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stream: improve performance for sync write finishes #30710
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Improve performance and reduce memory usage when a writable stream is written to with the same callback (which is the most common case) and when the write operation finishes synchronously (which is also often the case). confidence improvement accuracy (*) (**) (***) streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='no' n=2000000 0.99 % ±3.20% ±4.28% ±5.61% streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='yes' n=2000000 *** 710.69 % ±19.65% ±26.47% ±35.09% Refs: nodejs#18013 Refs: nodejs#18367
state.afterWriteTickInfo.count++; | ||
} else { | ||
state.afterWriteTickInfo = { count: 1, cb, stream, state }; | ||
process.nextTick(afterWriteTick, state.afterWriteTickInfo); |
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Is there any difference in just using afterWrite
directly here (process.nextTick(afterWrite, stream, ...)
)?
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@mscdex We need to allocate an object anyway so that we can modify count
later, so that’s why it’s not just spreading the arguments right now
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lgtm
how did you find out about this problem? Was this tied with a specific use case? I'm almost never pass a callback to write.
Well … Somebody asked for help privately because they were running a Node.js program, which consisted of a single synchronous loop and printed output using |
LGTM Using the callback is very uncommon in my experience. I'm not sure the extra complexity is worth it? I'm a little worried about the maintenance cost (in general) of streams. I would maybe instead consider looking into why |
Actually looking into this further this is not an optimization just for the callback case, but in general when doing multiple write calls in the same tick. |
Yeah, this also applies when no callback is passed -- that being said, I would understand if people were concerned about this working only for streams that potentially call write callbacks synchronously (although a number of builtin streams do that). |
CI: https://ci.nodejs.org/job/node-test-pull-request/27173/ (:white_check_mark:) |
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
|
||
function afterWrite(stream, state, cb) { | ||
function afterWriteTick({ stream, state, count, cb }) { |
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This might clear the wrong object. I think clearing the count and cb of the passed object is safer then modifying state?
function afterWriteTick(info) {
const { stream, state, count, cb } = info;
info.cb = null;
return afterWrite(stream, state, count, cb);
This would also allow reusing the object and avoiding allocations:
if (!state.afterWriteTickInfo || state.afterWriteTickInfo.cb) {
state.afterWriteTickInfo = { stream, state, cb, count: 1 };
} else {
state.afterWriteTickInfo.cb = cb;
state.afterWriteTickInfo.count = 1;
}
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Not sure if it matter though
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This comment is for the row below.
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@ronag So … the effect of setting afterWriteTickInfo
to null
is that the next time the code above is reached, a new process.nextTick()
call with a new afterWriteTickInfo
object is made. That’s always safe, right?
I think setting .cb
to null would have the same effect, and .count
is cleared anyway. I can do that instead, if you prefer, although it might screw with the map/hidden class of afterWriteTickInfo
, as .cb
is always a function right now.
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I was more thinking of the case where you have two different cbs, e.g.
write('a', cba) // schedule tick a
write('b', cbb) // clear info a, schedule tick b
// ...
// tick a
// clear info b
// tick b
// clear nothing
The a tick will actually clear the info for the b tick.
Probably not a problem, but maybe a little weird... I don't have a strong opinion if you think it's fine.
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it might screw with the map/hidden class
Oh, I didn't know that null
could cause a problems with that once it's been a function type.
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The a tick will actually clear the info for the b tick.
Probably not a problem, but maybe a little weird... I don't have a strong opinion if you think it's fine.
Yeah, I think that’s fine, because it would only make a difference if there’s a write('b', cbb)
inside cba()
, and that seems like a somewhat unlikely scenario, and even then it would only affect performance, not behaviour.
Improve performance and reduce memory usage when a writable stream is written to with the same callback (which is the most common case) and when the write operation finishes synchronously (which is also often the case). confidence improvement accuracy (*) (**) (***) streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='no' n=2000000 0.99 % ±3.20% ±4.28% ±5.61% streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='yes' n=2000000 *** 710.69 % ±19.65% ±26.47% ±35.09% Refs: #18013 Refs: #18367 PR-URL: #30710 Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
Landed in 2205f85 |
Improve performance and reduce memory usage when a writable stream is written to with the same callback (which is the most common case) and when the write operation finishes synchronously (which is also often the case). confidence improvement accuracy (*) (**) (***) streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='no' n=2000000 0.99 % ±3.20% ±4.28% ±5.61% streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='yes' n=2000000 *** 710.69 % ±19.65% ±26.47% ±35.09% Refs: #18013 Refs: #18367 PR-URL: #30710 Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
Improve performance and reduce memory usage when a writable stream is written to with the same callback (which is the most common case) and when the write operation finishes synchronously (which is also often the case). confidence improvement accuracy (*) (**) (***) streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='no' n=2000000 0.99 % ±3.20% ±4.28% ±5.61% streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='yes' n=2000000 *** 710.69 % ±19.65% ±26.47% ±35.09% Refs: #18013 Refs: #18367 PR-URL: #30710 Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
Improve performance and reduce memory usage when a writable stream is written to with the same callback (which is the most common case) and when the write operation finishes synchronously (which is also often the case). confidence improvement accuracy (*) (**) (***) streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='no' n=2000000 0.99 % ±3.20% ±4.28% ±5.61% streams/writable-manywrites.js sync='yes' n=2000000 *** 710.69 % ±19.65% ±26.47% ±35.09% Refs: #18013 Refs: #18367 PR-URL: #30710 Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
Improve performance and reduce memory usage when a writable stream
is written to with the same callback (which is the most common case)
and when the write operation finishes synchronously (which is also
often the case).
Refs: #18013
Refs: #18367
@nodejs/streams @ronag
Checklist
make -j4 test
(UNIX), orvcbuild test
(Windows) passes