should get deallocated when Py_Finalize is called.

It would be good if there was (conditional) statistical
analysis, showing how often no tuple was found because the
number of arguments was too large, and how often no tuple
was found because the candidate was in use.

I think it should be more stack-like, starting off with no
tuples allocated, then returning them inside the needs_free
blocks only if the refcount is 1 (or 2?). This would avoid
degeneralized cases where some function holds onto its
argument tuple indefinitely, thus consuming all 64 tuples.

For the other part, I think it would make the code more
readable if it inlined PyCFunction_Call even more: the test
for NOARGS|O could be integrated into the switch statement
(one case for each), VARARGS and VARARGS|KEYWORDS would both
load the arguments, then call the function directly
(possibly with NULL keywords). OLDARGS should goto either
METH_NOARGS, METH_O, or METH_VARARGS depending on na (if you
don't like goto, modifying flags would work as well).
msg50161 - (view) Author: Neal Norwitz (nnorwitz) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-05 08:27
Logged In: YES 
user_id=33168

v2 attached.  You might not want to review yet.  I mostly
did the first part of your suggest (stats, _Fini, and
stack-like if I understood you correctly).  I didn't do
anything on the second part about inlinting Function_Call.

perf seems to be about the same.  I'm not entirely sure the
patch is correct yet. I found one or two problems in the
original.  I added some more comments. 
msg50162 - (view) Author: Neal Norwitz (nnorwitz) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-11 07:43
Logged In: YES 
user_id=33168

This version actually works (in both normal and debug
builds).  It adds some stats which are useful and updates
Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt.

I modified to not preallocate and only hold a ref when the
function didn't keep a ref.

I still need to inline more of PyCFunction_Call.  Speed is
still the same as before.

I'm not sure if I'll finish this before the sprint next
week.  Anyone there feel free to check this in if you finish it.
msg50163 - (view) Author: Bob Ippolito (bob.ippolito) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-22 12:02
Logged In: YES 
user_id=139309

The performance gain for this patch (as-is) on Mac OS X i386 with a release 
build seems totally negligible. I'm not getting any consistent win with any of the 
timeit or pybench benchmarks. 
msg50164 - (view) Author: Neal Norwitz (nnorwitz) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-23 05:32
Logged In: YES 
user_id=33168

Interesting.  I did the original work for this on an amd64
(gcc 3.4 i think).  And continued work on ppc mac laptop
(gcc 4.0 i think).  Both had improvements.  I assume you
tested with v3?  What about v1?
msg50165 - (view) Author: Bob Ippolito (bob.ippolito) * (Python committer) Date: 2006-05-23 08:45
Logged In: YES 
user_id=139309

This was v3 on a MacBook Pro running 10.4.6 (gcc 4, of course, since that's the 
only Apple-distributed i386 GCC for OS X).
msg59872 - (view) Author: Antoine Pitrou (pitrou) * (Python committer) Date: 2008-01-13 23:23
Here is a patch applicable for SVN trunk.
However, as Bob I have mixed results on this. For example, functions
with variable parameter count have become slower:

# With patch
$ ./python -m timeit -s "def f(*x): pass" 'for x in xrange(10000): f(1)'
100 loops, best of 3: 4.92 msec per loop
$ ./python -m timeit -s "def f(*x): pass" 'for x in xrange(10000): f()'
100 loops, best of 3: 4.07 msec per loop
$ ./python -m timeit -s "def f(*x): pass" 'for x in xrange(10000): f(1,2)'
100 loops, best of 3: 5.04 msec per loop

# Without patch
$ ./python-orig -m timeit -s "def f(*x): pass" 'for x in xrange(10000):
f(1)'
100 loops, best of 3: 4.22 msec per loop
$ ./python-orig -m timeit -s "def f(*x): pass" 'for x in xrange(10000): f()'
100 loops, best of 3: 3.5 msec per loop
$ ./python-orig -m timeit -s "def f(*x): pass" 'for x in xrange(10000):
f(1,2)'
100 loops, best of 3: 4.46 msec per loop
msg110446 - (view) Author: Mark Lawrence (BreamoreBoy) * Date: 2010-07-16 14:32
I'm not sure if this is worth pursuing given the way performance is so often governed by networking and/or IO issues today, bearing in mind comments like msg50163 and msg59872.  I'd certainly like to see more comments from core developers.  Could someone in the know please put them on the nosy list.
msg110448 - (view) Author: Alexander Belopolsky (belopolsky) * (Python committer) Date: 2010-07-16 14:48
I think Raymond might be interested.  Since this is not a bug fix, it can only be considered for 3.x.
msg160886 - (view) Author: Antoine Pitrou (pitrou) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-05-16 16:45
Closing as terribly outdated (and not very promising).
History
Date User Action Args
2022-04-11 14:56:17adminsetgithub: 43303
2012-05-16 16:45:57pitrousetstatus: open -> closed
resolution: out of date
messages: + msg160886
2011-05-05 18:27:20passetnosy: + pas
2011-03-22 22:25:05rhettingersetassignee: rhettinger ->
nosy: loewis, nnorwitz, collinwinter, rhettinger, bob.ippolito, belopolsky, pitrou, jyasskin, BreamoreBoy
versions: + Python 3.3, - Python 3.2
2010-08-11 19:10:55rhettingersetpriority: normal -> low
assignee: rhettinger
2010-08-09 18:57:02terry.reedysettype: enhancement -> performance
2010-07-16 14:48:54belopolskysetnosy: + belopolsky, rhettinger

messages: + msg110448
versions: + Python 3.2, - Python 2.7
2010-07-16 14:32:30BreamoreBoysetnosy: + BreamoreBoy
messages: + msg110446
2010-01-20 17:03:15ezio.melottisetkeywords: + needs review
stage: patch review
versions: + Python 2.7, - Python 2.6
2009-01-12 22:28:49collinwintersetnosy: + collinwinter, jyasskin
2008-01-13 23:23:48pitrousetfiles: + funcall.patch
nosy: + pitrou
messages: + msg59872
2008-01-12 04:43:23christian.heimessettype: enhancement
versions: + Python 2.6, - Python 2.5
2006-05-01 06:58:24nnorwitzcreate