We're crashing occasionally here due to an assertion in Span.h. We would
also likely have problems down the road if we tried to cache nullptrs in
the startup cache. I think this is all we need to handle this as gracefully
as we are able - at least, this should make it so the recent StartupCache
changes are no longer making failure any less graceful.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D83189
If the original `NtCreateFile()` call failed, the file handle may have been left untouched, and is therefore probably uninitialized or in another unusable state.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D82647
This should be a relatively straightforward patch. Essentially, we implement
a wrapper class (and friends) around nsZipArchive (and friends), which transparently
caches entries from the underlying zip archive in the StartupCache. This will break
without changes to the StartupCache, made in the patch after this, which allow it
to be used off of the main thread, and outside the main process.
Depends on D77635
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77634
Opening our Omnijars can be expensive, and it should be deferrable until after
startup is completed, provided we have a startup cache. In a previous patch in this
stack, we implemented caching of the zip central directory for omnijars, but we
still have to open the file in order to hand the object off to various omnijar
consumers. In a later patch, we will wrap nsZipArchive access in a class which
will allow us to transparently cache nsZipArchive results. These two get us
most of the way to not needing to read from the underlying omnijar files during
startup, but there are still nontrivial pieces, like nsZipFind for instance,
which we don't want to just duplicate inside of a wrapper class, so we would
like to sort out a way in which we can use an nsZipArchive class, but not
actually back it up with the real underlying file until we really need data
from it which we can't find in a cache.
Depends on D77633
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D78584
We need to be able to init StartupCache before the Omnijar in order to cache
all of the Omnijar contents we access. This patch implements that.
Depends on D77632
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77633
We would like to be able to defer opening the omnijar files until after startup
if the StartupCache has already been populated. Opening the omnijar files takes
a nontrivial time, at least on Windows, and almost everything in the omnijar
should be fairly compressible, and thus makes sense to live in the StartupCache.
See the last patch in this series for a little more discussion on numbers, but
tl;dr: we saw a 12% improvement in time to about:home being finished on reference
hardware with these changes together with the changes from the descendant patches.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77632
This should be a relatively straightforward patch. Essentially, we implement
a wrapper class (and friends) around nsZipArchive (and friends), which transparently
caches entries from the underlying zip archive in the StartupCache. This will break
without changes to the StartupCache, made in the patch after this, which allow it
to be used off of the main thread, and outside the main process.
Depends on D77635
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77634
Opening our Omnijars can be expensive, and it should be deferrable until after
startup is completed, provided we have a startup cache. In a previous patch in this
stack, we implemented caching of the zip central directory for omnijars, but we
still have to open the file in order to hand the object off to various omnijar
consumers. In a later patch, we will wrap nsZipArchive access in a class which
will allow us to transparently cache nsZipArchive results. These two get us
most of the way to not needing to read from the underlying omnijar files during
startup, but there are still nontrivial pieces, like nsZipFind for instance,
which we don't want to just duplicate inside of a wrapper class, so we would
like to sort out a way in which we can use an nsZipArchive class, but not
actually back it up with the real underlying file until we really need data
from it which we can't find in a cache.
Depends on D77633
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D78584
We need to be able to init StartupCache before the Omnijar in order to cache
all of the Omnijar contents we access. This patch implements that.
Depends on D77632
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77633
We would like to be able to defer opening the omnijar files until after startup
if the StartupCache has already been populated. Opening the omnijar files takes
a nontrivial time, at least on Windows, and almost everything in the omnijar
should be fairly compressible, and thus makes sense to live in the StartupCache.
See the last patch in this series for a little more discussion on numbers, but
tl;dr: we saw a 12% improvement in time to about:home being finished on reference
hardware with these changes together with the changes from the descendant patches.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77632
This should be a relatively straightforward patch. Essentially, we implement
a wrapper class (and friends) around nsZipArchive (and friends), which transparently
caches entries from the underlying zip archive in the StartupCache. This will break
without changes to the StartupCache, made in the patch after this, which allow it
to be used off of the main thread, and outside the main process.
Depends on D77635
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77634
Opening our Omnijars can be expensive, and it should be deferrable until after
startup is completed, provided we have a startup cache. In a previous patch in this
stack, we implemented caching of the zip central directory for omnijars, but we
still have to open the file in order to hand the object off to various omnijar
consumers. In a later patch, we will wrap nsZipArchive access in a class which
will allow us to transparently cache nsZipArchive results. These two get us
most of the way to not needing to read from the underlying omnijar files during
startup, but there are still nontrivial pieces, like nsZipFind for instance,
which we don't want to just duplicate inside of a wrapper class, so we would
like to sort out a way in which we can use an nsZipArchive class, but not
actually back it up with the real underlying file until we really need data
from it which we can't find in a cache.
Depends on D77633
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D78584
We need to be able to init StartupCache before the Omnijar in order to cache
all of the Omnijar contents we access. This patch implements that.
Depends on D77632
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77633
We would like to be able to defer opening the omnijar files until after startup
if the StartupCache has already been populated. Opening the omnijar files takes
a nontrivial time, at least on Windows, and almost everything in the omnijar
should be fairly compressible, and thus makes sense to live in the StartupCache.
See the last patch in this series for a little more discussion on numbers, but
tl;dr: we saw a 12% improvement in time to about:home being finished on reference
hardware with these changes together with the changes from the descendant patches.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77632
Use `GetFileType(HANDLE)` on Windows.
Unlike `HandleToFilename`, `GetFileType` is fast enough that we don't need to use a `SmallArrayLRUCache` for it.
The pipe I/Os should not be visible anymore in the startup tests.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D82303
Platform-specific observations will be able to specify a file type.
They will appear in distinct rows in the profiler.firefox.com Marker Chart.
The default type is "File", which is shown in markers as "FileIO" like before.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D80399
Caching filenames in 32-entry LRU array covers >95% of calls, and makes the average `Filename()` call 5 to 10 times cheaper.
browser_start_content_mainthreadio.js needed to be updated to handle operations that now have a filename thanks to the cache.
Since `ClearPoisonIOInterposer()` is never called (see bug 1647107), during Firefox shutdown we put LRUCache in a shutdown mode, which bypasses the cache in case it is still used at that time.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D79767
This should be a relatively straightforward patch. Essentially, we implement
a wrapper class (and friends) around nsZipArchive (and friends), which transparently
caches entries from the underlying zip archive in the StartupCache. This will break
without changes to the StartupCache, made in the patch after this, which allow it
to be used off of the main thread, and outside the main process.
Depends on D77635
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77634
Opening our Omnijars can be expensive, and it should be deferrable until after
startup is completed, provided we have a startup cache. In a previous patch in this
stack, we implemented caching of the zip central directory for omnijars, but we
still have to open the file in order to hand the object off to various omnijar
consumers. In a later patch, we will wrap nsZipArchive access in a class which
will allow us to transparently cache nsZipArchive results. These two get us
most of the way to not needing to read from the underlying omnijar files during
startup, but there are still nontrivial pieces, like nsZipFind for instance,
which we don't want to just duplicate inside of a wrapper class, so we would
like to sort out a way in which we can use an nsZipArchive class, but not
actually back it up with the real underlying file until we really need data
from it which we can't find in a cache.
Depends on D77633
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D78584
We need to be able to init StartupCache before the Omnijar in order to cache
all of the Omnijar contents we access. This patch implements that.
Depends on D77632
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77633
We would like to be able to defer opening the omnijar files until after startup
if the StartupCache has already been populated. Opening the omnijar files takes
a nontrivial time, at least on Windows, and almost everything in the omnijar
should be fairly compressible, and thus makes sense to live in the StartupCache.
See the last patch in this series for a little more discussion on numbers, but
tl;dr: we saw a 12% improvement in time to about:home being finished on reference
hardware with these changes together with the changes from the descendant patches.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77632
This should be a relatively straightforward patch. Essentially, we implement
a wrapper class (and friends) around nsZipArchive (and friends), which transparently
caches entries from the underlying zip archive in the StartupCache. This will break
without changes to the StartupCache, made in the patch after this, which allow it
to be used off of the main thread, and outside the main process.
Depends on D77635
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77634
Opening our Omnijars can be expensive, and it should be deferrable until after
startup is completed, provided we have a startup cache. In a previous patch in this
stack, we implemented caching of the zip central directory for omnijars, but we
still have to open the file in order to hand the object off to various omnijar
consumers. In a later patch, we will wrap nsZipArchive access in a class which
will allow us to transparently cache nsZipArchive results. These two get us
most of the way to not needing to read from the underlying omnijar files during
startup, but there are still nontrivial pieces, like nsZipFind for instance,
which we don't want to just duplicate inside of a wrapper class, so we would
like to sort out a way in which we can use an nsZipArchive class, but not
actually back it up with the real underlying file until we really need data
from it which we can't find in a cache.
Depends on D77633
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D78584
We need to be able to init StartupCache before the Omnijar in order to cache
all of the Omnijar contents we access. This patch implements that.
Depends on D77632
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77633
We would like to be able to defer opening the omnijar files until after startup
if the StartupCache has already been populated. Opening the omnijar files takes
a nontrivial time, at least on Windows, and almost everything in the omnijar
should be fairly compressible, and thus makes sense to live in the StartupCache.
See the last patch in this series for a little more discussion on numbers, but
tl;dr: we saw a 12% improvement in time to about:home being finished on reference
hardware with these changes together with the changes from the descendant patches.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77632
Caching filenames in 32-entry LRU array covers >95% of calls, and makes the average `Filename()` call 5 to 10 times cheaper.
browser_start_content_mainthreadio.js needed to be updated to handle operations that now have a filename thanks to the cache.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D79767
After investigating the potential to reduce the nsTerminator's crash timeout from
1 min, to 20s, and then finally 40s, we have decided to this does not provide
significant gains to justify increasing the amount of shutdown hang crashes
and potential to lose data. We should maintain the crash timeout at 1 min.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77939
People seemed to be taking the comment as indicative that Services.py
wasn't providing everything they needed, so make it clearer that you can
still get `nsIXULAppInfo`, you just have to work a little harder.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D77477
During the last cycle collection, state watchers may attempt to dispatch tasks to the current AbstractThread, so we can't clear the TLS entry until that step has completed.
We want the object to be deleted last; ordering in call to ClearOnShutdown() can't guarantee it.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D75498
In practice this shouldn't substantially change the behavior, but
it gets around being UB, and it shouldn't really cost us in terms
of performance. The alternative would be adding it to the TSAN
whitelist, which feels worse.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D72015