Avoid sorting in hash map stable hashing
Suggested by `@the8472` [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89404#issuecomment-991813333). I hope that I understood it right, I replaced the sort with modular multiplication, which should be commutative.
Can I ask for a perf. run? However, locally it didn't help at all. Creating the `StableHasher` all over again is probably slowing it down quite a lot. And using `FxHasher` is not straightforward, because the keys and values only implement `HashStable` (and probably they shouldn't be just hashed via `Hash` anyway for it to actually be stable).
Maybe the `StableHash` interface could be changed somehow to better suppor these scenarios where the hasher is short-lived. Or the `StableHasher` implementation could have variants with e.g. a shorter buffer for these scenarios.
Slightly optimize hash map stable hashing
I was profiling some of the `rustc-perf` benchmarks locally and noticed that quite some time is spent inside the stable hash of hashmaps. I tried to use a `SmallVec` instead of a `Vec` there, which helped very slightly.
Then I tried to remove the sorting, which was a bottleneck, and replaced it with insertion into a binary heap. Locally, it yielded nice improvements in instruction counts and RSS in several benchmarks for incremental builds. The implementation could probably be much nicer and possibly extended to other stable hashes, but first I wanted to test the perf impact properly.
Can I ask someone to do a perf run? Thank you!
This largely avoids remapping from and to the 'real' indices, with the exception
of predecessor lookup and the final merge back, and is conceptually better.
As the paper indicates, the unprocessed vertices in the DFS tree and processed
vertices are disjoint, and we can use them in the same space, tracking only the index
of the split.
This replaces the previous implementation with the simple variant of
Lengauer-Tarjan, which performs better in the general case. Performance on the
keccak benchmark is about equivalent between the two, but we don't see
regressions (and indeed see improvements) on other benchmarks, even on a
partially optimized implementation.
The implementation here follows that of the pseudocode in "Linear-Time
Algorithms for Dominators and Related Problems" thesis by Loukas Georgiadis. The
next few commits will optimize the implementation as suggested in the thesis.
Several related works are cited in the comments within the implementation, as
well.
Implement the simple Lengauer-Tarjan algorithm
This replaces the previous implementation (from #34169), which has not been
optimized since, with the simple variant of Lengauer-Tarjan which performs
better in the general case. A previous attempt -- not kept in commit history --
attempted a replacement with a bitset-based implementation, but this led to
regressions on perf.rust-lang.org benchmarks and equivalent wins for the keccak
benchmark, so was rejected.
The implementation here follows that of the pseudocode in "Linear-Time
Algorithms for Dominators and Related Problems" thesis by Loukas Georgiadis. The
next few commits will optimize the implementation as suggested in the thesis.
Several related works are cited in the comments within the implementation, as
well.
On the keccak benchmark, we were previously spending 15% of our cycles computing
the NCA / intersect function; this function is quite expensive, especially on
modern CPUs, as it chases pointers on every iteration in a tight loop. With this
commit, we spend ~0.05% of our time in dominator computation.
There's a conversation in the tracking issue about possibly unaccepting `in_band_lifetimes`, but it's used heavily in the compiler, and thus there'd need to be a bunch of PRs like this if that were to happen.
So here's one to see how much of an impact it has.
(Oh, and I removed `nll` while I was here too, since it didn't seem needed. Let me know if I should put that back.)
Implement write() method for Box<MaybeUninit<T>>
This adds method similar to `MaybeUninit::write` main difference being
it returns owned `Box`. This can be used to elide copy from stack
safely, however it's not currently tested that the optimization actually
occurs.
Analogous methods are not provided for `Rc` and `Arc` as those need to
handle the possibility of sharing. Some version of them may be added in
the future.
This was discussed in #63291 which this change extends.
This adds method similar to `MaybeUninit::write` main difference being
it returns owned `Box`. This can be used to elide copy from stack
safely, however it's not currently tested that the optimization actually
occurs.
Analogous methods are not provided for `Rc` and `Arc` as those need to
handle the possibility of sharing. Some version of them may be added in
the future.
This was discussed in #63291 which this change extends.
Revert "Add rustc lint, warning when iterating over hashmaps"
Fixes perf regressions introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90235 by temporarily reverting the relevant PR.
Particularly for ctfe-stress-4, the hashing of byte slices as part of the
MIR Allocation is quite hot. Previously, we were falling back on byte-by-byte
copying of the slice into the SipHash buffer (64 bytes long) before hashing a 64
byte chunk, and then doing that again and again.
This should hopefully be an improvement for that code.
Stabilize `const_panic`
Closes#51999
FCP completed in #89006
```@rustbot``` label +A-const-eval +A-const-fn +T-lang
cc ```@oli-obk``` for review (not `r?`'ing as not on lang team)
Rework DepthFirstSearch API
This expands the API to be more flexible, allowing for more visitation patterns
on graphs. This will be useful to avoid extra datasets (and allocations) in
cases where the expanded DFS API is sufficient.
This also fixes a bug with the previous DFS constructor, which left the start
node not marked as visited (even though it was immediately returned).
Commit written by ```@nikomatsakis``` originally, cherry picked from several commits in work on never type stabilization, but stands alone.
This expands the API to be more flexible, allowing for more visitation patterns
on graphs. This will be useful to avoid extra datasets (and allocations) in
cases where the expanded DFS API is sufficient.
This also fixes a bug with the previous DFS constructor, which left the start
node not marked as visited (even though it was immediately returned).
Remove SmallVector mention
SmallVector is long gone, as it's been first replaced
by OneVector in commit e5e6375352,
which then has been removed entirely in favour of SmallVec in
commit 130a32fa72.
SmallVector is long gone, as it's been first replaced
by OneVector in commit e5e6375352,
which then has been removed entirely in favour of SmallVec in
commit 130a32fa72.
Make mir borrowck's use of opaque types independent of the typeck query's result
fixes#87218fixes#86465
we used to use the typeck results only to generate an obligation for the mir borrowck type to be equal to the typeck result.
When i removed the `fixup_opaque_types` function in #87200, I exposed a bug that showed that mir borrowck can't doesn't get enough information from typeck in order to build the correct lifetime mapping from opaque type usage to the actual concrete type. We therefor now fully compute the information within mir borrowck (we already did that, but we only used it to verify the typeck result) and stop using the typeck information.
We will likely be able to remove most opaque type information from the borrowck results in the future and just have all current callers use the mir borrowck result instead.
r? `@spastorino`
Profile incremental compilation hashing fingerprints
Adds profiling instrumentation for the hashing of incremental compilation fingerprints per query.
This will eventually feed into the `measureme` and `rustc-perf` infrastructure for tracking if computing hashes changes over time.
TODOs:
* [x] Address the FIXME where we are including node interning in the hash timing.
* [ ] Update measureme/summarize to handle this new data: https://github.com/rust-lang/measureme/pull/166
* [ ] ~Update rustc-perf to handle the new data from measureme~ (will be done at a later time)
r? `@ghost`
cc `@michaelwoerister`
Don't use a generator for BoxedResolver
The generator is non-trivial and requires unsafe code anyway. Using regular unsafe code without a generator is much easier to follow.
Based on #85810 as it touches rustc_interface too.