-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 30k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Debugging: name every function #8913
Comments
This applies to 4.x & master. I did not check 6.x, I assume 6.x and master are the same. |
We can't name arrow functions though. Since those are done for perf reasons you'd still need to live with them... :/ |
@Fishrock123 out of curiosity (pardon if this venue isn't suited for inquiry); pre-assigning the arrow function before usage does retain the naming while |
@fl0w you mean assigning to a variable means you get the variable name? You can't assign names to arrow functions like to regular functions though. |
const a = () => 42;
a.name; // returns 'a' works since V8 5.1, so that should be possible. |
@Fishrock123 @addaleax answered before me - I was wondering if that was an overhead you were referring to in your original comment. koajs/koa#805 (comment) for pictures |
Do you have a link to a demonstration that arrows are more performant. I suspect named function declarations would be more performant then arrow functions. |
V8 doesn't have to worry about super and new.target when emitting code for arrow functions. It's a minor thing and probably not much of an issue once the function makes it to the optimizing tier but it means that core should lean towards arrow functions, all other things being equal. |
@Raynos anywhere where Other than that, they are only marginally different like @bnoordhuis said. The best rule of thumb is use them where you need the lexical |
Thanks for input @Fishrock123 @bnoordhuis Agreed that I wrote a quick benchmark ( https://gist.github.com/Raynos/93d275463a90306b4b0779fed308550c ). Having a named function declaration;
Instead of I suspect using a technique that improves heap introspection is more valuable then saving a few lines of code. Especially if the allocation and calling performance of both is the same. |
In your benchmark the arrow/non-arrow functions are optimized almost right from the start but that's not very representative of long tail code (code that gets called periodically but not frequently enough to get optimized.)
It's not a theoretical concern either. Over the years I've fixed several memory leaks in core that were the result of over-capturing. |
@soleboxy I’d suggest picking a file in |
k thanks 👍 |
@bnoordhuis Over capturing closure variables that leads to leak is a great point. I'm convinced arrow functions are worth using for that alone. Thanks for explaining the details. |
I can take |
@trivikr I think a lot of the PRs currently being opened don’t actually improve the debugging situation – when a function is stored on a property on some object, the engine infers the name from it properly anyway… |
I checked off |
I agree with @addaleax and I think our situation improved significantly since this issue was opened. Not only have we named almost all functions throughout the code but the compiler will now infer the the names very well by now. Therefore I am going to close this as resolved. If someone disagrees, please feel free to reopen. However, even if this is closed, it should of course not keep someone from opening a PR that provides names to functions that can not be inferred. |
Refs: #8913 PR-URL: #21755 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
Refs: #8913 PR-URL: #21754 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]>
PR-URL: nodejs#21753 Refs: nodejs#8913 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
PR-URL: nodejs#21756 Refs: nodejs#8913 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]>
Refs: #8913 PR-URL: #21755 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
Refs: #8913 PR-URL: #21754 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]>
PR-URL: #21753 Refs: #8913 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
PR-URL: #21756 Refs: #8913 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]>
This commit is to help in the effort to name all anonymous functions to help when heap debugging. Specifically, this commit fixes some anonymous functions used as listeners in the lib/ folder. Refs: nodejs#8913
This commit is to help in the effort to name all anonymous functions to help when heap debugging. Specifically, this commit fixes some anonymous functions used as listeners in the lib/ folder. PR-URL: #21412 Reviewed-By: Weijia Wang <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Benjamin Gruenbaum <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Anatoli Papirovski <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]> Refs: #8913
This commit is to help in the effort to name all anonymous functions to help when heap debugging. Specifically, this commit fixes some anonymous functions used as listeners in the lib/ folder. PR-URL: #21412 Reviewed-By: Weijia Wang <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Benjamin Gruenbaum <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Anatoli Papirovski <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Jon Moss <[email protected]> Refs: #8913
There are too many anonymous functions in the source code which makes heap debugging frustrating
This
once('response')
listener ( https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/master/lib/_http_client.js#L235-L237 ) is anonymous.When I try to debug why I am leaking
response
listeners in a heap snapshotI see that the
listener
in theonce
closure isfunction () {}
which gives me no information. I strongly suspect that it's theabort
listener but i have no evidence for it.There are many, many, many anonymous functions in node core, there should be zero.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: