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authorC.A.M. Gerlach <CAM.Gerlach@Gerlach.CAM>2023-03-07 02:45:52 (GMT)
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2023-03-07 02:45:52 (GMT)
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gh-95913: Edit Faster CPython section in 3.11 WhatsNew (GH-98429)
Co-authored-by: C.A.M. Gerlach <CAM.Gerlach@Gerlach.CAM>
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/whatsnew/3.11.rst')
-rw-r--r--Doc/whatsnew/3.11.rst186
1 files changed, 109 insertions, 77 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/whatsnew/3.11.rst b/Doc/whatsnew/3.11.rst
index bffb8d0..391ea53 100644
--- a/Doc/whatsnew/3.11.rst
+++ b/Doc/whatsnew/3.11.rst
@@ -1317,14 +1317,17 @@ This section covers specific optimizations independent of the
Faster CPython
==============
-CPython 3.11 is on average `25% faster <https://github.com/faster-cpython/ideas#published-results>`_
-than CPython 3.10 when measured with the
+CPython 3.11 is an average of
+`25% faster <https://github.com/faster-cpython/ideas#published-results>`_
+than CPython 3.10 as measured with the
`pyperformance <https://github.com/python/pyperformance>`_ benchmark suite,
-and compiled with GCC on Ubuntu Linux. Depending on your workload, the speedup
-could be up to 10-60% faster.
+when compiled with GCC on Ubuntu Linux.
+Depending on your workload, the overall speedup could be 10-60%.
-This project focuses on two major areas in Python: faster startup and faster
-runtime. Other optimizations not under this project are listed in `Optimizations`_.
+This project focuses on two major areas in Python:
+:ref:`whatsnew311-faster-startup` and :ref:`whatsnew311-faster-runtime`.
+Optimizations not covered by this project are listed separately under
+:ref:`whatsnew311-optimizations`.
.. _whatsnew311-faster-startup:
@@ -1337,8 +1340,8 @@ Faster Startup
Frozen imports / Static code objects
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Python caches bytecode in the :ref:`__pycache__<tut-pycache>` directory to
-speed up module loading.
+Python caches :term:`bytecode` in the :ref:`__pycache__ <tut-pycache>`
+directory to speed up module loading.
Previously in 3.10, Python module execution looked like this:
@@ -1347,8 +1350,9 @@ Previously in 3.10, Python module execution looked like this:
Read __pycache__ -> Unmarshal -> Heap allocated code object -> Evaluate
In Python 3.11, the core modules essential for Python startup are "frozen".
-This means that their code objects (and bytecode) are statically allocated
-by the interpreter. This reduces the steps in module execution process to this:
+This means that their :ref:`codeobjects` (and bytecode)
+are statically allocated by the interpreter.
+This reduces the steps in module execution process to:
.. code-block:: text
@@ -1357,7 +1361,7 @@ by the interpreter. This reduces the steps in module execution process to this:
Interpreter startup is now 10-15% faster in Python 3.11. This has a big
impact for short-running programs using Python.
-(Contributed by Eric Snow, Guido van Rossum and Kumar Aditya in numerous issues.)
+(Contributed by Eric Snow, Guido van Rossum and Kumar Aditya in many issues.)
.. _whatsnew311-faster-runtime:
@@ -1370,17 +1374,19 @@ Faster Runtime
Cheaper, lazy Python frames
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Python frames are created whenever Python calls a Python function. This frame
-holds execution information. The following are new frame optimizations:
+Python frames, holding execution information,
+are created whenever Python calls a Python function.
+The following are new frame optimizations:
- Streamlined the frame creation process.
- Avoided memory allocation by generously re-using frame space on the C stack.
- Streamlined the internal frame struct to contain only essential information.
Frames previously held extra debugging and memory management information.
-Old-style frame objects are now created only when requested by debuggers or
-by Python introspection functions such as ``sys._getframe`` or
-``inspect.currentframe``. For most user code, no frame objects are
+Old-style :ref:`frame objects <frame-objects>`
+are now created only when requested by debuggers
+or by Python introspection functions such as :func:`sys._getframe` and
+:func:`inspect.currentframe`. For most user code, no frame objects are
created at all. As a result, nearly all Python functions calls have sped
up significantly. We measured a 3-7% speedup in pyperformance.
@@ -1401,10 +1407,11 @@ In 3.11, when CPython detects Python code calling another Python function,
it sets up a new frame, and "jumps" to the new code inside the new frame. This
avoids calling the C interpreting function altogether.
-Most Python function calls now consume no C stack space. This speeds up
-most of such calls. In simple recursive functions like fibonacci or
-factorial, a 1.7x speedup was observed. This also means recursive functions
-can recurse significantly deeper (if the user increases the recursion limit).
+Most Python function calls now consume no C stack space, speeding them up.
