2022-08-27 21:45:19 +02:00
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Known Optimisation Potential
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============================
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There are several areas of the Tvix evaluator code base where
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potentially large performance gains can be achieved through
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optimisations that we are already aware of.
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The shape of most optimisations is that of moving more work into the
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compiler to simplify the runtime execution of Nix code. This leads, in
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some cases, to drastically higher complexity in both the compiler
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itself and in invariants that need to be guaranteed between the
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runtime and the compiler.
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For this reason, and because we lack the infrastructure to adequately
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track their impact (WIP), we have not yet implemented these
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optimisations, but note the most important ones here.
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* Use "open upvalues" [hard]
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Right now, Tvix will immediately close over all upvalues that are
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created and clone them into the `Closure::upvalues` array.
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Instead of doing this, we can statically determine most locals that
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are closed over *and escape their scope* (similar to how the
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`compiler::scope::Scope` struct currently tracks whether locals are
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used at all).
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If we implement the machinery to track this, we can implement some
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upvalues at runtime by simply sticking stack indices in the upvalue
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array and only copy the values where we know that they escape.
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* Avoid `with` value duplication [easy]
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If a `with` makes use of a local identifier in a scope that can not
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close before the with (e.g. not across `LambdaCtx` boundaries), we
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can avoid the allocation of the phantom value and duplication of the
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`NixAttrs` value on the stack. In this case we simply push the stack
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index of the known local.
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* Multiple attribute selection [medium]
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An instruction could be introduced that avoids repeatedly pushing an
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attribute set to/from the stack if multiple keys are being selected
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from it. This occurs, for example, when inheriting from an attribute
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set or when binding function formals.
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* Split closure/function representation [easy]
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Functions have fewer fields that need to be populated at runtime and
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can directly use the `value::function::Lambda` representation where
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possible.
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2022-09-02 14:46:14 +02:00
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* Optimise inner builtin access [medium]
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When accessing identifiers like `builtins.foo`, the compiler should
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not go through the trouble of setting up the attribute set on the
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stack and accessing `foo` from it if it knows that the scope for
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2022-09-06 21:29:58 +02:00
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`builtins` is unpoisoned. The same optimisation can also be done
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for the other set operations like `builtins ? foo` and
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`builtins.foo or alternative-implementation`.
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2022-09-02 14:46:14 +02:00
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The same thing goes for resolving `with builtins;`, which should
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definitely resolve statically.
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2022-09-02 20:49:11 +02:00
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2022-09-06 21:39:03 +02:00
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* Inline fully applied builtins with equivalent operators [medium]
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Some `builtins` have equivalent operators, e.g. `builtins.add`
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corresponds to the `+` operator, `builtins.hasAttr` to the `?`
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operator etc. These operators additionally compile to a primitive
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VM opcode, so they should be just as cheap (if not cheaper) as
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a builtin application.
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In case the compiler encounters a fully applied builtin (i.e.
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no currying is occurring) and the `builtins` global is unpoisoned,
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it could compile the equivalent operator bytecode instead: For
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example, `builtins.add 20 22` would be compiled as `20 + 22`.
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This would ensure that equivalent `builtins` can also benefit
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from special optimisations we may implement for certain operators
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(in the absence of currying). E.g. we could optimise access
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to the `builtins` attribute set which a call to
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`builtins.getAttr "foo" builtins` should also profit from.
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2022-09-02 20:49:11 +02:00
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* Avoid nested `VM::run` calls [hard]
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Currently when encountering Nix-native callables (thunks, closures)
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the VM's run loop will nest and return the value of the nested call
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frame one level up. This makes the Rust call stack almost mirror the
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Nix call stack, which is usually undesirable.
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It is possible to detect situations where this is avoidable and
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instead set up the VM in such a way that it continues and produces
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the desired result in the same run loop, but this is kind of tricky
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to get right - especially while other parts are still in flux.
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For details consult the commit with Gerrit change ID
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`I96828ab6a628136e0bac1bf03555faa4e6b74ece`, in which the initial
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attempt at doing this was reverted.
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2022-09-06 22:25:57 +02:00
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* Avoid thunks if only identifier closing is required [medium]
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Some constructs, like `with`, mostly do not change runtime behaviour
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if thunked. However, they are wrapped in thunks to ensure that
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deferred identifiers are resolved correctly.
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This can be avoided, as we statically analyse the scope and should
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be able to tell whether any such logic was required.
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2022-10-26 11:22:08 +02:00
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* Intern literals [easy]
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Currently, the compiler emits a separate entry in the constant
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table for each literal. So the program `1 + 1 + 1` will have
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three entries in its `Chunk::constants` instead of only one.
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