Граф коммитов

6 Коммитов

Автор SHA1 Сообщение Дата
Kris Maglione e3992a28fd Bug 1361900: Part 5 - Add support for IPC FileDescriptors to AutoMemMap. r=erahm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3HBuKLVNdWT

--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d1edbec1294e41f645c0515a523cf3df5e90af21
extra : source : 540ecb4c1f0fc25725375c7cc5a399a1d2bea5fe
2017-04-30 22:54:00 -07:00
Sebastian Hengst 185936c593 Backed out changeset 540ecb4c1f0f (bug 1361900) 2017-05-13 18:53:35 +02:00
Kris Maglione d3eae9806f Bug 1361900: Part 5 - Add support for IPC FileDescriptors to AutoMemMap. r=erahm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3HBuKLVNdWT

--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b5c331223808810c0dceeafccbbf7a2de7d98bc4
2017-04-30 22:54:00 -07:00
Kris Maglione 15e7adf3aa Bug 1359653: Part 5 - Pre-load scripts needed during startup in a background thread. r=shu,erahm
One of the things that I've noticed in profiling startup overhead is that,
even with the startup cache, we spend about 130ms just loading and decoding
scripts from the startup cache on my machine.

I think we should be able to do better than that by doing some of that work in
the background for scripts that we know we'll need during startup. With this
change, we seem to consistently save about 3-5% on non-e10s startup overhead
on talos. But there's a lot of room for tuning, and I think we get some
considerable improvement with a few ongoing tweeks.

Some notes about the approach:

- Setting up the off-thread compile is fairly expensive, since we need to
create a global object, and a lot of its built-in prototype objects for each
compile. So in order for there to be a performance improvement for OMT
compiles, the script has to be pretty large. Right now, the tipping point
seems to be about 20K.

  There's currently no easy way to improve the per-compile setup overhead, but
we should be able to combine the off-thread compiles for multiple smaller
scripts into a single operation without any additional per-script overhead.

- The time we spend setting up scripts for OMT compile is almost entirely
CPU-bound. That means that we have a chunk of about 20-50ms where we can
safely schedule thread-safe IO work during early startup, so if we schedule
some of our current synchronous IO operations on background threads during the
script cache setup, we basically get them for free, and can probably increase
the number of scripts we compile in the background.

- I went with an uncompressed mmap of the raw XDR data for a storage format.
That currently occupies about 5MB of disk space. Gzipped, it's ~1.2MB, so
compressing it might save some startup disk IO, but keeping it uncompressed
simplifies a lot of the OMT and even main thread decoding process, but, more
importantly:

- We currently don't use the startup cache in content processes, for a variety
of reasons. However, with this approach, I think we can safely store the
cached script data from a content process before we load any untrusted code
into it, and then share mmapped startup cache data between all content
processes. That should speed up content process startup *a lot*, and very
likely save memory, too. And:

- If we're especially concerned about saving per-process memory, and we keep
the cache data mapped for the lifetime of the JS runtime, I think that with
some effort we can probably share the static string data from scripts between
content processes, without any copying. Right now, it looks like for the main
process, there's about 1.5MB of string-ish data in the XDR dumps. It's
probably less for content processes, but if we could save .5MB per process
this way, it might make it easier to increase the number of content processes
we allow.

MozReview-Commit-ID: CVJahyNktKB

--HG--
extra : source : 1c7df945505930d2d86a076ee20807104324c8cc
extra : histedit_source : 75e193839edf727874f01b2a9f6852f6c1f087fb%2C3ce966d7dcf2bd0454a7d673d0467097456bd782
2017-05-06 12:24:22 -07:00
Sebastian Hengst 544da0524c Backed out changeset 1c7df9455059 (bug 1359653) 2017-05-06 11:02:23 +02:00
Kris Maglione a4368ffba1 Bug 1359653: Part 5 - Pre-load scripts needed during startup in a background thread. r=shu,erahm
One of the things that I've noticed in profiling startup overhead is that,
even with the startup cache, we spend about 130ms just loading and decoding
scripts from the startup cache on my machine.

I think we should be able to do better than that by doing some of that work in
the background for scripts that we know we'll need during startup. With this
change, we seem to consistently save about 3-5% on non-e10s startup overhead
on talos. But there's a lot of room for tuning, and I think we get some
considerable improvement with a few ongoing tweeks.

Some notes about the approach:

- Setting up the off-thread compile is fairly expensive, since we need to
create a global object, and a lot of its built-in prototype objects for each
compile. So in order for there to be a performance improvement for OMT
compiles, the script has to be pretty large. Right now, the tipping point
seems to be about 20K.

  There's currently no easy way to improve the per-compile setup overhead, but
we should be able to combine the off-thread compiles for multiple smaller
scripts into a single operation without any additional per-script overhead.

- The time we spend setting up scripts for OMT compile is almost entirely
CPU-bound. That means that we have a chunk of about 20-50ms where we can
safely schedule thread-safe IO work during early startup, so if we schedule
some of our current synchronous IO operations on background threads during the
script cache setup, we basically get them for free, and can probably increase
the number of scripts we compile in the background.

- I went with an uncompressed mmap of the raw XDR data for a storage format.
That currently occupies about 5MB of disk space. Gzipped, it's ~1.2MB, so
compressing it might save some startup disk IO, but keeping it uncompressed
simplifies a lot of the OMT and even main thread decoding process, but, more
importantly:

- We currently don't use the startup cache in content processes, for a variety
of reasons. However, with this approach, I think we can safely store the
cached script data from a content process before we load any untrusted code
into it, and then share mmapped startup cache data between all content
processes. That should speed up content process startup *a lot*, and very
likely save memory, too. And:

- If we're especially concerned about saving per-process memory, and we keep
the cache data mapped for the lifetime of the JS runtime, I think that with
some effort we can probably share the static string data from scripts between
content processes, without any copying. Right now, it looks like for the main
process, there's about 1.5MB of string-ish data in the XDR dumps. It's
probably less for content processes, but if we could save .5MB per process
this way, it might make it easier to increase the number of content processes
we allow.

MozReview-Commit-ID: CVJahyNktKB

--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 2ec24c8b0000f9187a9bf4a096ee8d93403d7ab2
extra : absorb_source : bb9d799d664a03941447a294ac43c54f334ef6f5
2017-05-05 16:15:04 -07:00