Feature #19874
closedRe-introduce heap sort by pinned count prior to GC compaction
Description
See Github PR: #8420
Introduction¶
In Ruby 2.7 compaction was originally introduced as an experimental feature.
There was no auto-compaction, and compaction had to be manually triggered using
GC.compact
.
See this commit.
When this happened, at the start of compaction the heap was sorted so that pages
containing the most pinned slots were compacted into by
default.
This was important for compaction efficiency and copy on write friendliness as
it prioritises filling pages that can't be free'd and emptying as many pages as possible.
When GC.auto_compact
, was introduced in this commit. This heap sorting
mechanism was (unintentionally?) removed.
This means that the heap is now unsorted when compacted and we're just
compacting towards the lowest addresses from the higher ones.
This PR re-introduces this feature: by default the heap will now be sorted by
pinned object count prior to compaction.
This will improve the CoW friendliness of compaction to aid the reforking work
being carried out by @byroot (Jean Boussier).
Verifying the behaviour¶
We used a test script to build a heap that would be laid out in a prescribed
manner. with a predictable pinning pattern in order to test that pages with
higher numbers of pinned objects are being filled first during compaction.
Test script was as follows:
require 'fiddle'
require 'objspace'
objcount = 1_000_000
GC.disable
list = []
# Create sparsely populated pages
32000.times do
list << Object.new
Object.new
Object.new
Object.new
Object.new
Object.new
Object.new
end
# less sparsely populated pages
32000.times do
list << Object.new
Object.new
Object.new
Object.new
end
# densly populated pages
32000.times do
list << Object.new
Object.new
end
# packed pages
32000.times do
list << Object.new
end
# Pin the set of objects and free the rest in order to create our controlled heap
pinned = list.map { |x| Fiddle::Pinned.new(x) }
GC.start
# Dump the heap before compaction, this should contain lots of pages that contain
# only pinned slots, in varying density patterns, followed by a solid chunk of
# movable objects in the 40 byte size pool (these are the objects created by
# `Fiddle::Pinned.new`).
f = File.open("before.log", "w")
ObjectSpace.dump_all(shapes: false, output: f)
GC.compact
GC.start
puts `ps -o rss= -p #{$$}`
# Dump the heap after compaction, this should show the same density pattern that we saw
# in the previous dump, but this time the solid region of 40 byte objects should be compacted
# into the pages with the most pinned objects first
f = File.open("after.log", "w")
ObjectSpace.dump_all(shapes: false, output: f)
Heap diagram before¶
This diagram shows heap pages vertically with the pinned object distribution pattern set up by the test script.
Heap diagram after (master branch)¶
This diagram shows the heap having been compacted without this patch. We can see that the heap has not been sorted by pages, and that movable objects (green) are being compacted into pages that contain fewer pinned objects, and leaving pages that contain lots of pinned objects sparsely populated.
Heap diagram after (this branch)¶
This diagram shows the heap having been compacted into pinned pages. This diagram shows pages sorted by their order in the heap->pages
list. So will respect the sorting that happens during compaction.
Benchmarking¶
Compaction speed¶
This plot shows mean and standard deviation of GC.compact
time for 6 runs of the test script defined above on both this branch and master. Measured using Benchmark.bm
Raw values are:
branch name | mean | std deviation |
---|---|---|
this branch | 0.0125643333 | 0.0004797644 |
master | 0.0121891667 | 0.0008149953 |
This data appears shows a 3% slowdown in GC compation times on this branch which is expected given the extra work required to sort the heap prior to compaction.
However, given the sizeable overlap in the error bars we can conclude that this difference is not significant.
Post compaction RSS¶
We used a modified test script that created a heap with a lot of pinned slots at the end of the heap.
The expected outcome is that if the heap remains unsorted, RSS will be higher because objects will be packed into the front of the heap, and then followed by sparsely populated pages of pinned objects.
In a sorted heap, the objects will be packed in around the pages of pinned objects where possible allowing more empty pages to be free'd and RSS to be lower.
Here is the test script used:
require 'fiddle'
GC.disable
list = []
288000.times do
Object.new
end
36000.times do
list << Object.new
50.times do
Object.new
end
end
pinned = list.map { |x| Fiddle::Pinned.new(x) }
GC.start
GC.compact
puts `ps -o rss= -p #{$$}`
And here is the outcome:
Raw data:
branch name | mean | std deviation |
---|---|---|
this branch | 92200.0000 | 332.9769 |
master | 93594.6667 | 188.9536 |
We can see from this data that sorting the heap by pinned pages results in a 1.5% decrease in memory usage, and we can infer from the non-overlapping error bars that this is likely to be statistically significant.
Conclusion¶
Re-introducing heap sorting by pinned slots prior to compaction improves memory usage of a Ruby process by a statistically significant amount. It does this at a very slight, and likely insignificant performance penalty, which we believe to be acceptable given that GC compaction is currently a fairly major "stop the world" event that should only be done occasionally. For example, before forking.