Bug #9035
closed[proposal] new RUBY_GC_HEAP_GROWTH_MAX_OBJ tuning parameter
Description
=begin
= Background
Currently, whenever the Ruby GC runs out of object slots the heap is grown by 1.8x (((%GC_HEAP_GROWTH_FACTOR%))).
This works well for small programs, but given a large application it will cause rapid increase in memory.
For example, if a ruby program is using 1 million objects and runs out of slots, it will grow to 1.8 million objects.
This is a huge increase.
= Proposal
Introduce ((%RUBY_GC_HEAP_GROWTH_MAX_OBJ%)) to avoid exponential growth in larger ruby applications.
After this limit is reached, heap growth will happen linearly instead of exponentially.
For example, if ((%growth_max=100k%)) then the application above will grow from 1mm objects to 1.1mm objects.
= Discussion
((%RUBY_GC_HEAP_GROWTH_MAX%)) can be represented either in a) bytesize, or b) number of objects.
Arguments for (a)
- more user friendly, since users are exposed primarily to RSS and want to control final RSS value
- a bytesize based formula can include more varibles, for example the size of bitmaps associated with each (({RVALUE}))
Arguments for (b)
- consistent with existing tuning parameters (all object based, i.e. RUBY_HEAP_MIN_SLOTS)
- GC tuning already requires measuring "startup objects", "objects per request", so object based is more friendly
- bytesize is confusing because ((%GROWTH_MAX%)) only controls growth of ruby heap, not total RSS
- this is an advanced feature meant for use by experts (default value will be 0 = no change from behavior)
since experts will be using it, we can assume they have already measured the number of objects in their ruby app first
=end