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Bug #18293

closed

Time.at in master branch was 25% slower then Ruby 3.0

Added by watson1978 (Shizuo Fujita) over 2 years ago. Updated over 2 years ago.

Status:
Closed
Target version:
-
ruby -v:
ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-08T13:15:21Z master bd2674ad33) [arm64-darwin21]
[ruby-core:105967]

Description

Ruby 3.0.2 Ruby 3.1.0-dev result
Time.at 8.223M 6.190M 0.753x

Environment

  • MacBook Pro (14inch, 2021)
  • macOS 12.0
  • Apple M1 Max
  • Apple clang version 13.0.0 (clang-1300.0.29.3)

Ruby 3.1.0-dev

$ ruby -v time.rb
ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-08T13:15:21Z master bd2674ad33) [arm64-darwin21]
Warming up --------------------------------------
             Time.at   614.843k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
             Time.at      6.190M (± 0.3%) i/s -     31.357M in   5.065559s

Ruby 3.0.2

$ ruby -v time.rb
ruby 3.0.2p107 (2021-07-07 revision 0db68f0233) [arm64-darwin21]
Warming up --------------------------------------
             Time.at   821.722k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
             Time.at      8.223M (± 0.6%) i/s -     41.908M in   5.096820s

Test code

require 'benchmark/ips'

Benchmark.ips do |x|
  x.report('Time.at') { Time.at(0) }
end

Files

patch.diff (2.52 KB) patch.diff k0kubun (Takashi Kokubun), 11/10/2021 04:23 AM
Actions #1

Updated by watson1978 (Shizuo Fujita) over 2 years ago

  • ruby -v set to ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-08T13:15:21Z master bd2674ad33) [arm64-darwin21]

Updated by peterzhu2118 (Peter Zhu) over 2 years ago

I was able to repro this on Ubuntu 20.04 on an AMD CPU. Looks like moving these functions from time.c to timev.rb is the reason.

77e7082e824af8523c1e7c3bfc111c2e52e7e3b3 (Moved Time.at to builtin)

             Time.at      5.663M (± 0.7%) i/s -     28.836M in   5.092655s
            Time.now      5.077M (± 0.8%) i/s -     25.841M in   5.089906s

9101597d05ef645949bab3a210d8fa5e61de26e3 (Moved Time.now to builtin)

             Time.at      7.755M (± 0.7%) i/s -     39.139M in   5.047441s
            Time.now      5.001M (± 0.8%) i/s -     25.217M in   5.042618s

d5fb51d2d3a7ba0e16042282d0f94c5336ed2cc1 (Add time.rb as builtin)

             Time.at      7.882M (± 0.7%) i/s -     39.532M in   5.015832s
            Time.now      5.450M (± 0.4%) i/s -     27.564M in   5.057575s

Updated by k0kubun (Takashi Kokubun) over 2 years ago

Could anybody share use cases (preferably a link to a particular code calling it) where Time.at's performance matters?

Updated by byroot (Jean Boussier) over 2 years ago

It's quite a hotspot in our cache serializers:

All Active Record models have at least two Time instances, often a few more, so when you cache a few hundreds or thousand records for say a product collection page, it's not rare for Time.at to show up in production profiles as 2-3% of total request time.

Most people however use Marshal for this, so they'll see Time#_dump instead.

Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) over 2 years ago

I think it'd be good to understand the slow down here.

Is it due to having the method in Ruby and using Primitive.?
It seems unexpectedly high for that.

Or maybe the fact there is a declared keyword argument is slow if the kwarg is not given?
But that's not new, e.g. read_nonblock uses this pattern since a long time.

Updated by k0kubun (Takashi Kokubun) over 2 years ago

Time.at has complicated default arguments. I believe that would result in 5 local variable assignments in VM and be the bottleneck.

If you apply the attached patch and use this benchmark script:

benchmark:
  - Time.at(0)
  - Time.at_c(0)
  - Time.at_1arg(0)

the result is:

$ benchmark-driver -v /tmp/a.yml --rbenv=ruby
ruby: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-10T01:08:48Z master af74cc7504) [x86_64-linux]
Warming up --------------------------------------
          Time.at(0)     6.141M i/s -      6.164M times in 1.003748s (162.85ns/i, 618clocks/i)
        Time.at_c(0)     9.847M i/s -      9.945M times in 1.009962s (101.56ns/i, 385clocks/i)
     Time.at_1arg(0)     8.976M i/s -      9.089M times in 1.012540s (111.40ns/i, 423clocks/i)
Calculating -------------------------------------
          Time.at(0)     6.691M i/s -     18.422M times in 2.753387s (149.47ns/i, 567clocks/i)
        Time.at_c(0)    11.616M i/s -     29.541M times in 2.543150s (86.09ns/i, 327clocks/i)
     Time.at_1arg(0)    10.710M i/s -     26.929M times in 2.514397s (93.37ns/i, 354clocks/i)

Comparison:
        Time.at_c(0):  11615765.0 i/s
     Time.at_1arg(0):  10709979.3 i/s - 1.08x  slower
          Time.at(0):   6690511.4 i/s - 1.74x  slower

So the bottleneck seems to be not the Primitive. call but the complicated default argument behavior.

