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authorTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2002-07-15 17:58:03 (GMT)
committerTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2002-07-15 17:58:03 (GMT)
commite561dc231e31a304b69e66979fc9cc773b7668de (patch)
tree1ad5a58863daedceb017ce09891b240e750e6ed5 /Parser
parenta65523a151c29a227626bfc4377899de92bd67e9 (diff)
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XXXROUNDUP(): Turns out this fixed Andrew MacIntyre's memory-mgmt
disaster too, so this change is here to stay. Beefed up the comments and added some stats Andrew reported. Also a small change to the macro body, to make it obvious how XXXROUNDUP(0) ends up returning 0. See SF patch 578297 for context. Not a bugfix candidate, as the functional changes here have already been backported to the 2.2 line (this patch just improves clarity).
Diffstat (limited to 'Parser')
-rw-r--r--Parser/node.c43
1 files changed, 33 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/Parser/node.c b/Parser/node.c
index 9ed34b8..780c230 100644
--- a/Parser/node.c
+++ b/Parser/node.c
@@ -34,21 +34,44 @@ fancy_roundup(int n)
}
/* A gimmick to make massive numbers of reallocs quicker. The result is
- * a number >= the input. For n=0 we must return 0.
- * For n=1, we return 1, to avoid wasting memory in common 1-child nodes
- * (XXX are those actually common?).
- * Else for n <= 128, round up to the closest multiple of 4. Why 4?
- * Rounding up to a multiple of an exact power of 2 is very efficient.
- * Else call fancy_roundup() to grow proportionately to n. We've got an
+ * a number >= the input. In PyNode_AddChild, it's used like so, when
+ * we're about to add child number current_size + 1:
+ *
+ * if XXXROUNDUP(current_size) < XXXROUNDUP(current_size + 1):
+ * allocate space for XXXROUNDUP(current_size + 1) total children
+ * else:
+ * we already have enough space
+ *
+ * Since a node starts out empty, we must have
+ *
+ * XXXROUNDUP(0) < XXXROUNDUP(1)
+ *
+ * so that we allocate space for the first child. One-child nodes are very
+ * common (presumably that would change if we used a more abstract form
+ * of syntax tree), so to avoid wasting memory it's desirable that
+ * XXXROUNDUP(1) == 1. That in turn forces XXXROUNDUP(0) == 0.
+ *
+ * Else for 2 <= n <= 128, we round up to the closest multiple of 4. Why 4?
+ * Rounding up to a multiple of an exact power of 2 is very efficient, and
+ * most nodes with more than one child have <= 4 kids.
+ *
+ * Else we call fancy_roundup() to grow proportionately to n. We've got an
* extreme case then (like test_longexp.py), and on many platforms doing
* anything less than proportional growth leads to exorbitant runtime
* (e.g., MacPython), or extreme fragmentation of user address space (e.g.,
* Win98).
- * This would be straightforward if a node stored its current capacity. The
- * code is tricky to avoid that.
+ *
+ * In a run of compileall across the 2.3a0 Lib directory, Andrew MacIntyre
+ * reported that, with this scheme, 89% of PyMem_RESIZE calls in
+ * PyNode_AddChild passed 1 for the size, and 9% passed 4. So this usually
+ * wastes very little memory, but is very effective at sidestepping
+ * platform-realloc disasters on vulnernable platforms.
+ *
+ * Note that this would be straightforward if a node stored its current
+ * capacity. The code is tricky to avoid that.
*/
-#define XXXROUNDUP(n) ((n) == 1 ? 1 : \
- (n) <= 128 ? (((n) + 3) & ~3) : \
+#define XXXROUNDUP(n) ((n) <= 1 ? (n) : \
+ (n) <= 128 ? (((n) + 3) & ~3) : \
fancy_roundup(n))