Feature #11164
closedGarbage collector in Ruby 2.2 provokes unexpected CoW
Description
How do I prevent the GC from provoking copy-on-write, when I fork my process ? I have recently been analyzing the garbage collector's behavior in Ruby, due to some memory issues that I encountered in my program (I run out of memory on my 60core 0.5Tb machine even for fairly small tasks). For me this really limits the usefulness of ruby for running programs on multicore servers. I would like to present my experiments and results here.
The issue arises when the garbage collector runs during forking. I have investigated three cases that illustrate the issue.
Case 1: We allocate a lot of objects (strings no longer than 20 bytes) in the memory using an array. The strings are created using a random number and string formatting. When the process forks and we force the GC to run in the child, all the shared memory goes private, causing a duplication of the initial memory.
Case 2: We allocate a lot of objects (strings) in the memory using an array, but the string is created using the rand.to_s function, hence we remove the formatting of the data compared to the previous case. We end up with a smaller amount of memory being used, presumably due to less garbage. When the process forks and we force the GC to run in the child, only part of the memory goes private. We have a duplication of the initial memory, but to a smaller extent.
Case 3: We allocate fewer objects compared to before, but the objects are bigger, such that the amount of memory allocated stays the same as in the previous cases. When the process forks and we force the GC to run in the child all the memory stays shared, i.e. no memory duplication.
Here I paste the Ruby code that has been used for these experiments. To switch between cases you only need to change the “option” value in the memory_object function. The code was tested using Ruby 2.2.2, 2.2.1, 2.1.3, 2.1.5 and 1.9.3 on an Ubuntu 14.04 machine.
Sample output for case 1:
ruby version 2.2.2
proces pid log priv_dirty shared_dirty
Parent 3897 post alloc 38 0
Parent 3897 4 fork 0 37
Child 3937 4 initial 0 37
Child 3937 8 empty GC 35 5
The exact same code has been written in Python and in all cases the CoW works perfectly fine.
Sample output for case 1:
python version 2.7.6 (default, Mar 22 2014, 22:59:56)
[GCC 4.8.2]
proces pid log priv_dirty shared_dirty
Parent 4308 post alloc 35 0
Parent 4308 4 fork 0 35
Child 4309 4 initial 0 35
Child 4309 10 empty GC 1 34
Ruby code
$start_time=Time.new
# Monitor use of Resident and Virtual memory.
class Memory
shared_dirty = '.+?Shared_Dirty:\s+(\d+)'
priv_dirty = '.+?Private_Dirty:\s+(\d+)'
MEM_REGEXP = /#{shared_dirty}#{priv_dirty}/m
# get memory usage
def self.get_memory_map( pids)
memory_map = {}
memory_map[ :pids_found] = {}
memory_map[ :shared_dirty] = 0
memory_map[ :priv_dirty] = 0
pids.each do |pid|
begin
lines = nil
lines = File.read( "/proc/#{pid}/smaps")
rescue
lines = nil
end
if lines
lines.scan(MEM_REGEXP) do |shared_dirty, priv_dirty|
memory_map[ :pids_found][pid] = true
memory_map[ :shared_dirty] += shared_dirty.to_i
memory_map[ :priv_dirty] += priv_dirty.to_i
end
end
end
memory_map[ :pids_found] = memory_map[ :pids_found].keys
return memory_map
end
# get the processes and get the value of the memory usage
def self.memory_usage( )
pids = [ $$]
result = self.get_memory_map( pids)
result[ :pids] = pids
return result
end
# print the values of the private and shared memories
def self.log( process_name='', log_tag="")
if process_name == "header"
puts " %-6s %5s %-12s %10s %10s\n" % ["proces", "pid", "log", "priv_dirty", "shared_dirty"]
else
time = Time.new - $start_time
mem = Memory.memory_usage( )
puts " %-6s %5d %-12s %10d %10d\n" % [process_name, $$, log_tag, mem[:priv_dirty]/1000, mem[:shared_dirty]/1000]
end
end
end
# function to delay the processes a bit
def time_step( n)
while Time.new - $start_time < n
sleep( 0.01)
end
end
# create an object of specified size. The option argument can be changed from 0 to 2 to visualize the behavior of the GC in various cases
#
# case 0 (default) : we make a huge array of small objects by formatting a string
# case 1 : we make a huge array of small objects without formatting a string (we use the to_s function)
# case 2 : we make a smaller array of big objects
def memory_object( size, option=1)
result = []
count = size/20
if option > 3 or option < 1
count.times do
result << "%20.18f" % rand
end
elsif option == 1
count.times do
result << rand.to_s
end
elsif option == 2
count = count/10
count.times do
result << ("%20.18f" % rand)*30
end
end
return result
end
##### main #####
puts "ruby version #{RUBY_VERSION}"
GC.disable
# print the column headers and first line
Memory.log( "header")
# Allocation of memory
big_memory = memory_object( 1000 * 1000 * 10)
Memory.log( "Parent", "post alloc")
lab_time = Time.new - $start_time
if lab_time < 3.9
lab_time = 0
end
# start the forking
pid = fork do
time = 4
time_step( time + lab_time)
Memory.log( "Child", "#{time} initial")
# force GC when nothing happened
GC.enable; GC.start; GC.disable
time = 8
time_step( time + lab_time)
Memory.log( "Child", "#{time} empty GC")
sleep( 1)
STDOUT.flush
exit!
end
time = 4
time_step( time + lab_time)
Memory.log( "Parent", "#{time} fork")
# wait for the child to finish
Process.wait( pid)
Python code
import re
import time
import os
import random
import sys
import gc
start_time=time.time()
# Monitor use of Resident and Virtual memory.
class Memory:
def __init__(self):
self.shared_dirty = '.+?Shared_Dirty:\s+(\d+)'
self.priv_dirty = '.+?Private_Dirty:\s+(\d+)'
self.MEM_REGEXP = re.compile("{shared_dirty}{priv_dirty}".format(shared_dirty=self.shared_dirty, priv_dirty=self.priv_dirty), re.DOTALL)
# get memory usage
def get_memory_map(self, pids):
memory_map = {}
memory_map[ "pids_found" ] = {}
memory_map[ "shared_dirty" ] = 0
memory_map[ "priv_dirty" ] = 0
for pid in pids:
try:
lines = None
with open( "/proc/{pid}/smaps".format(pid=pid), "r" ) as infile:
lines = infile.read()
except:
lines = None
if lines:
for shared_dirty, priv_dirty in re.findall( self.MEM_REGEXP, lines ):
memory_map[ "pids_found" ][pid] = True
memory_map[ "shared_dirty" ] += int( shared_dirty )
memory_map[ "priv_dirty" ] += int( priv_dirty )
memory_map[ "pids_found" ] = memory_map[ "pids_found" ].keys()
return memory_map
# get the processes and get the value of the memory usage
def memory_usage( self):
pids = [ os.getpid() ]
result = self.get_memory_map( pids)
result[ "pids" ] = pids
return result
# print the values of the private and shared memories
def log( self, process_name='', log_tag=""):
if process_name == "header":
print " %-6s %5s %-12s %10s %10s" % ("proces", "pid", "log", "priv_dirty", "shared_dirty")
else:
global start_time
Time = time.time() - start_time
mem = self.memory_usage( )
print " %-6s %5d %-12s %10d %10d" % (process_name, os.getpid(), log_tag, mem["priv_dirty"]/1000, mem["shared_dirty"]/1000)
# function to delay the processes a bit
def time_step( n):
global start_time
while (time.time() - start_time) < n:
time.sleep( 0.01)
# create an object of specified size. The option argument can be changed from 0 to 2 to visualize the behavior of the GC in various cases
#
# case 0 (default) : we make a huge array of small objects by formatting a string
# case 1 : we make a huge array of small objects without formatting a string (we use the to_s function)
# case 2 : we make a smaller array of big objects
def memory_object( size, option=2):
count = size/20
if option > 3 or option < 1:
result = [ "%20.18f"% random.random() for i in xrange(count) ]
elif option == 1:
result = [ str( random.random() ) for i in xrange(count) ]
elif option == 2:
count = count/10
result = [ ("%20.18f"% random.random())*30 for i in xrange(count) ]
return result
##### main #####
print "python version {version}".format(version=sys.version)
memory = Memory()
gc.disable()
# print the column headers and first line
memory.log( "header") # Print the headers of the columns
# Allocation of memory
big_memory = memory_object( 1000 * 1000 * 10) # Allocate memory
memory.log( "Parent", "post alloc")
lab_time = time.time() - start_time
if lab_time < 3.9:
lab_time = 0
# start the forking
pid = os.fork() # fork the process
if pid == 0:
Time = 4
time_step( Time + lab_time)
memory.log( "Child", "{time} initial".format(time=Time))
# force GC when nothing happened
gc.enable(); gc.collect(); gc.disable();
Time = 10
time_step( Time + lab_time)
memory.log( "Child", "{time} empty GC".format(time=Time))
time.sleep( 1)
sys.exit(0)
Time = 4
time_step( Time + lab_time)
memory.log( "Parent", "{time} fork".format(time=Time))
# Wait for child process to finish
os.waitpid( pid, 0)
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