Updated by byroot (Jean Boussier) over 2 years ago

I don't understand why we need to detect wether the parameters were passed, why can't we just have default values?

>> Time.at(946702800, 0, :usec)  == Time.at(946702800)
=> true

Or am I missing something?

Updated by k0kubun (Takashi Kokubun) over 2 years ago

FYI, the current iseq is:

irb(main)[01:0]> puts RubyVM::InstructionSequence.of(Time.method(:at)).disasm
== disasm: #<ISeq:at@<internal:timev>:270 (270,2)-(272,5)> (catch: FALSE)
local table (size: 7, argc: 1 [opts: 2, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: 1@0, kwrest: -1])
[ 7] time@0<Arg>[ 6] subsec@1<Opt=0>[ 5] unit@2<Opt=7>[ 4] in@3       [ 3] ?@4        [ 2] nosubsec@5 [ 1] nounit@6
0000 putobject                              true                      ( 270)[Li]
0002 dup
0003 setlocal_WC_0                          nosubsec@5
0005 setlocal_WC_0                          subsec@1
0007 putobject                              true
0009 dup
0010 setlocal_WC_0                          nounit@6
0012 setlocal_WC_0                          unit@2
0014 getlocal_WC_0                          time@0                    ( 271)[LiCa]
0016 getlocal_WC_0                          subsec@1
0018 getlocal_WC_0                          unit@2
0020 getlocal_WC_0                          in@3
0022 getlocal_WC_0                          nosubsec@5
0024 getlocal_WC_0                          nounit@6
0026 invokebuiltin                          <builtin!time_s_at/6>
0028 leave                                                            ( 272)[Re]

obviously this would be slower than things like:

irb(main)[02:0]> puts RubyVM::InstructionSequence.of(Kernel.method(:Float)).disasm
== disasm: #<ISeq:Float@<internal:kernel>:171 (171,2)-(173,5)> (catch: FALSE)
local table (size: 3, argc: 1 [opts: 0, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: 1@0, kwrest: -1])
[ 3] arg@0<Arg> [ 2] exception@1[ 1] ?@2
0000 opt_invokebuiltin_delegate_leave       <builtin!rb_f_float/2>, 0 ( 172)[LiCa]
0003 leave                                                            ( 173)[Re]

I don't understand why we need to detect wether the parameters were passed, why can't we just have default values?

I'm not aware of that, but if we can eliminate nosubsec and nounit local variables, we could convert invokebuiltin to opt_invokebuiltin_delegate_leave and I guess that would be a large improvement. It would then look like:

== disasm: #<ISeq:at@<internal:timev>:274 (274,2)-(276,5)> (catch: FALSE)
local table (size: 5, argc: 1 [opts: 2, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: 1@0, kwrest: -1])
[ 5] time@0<Arg>[ 4] subsec@1<Opt=0>[ 3] unit@2<Opt=4>[ 2] in@3       [ 1] ?@4
0000 putobject                              true                      ( 274)
0002 setlocal_WC_0                          subsec@1
0004 putobject                              true
0006 setlocal_WC_0                          unit@2
0008 opt_invokebuiltin_delegate_leave       <builtin!time_s_at2/4>, 0 ( 275)[LiCa]
0011 leave                                                            ( 276)[Re]

It'd be nice if we can eliminate setlocal for subsec and unit as well, but it seems inevitable as long as you use positional arguments with default values.

Actions #9

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) over 2 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Closed

Applied in changeset git|83bdc2f00c4565a091d88399e5a315a96f6afed6.


Simplify default values of Time.at [Bug #18293]

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) over 2 years ago

  • Status changed from Closed to Open

I thought and tried it but still 10% slower than 3.0.

Actions #11

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) over 2 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Closed

Applied in changeset git|8bcff5604b15fd29f357669dd8cb65a6618c9926.


Tentative fix of subsec to Time.at [Bug #18293]

Actions #12

Updated by byroot (Jean Boussier) over 2 years ago

  • Status changed from Closed to Open

Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) over 2 years ago

FYI in TruffleRuby when we need to know if an argument is passed or not we use a default value of undefined which would be just Qundef in CRuby.
It works well and it's efficient to check (identity check).
For the anecdote, that's an heritage from Rubinius.

Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) over 2 years ago

On current master I get 6044704 i/s and 5368058 i/s on 3.0.2, 11.2% slower.

Updated by k0kubun (Takashi Kokubun) over 2 years ago

Current status:

$ cat /tmp/a.yml
benchmark:
  - Time.at(0)

$ benchmark-driver -v --rbenv '3.0.0;before;after' /tmp/a.yml
3.0.0: ruby 3.0.0p0 (2020-12-25 revision 95aff21468) [x86_64-darwin19]
before: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-10T08:42:09Z master cc33d07f46) [x86_64-darwin19]
after: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-10T09:14:14Z master 8bcff5604b) [x86_64-darwin19]
Warming up --------------------------------------
          Time.at(0)     4.058M i/s -      4.169M times in 1.027334s (246.42ns/i)
Calculating -------------------------------------
                          3.0.0      before       after
          Time.at(0)     4.664M      3.559M      3.957M i/s -     12.175M times in 2.610444s 3.421049s 3.077017s

Comparison:
                       Time.at(0)
               3.0.0:   4663774.1 i/s
               after:   3956598.5 i/s - 1.18x  slower
              before:   3558709.9 i/s - 1.31x  slower
irb(main)[01:0]> puts RubyVM::InstructionSequence.of(Time.method(:at)).disasm
== disasm: #<ISeq:at@<internal:timev>:270 (270,2)-(272,5)> (catch: FALSE)
local table (size: 5, argc: 1 [opts: 2, rest: -1, post: 0, block: -1, kw: 1@0, kwrest: -1])
[ 5] time@0<Arg>[ 4] subsec@1<Opt=0>[ 3] unit@2<Opt=4>[ 2] in@3       [ 1] ?@4
0000 putobject                              false                     ( 270)
0002 setlocal_WC_0                          subsec@1
0004 putobject                              :microsecond
0006 setlocal_WC_0                          unit@2
0008 opt_invokebuiltin_delegate_leave       <builtin!time_s_at/4>, 0  ( 271)[LiCa]
0011 leave                                                            ( 272)[Re]

Updated by k0kubun (Takashi Kokubun) over 2 years ago

It seems like C -> builtin conversion makes method calls with keyword arguments faster, but C seems faster on method calls without keyword arguments if the method has keyword arguments (with default values).

$ benchmark-driver -v --rbenv '3.0.0;master::after' /tmp/a.yml
3.0.0: ruby 3.0.0p0 (2020-12-25 revision 95aff21468) [x86_64-darwin19]
master: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-10T09:14:14Z master 8bcff5604b) [x86_64-darwin19]
Calculating -------------------------------------
                            3.0.0      master
            Time.at(0)     4.825M      4.025M i/s -     10.000M times in 2.072430s 2.484322s
Time.at(0, in: -"UTC")     1.388M      1.546M i/s -     10.000M times in 7.205443s 6.466879s

Comparison:
                         Time.at(0)
                 3.0.0:   4825253.4 i/s
                master:   4025243.1 i/s - 1.20x  slower

             Time.at(0, in: -"UTC")
                master:   1546341.0 i/s
                 3.0.0:   1387839.7 i/s - 1.11x  slower

Updated by k0kubun (Takashi Kokubun) over 2 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Closed
  • Assignee set to ko1 (Koichi Sasada)

Thanks to 2a3d5d661ce2cadad50aa5d72b54e134da54f5f3, master is no longer 25% slower than Ruby 3.0.0 at Time.at(0).

$ benchmark-driver -v --rbenv='3.0.0;master::ruby' benchmark/time_at.yml
3.0.0: ruby 3.0.0p0 (2020-12-25 revision 95aff21468) [x86_64-linux]
master: ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-15T06:58:56Z master f943264565) [x86_64-linux]
Warming up --------------------------------------
                   Time.at(0)     9.546M i/s -      9.734M times in 1.019744s (104.76ns/i, 398clocks/i)
              Time.at(0, 500)     9.457M i/s -      9.680M times in 1.023522s (105.74ns/i, 370clocks/i)
     Time.at(0, in: "+09:00")     1.977M i/s -      2.044M times in 1.033743s (505.75ns/i)
Time.at(0, 500, in: "+09:00")     1.821M i/s -      1.902M times in 1.044507s (549.27ns/i)
Calculating -------------------------------------
                                   3.0.0      master
                   Time.at(0)    10.477M     13.172M i/s -     28.637M times in 2.733200s 2.174097s
              Time.at(0, 500)     9.686M      7.931M i/s -     28.371M times in 2.929153s 3.577184s
     Time.at(0, in: "+09:00")     1.823M      2.542M i/s -      5.932M times in 3.253225s 2.333703s
Time.at(0, 500, in: "+09:00")     1.959M      2.448M i/s -      5.462M times in 2.787425s 2.230970s

Comparison:
                                Time.at(0)
                       master:  13171774.0 i/s
                        3.0.0:  10477358.7 i/s - 1.26x  slower

                           Time.at(0, 500)
                        3.0.0:   9685817.8 i/s
                       master:   7931166.6 i/s - 1.22x  slower

                  Time.at(0, in: "+09:00")
                       master:   2541815.3 i/s
                        3.0.0:   1823372.9 i/s - 1.39x  slower

             Time.at(0, 500, in: "+09:00")
                       master:   2448156.1 i/s
                        3.0.0:   1959429.5 i/s - 1.25x  slower

Updated by byroot (Jean Boussier) over 2 years ago

  • Status changed from Closed to Open

I'm afraid that last patch introduced a regression:

> Time.at(123, 123123)
=> 1970-01-01 00:02:03.123123 +0000
> Time.at(*[123, 123123])
<internal:timev>:271:in `at': wrong number of arguments (given 2, expected 1) (ArgumentError)

Updated by byroot (Jean Boussier) over 2 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Closed

Fixed in 1af8ed5f0a2c381c5dee4a5bcffff61f270c30d9

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