+In simple recursive functions like fibonacci or
+factorial, we observed a 1.7x speedup. This also means recursive functions
+can recurse significantly deeper
+(if the user increases the recursion limit with :func:`sys.setrecursionlimit`).
We measured a 1-3% improvement in pyperformance.
(Contributed by Pablo Galindo and Mark Shannon in :issue:`45256`.)
@@ -1415,7 +1422,7 @@ We measured a 1-3% improvement in pyperformance.
PEP 659: Specializing Adaptive Interpreter
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-:pep:`659` is one of the key parts of the faster CPython project. The general
+:pep:`659` is one of the key parts of the Faster CPython project. The general
idea is that while Python is a dynamic language, most code has regions where
objects and types rarely change. This concept is known as *type stability*.
@@ -1424,17 +1431,18 @@ in the executing code. Python will then replace the current operation with a
more specialized one. This specialized operation uses fast paths available only
to those use cases/types, which generally outperform their generic
counterparts. This also brings in another concept called *inline caching*, where
-Python caches the results of expensive operations directly in the bytecode.
+Python caches the results of expensive operations directly in the
+:term:`bytecode`.
The specializer will also combine certain common instruction pairs into one
-superinstruction. This reduces the overhead during execution.
+superinstruction, reducing the overhead during execution.
Python will only specialize
when it sees code that is "hot" (executed multiple times). This prevents Python
-from wasting time for run-once code. Python can also de-specialize when code is
+from wasting time on run-once code. Python can also de-specialize when code is
too dynamic or when the use changes. Specialization is attempted periodically,
-and specialization attempts are not too expensive. This allows specialization
-to adapt to new circumstances.
+and specialization attempts are not too expensive,
+allowing specialization to adapt to new circumstances.
(PEP written by Mark Shannon, with ideas inspired by Stefan Brunthaler.
See :pep:`659` for more information. Implementation by Mark Shannon and Brandt
@@ -1447,32 +1455,32 @@ Bucher, with additional help from Irit Katriel and Dennis Sweeney.)
| Operation | Form | Specialization | Operation speedup | Contributor(s) |
| | | | (up to) | |
+===============+====================+=======================================================+===================+===================+
-| Binary | ``x+x; x*x; x-x;`` | Binary add, multiply and subtract for common types | 10% | Mark Shannon, |
-| operations | | such as ``int``, ``float``, and ``str`` take custom | | Dong-hee Na, |
-| | | fast paths for their underlying types. | | Brandt Bucher, |
+| Binary | ``x + x`` | Binary add, multiply and subtract for common types | 10% | Mark Shannon, |
+| operations | | such as :class:`int`, :class:`float` and :class:`str` | | Dong-hee Na, |
+| | ``x - x`` | take custom fast paths for their underlying types. | | Brandt Bucher, |
| | | | | Dennis Sweeney |
+| | ``x * x`` | | | |
+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
-| Subscript | ``a[i]`` | Subscripting container types such as ``list``, | 10-25% | Irit Katriel, |
-| | | ``tuple`` and ``dict`` directly index the underlying | | Mark Shannon |
-| | | data structures. | | |
+| Subscript | ``a[i]`` | Subscripting container types such as :class:`list`, | 10-25% | Irit Katriel, |
+| | | :class:`tuple` and :class:`dict` directly index | | Mark Shannon |
+| | | the underlying data structures. | | |
| | | | | |
-| | | Subscripting custom ``__getitem__`` | | |
+| | | Subscripting custom :meth:`~object.__getitem__` | | |
| | | is also inlined similar to :ref:`inline-calls`. | | |
+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
| Store | ``a[i] = z`` | Similar to subscripting specialization above. | 10-25% | Dennis Sweeney |
| subscript | | | | |
+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
| Calls | ``f(arg)`` | Calls to common builtin (C) functions and types such | 20% | Mark Shannon, |
-| | ``C(arg)`` | as ``len`` and ``str`` directly call their underlying | | Ken Jin |
-| | | C version. This avoids going through the internal | | |
-| | | calling convention. | | |
-| | | | | |
+| | | as :func:`len` and :class:`str` directly call their | | Ken Jin |
+| | ``C(arg)`` | underlying C version. This avoids going through the | | |
+| | | internal calling convention. | | |
+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
-| Load | ``print`` | The object's index in the globals/builtins namespace | [1]_ | Mark Shannon |
-| global | ``len`` | is cached. Loading globals and builtins require | | |
-| variable | | zero namespace lookups. | | |
+| Load | ``print`` | The object's index in the globals/builtins namespace | [#load-global]_ | Mark Shannon |
+| global | | is cached. Loading globals and builtins require | | |
+| variable | ``len`` | zero namespace lookups. | | |
+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
-| Load | ``o.attr`` | Similar to loading global variables. The attribute's | [2]_ | Mark Shannon |
+| Load | ``o.attr`` | Similar to loading global variables. The attribute's | [#load-attr]_ | Mark Shannon |
| attribute | | index inside the class/object's namespace is cached. | | |
| | | In most cases, attribute loading will require zero | | |
| | | namespace lookups. | | |
@@ -1484,14 +1492,15 @@ Bucher, with additional help from Irit Katriel and Dennis Sweeney.)
| Store | ``o.attr = z`` | Similar to load attribute optimization. | 2% | Mark Shannon |
| attribute | | | in pyperformance | |
+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
-| Unpack | ``*seq`` | Specialized for common containers such as ``list`` | 8% | Brandt Bucher |
-| Sequence | | and ``tuple``. Avoids internal calling convention. | | |
+| Unpack | ``*seq`` | Specialized for common containers such as | 8% | Brandt Bucher |
+| Sequence | | :class:`list` and :class:`tuple`. | | |
+| | | Avoids internal calling convention. | | |
+---------------+--------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
-.. [1] A similar optimization already existed since Python 3.8. 3.11
- specializes for more forms and reduces some overhead.
+.. [#load-global] A similar optimization already existed since Python 3.8.
+ 3.11 specializes for more forms and reduces some overhead.
-.. [2] A similar optimization already existed since Python 3.10.
+.. [#load-attr] A similar optimization already existed since Python 3.10.
3.11 specializes for more forms. Furthermore, all attribute loads should
be sped up by :issue:`45947`.
@@ -1501,49 +1510,72 @@ Bucher, with additional help from Irit Katriel and Dennis Sweeney.)
Misc
----
-* Objects now require less memory due to lazily created object namespaces. Their
- namespace dictionaries now also share keys more freely.
+* Objects now require less memory due to lazily created object namespaces.
+ Their namespace dictionaries now also share keys more freely.
(Contributed Mark Shannon in :issue:`45340` and :issue:`40116`.)
+* "Zero-cost" exceptions are implemented, eliminating the cost
+ of :keyword:`try` statements when no exception is raised.
+ (Contributed by Mark Shannon in :issue:`40222`.)
+
* A more concise representation of exceptions in the interpreter reduced the
time required for catching an exception by about 10%.
(Contributed by Irit Katriel in :issue:`45711`.)
+* :mod:`re`'s regular expression matching engine has been partially refactored,
+ and now uses computed gotos (or "threaded code") on supported platforms. As a
+ result, Python 3.11 executes the `pyperformance regular expression benchmarks
+ <https://pyperformance.readthedocs.io/benchmarks.html#regex-dna>`_ up to 10%
+ faster than Python 3.10.
+ (Contributed by Brandt Bucher in :gh:`91404`.)
+
.. _whatsnew311-faster-cpython-faq:
FAQ
---
-| Q: How should I write my code to utilize these speedups?
-|
-| A: You don't have to change your code. Write Pythonic code that follows common
- best practices. The Faster CPython project optimizes for common code
- patterns we observe.
-|
-|
-| Q: Will CPython 3.11 use more memory?
-|
-| A: Maybe not. We don't expect memory use to exceed 20% more than 3.10.
- This is offset by memory optimizations for frame objects and object
- dictionaries as mentioned above.
-|
-|
-| Q: I don't see any speedups in my workload. Why?
-|
-| A: Certain code won't have noticeable benefits. If your code spends most of
- its time on I/O operations, or already does most of its
- computation in a C extension library like numpy, there won't be significant
- speedup. This project currently benefits pure-Python workloads the most.
-|
-| Furthermore, the pyperformance figures are a geometric mean. Even within the
- pyperformance benchmarks, certain benchmarks have slowed down slightly, while
- others have sped up by nearly 2x!
-|
-|
-| Q: Is there a JIT compiler?
-|
-| A: No. We're still exploring other optimizations.
+.. _faster-cpython-faq-my-code:
+
+How should I write my code to utilize these speedups?
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Write Pythonic code that follows common best practices;
+you don't have to change your code.
+The Faster CPython project optimizes for common code patterns we observe.
+
+
+.. _faster-cpython-faq-memory:
+
+Will CPython 3.11 use more memory?
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Maybe not; we don't expect memory use to exceed 20% higher than 3.10.
+This is offset by memory optimizations for frame objects and object
+dictionaries as mentioned above.
+
+
+.. _faster-cpython-ymmv:
+
+I don't see any speedups in my workload. Why?
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Certain code won't have noticeable benefits. If your code spends most of
+its time on I/O operations, or already does most of its
+computation in a C extension library like NumPy, there won't be significant
+speedups. This project currently benefits pure-Python workloads the most.
+
+Furthermore, the pyperformance figures are a geometric mean. Even within the
+pyperformance benchmarks, certain benchmarks have slowed down slightly, while
+others have sped up by nearly 2x!
+
+
+.. _faster-cpython-jit:
+
+Is there a JIT compiler?
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+No. We're still exploring other optimizations.
.. _whatsnew311-faster-cpython-about: