aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/lib/stdlib/test/erl_eval_helper.erl
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorNico Kruber <[email protected]>2011-11-25 11:48:40 +0100
committerHenrik Nord <[email protected]>2011-12-09 12:38:43 +0100
commit864faca823631cfd46da432b4e405d94d7104429 (patch)
treeb764c458861be6741adae0c6240b7c1760b3b24f /lib/stdlib/test/erl_eval_helper.erl
parent7bd353a976a0bf4d93b962376daa0d38958335d0 (diff)
downloadotp-864faca823631cfd46da432b4e405d94d7104429.tar.gz
otp-864faca823631cfd46da432b4e405d94d7104429.tar.bz2
otp-864faca823631cfd46da432b4e405d94d7104429.zip
JInterface: improve OtpOutputStream buffer allocation
Previously, the buffer was increased linearly by 2048 bytes. I now propose to use an exponential increase function (similar to Javas ArrayList, e.g. always at least +50%). This significantly increases performance of e.g. doRPC for large parameters as the following comparison illustrates (shown is the buffer size after each time, the buffer has reached its limit): n n*2048 (n*3)/2+1 (n*3)/2+1 (at least +2048) 1 2,048 2,048 2,048 2 4,096 3,073 4,096 3 6,144 4,610 6,145 4 8,192 6,916 9,218 5 10,240 10,375 13,828 6 12,288 15,563 20,743 7 14,336 23,345 31,115 8 16,384 35,018 46,673 9 18,432 52,528 70,010 10 20,480 78,793 105,016 11 22,528 118,190 157,525 12 24,576 177,286 236,288 13 26,624 265,930 354,433 14 28,672 398,896 531,650 15 30,720 598,345 797,476 16 32,768 897,518 1,196,215 17 34,816 1,346,278 1,794,323 18 36,864 2,019,418 2,691,485 19 38,912 3,029,128 4,037,228 20 40,960 4,543,693 6,055,843 21 43,008 6,815,540 9,083,765 22 45,056 10,223,311 13,625,648 23 47,104 15,334,967 20,438,473 24 49,152 23,002,451 30,657,710 25 51,200 34,503,677 45,986,566 26 53,248 51,755,516 68,979,850 27 55,296 77,633,275 103,469,776 28 57,344 116,449,913 155,204,665 29 59,392 174,674,870 232,806,998 30 61,440 262,012,306 349,210,498 Actually, ArrayList uses the (n*3)/2+1 strategy. In order not to decrease performance for messages <10k, we could keep the (public) OtpOutputStream#defaultIncrement constant and let the buffer always increase by at least this much (third column). In order to create a buffer of 1MB, now only 16 array copies are needed vs. (1024*1024/2048)=512 array copies for the linear increase function. If a user sends a message of 10MB size, this is 22 vs. 5120 copies. NOTE: the meaning of the "public static final int defaultIncrement" member has changed a bit with this implementation (API compatibility?) - why was this public in the first place?
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/stdlib/test/erl_eval_helper.erl')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions