Making wait events a bit more efficient - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Andres Freund
Subject Making wait events a bit more efficient
Date
Msg-id 20210402194458.2vu324hkk2djq6ce@alap3.anarazel.de
Whole thread Raw
Responses Re: Making wait events a bit more efficient
Re: Making wait events a bit more efficient
List pgsql-hackers
Hi,

This grew out of my patch to split the waits event code out of
pgstat.[ch], which in turn grew out of the shared memory stats patch
series.


pgstat_report_wait_start() and pgstat_report_wait_end() currently check
pgstat_track_activities before assigning to MyProc->wait_event_info.
Given the small cost of the assignment, and that pgstat_track_activities
is almost always used, I'm doubtful that that's the right tradeoff.

Normally I would say that branch prediction will take care of this cost
- but because pgstat_report_wait_{start,end} are inlined, that has to
happen in each of the calling locations.

The code works out to be something like the following (this is from
basebackup_read_file, the simplest caller I could quickly find, I
removed interspersed code from it):

267        if (!pgstat_track_activities || !proc)
   0x0000000000430e4d <+13>:    cmpb   $0x1,0x4882e1(%rip)        # 0x8b9135 <pgstat_track_activities>

265        volatile PGPROC *proc = MyProc;
   0x0000000000430e54 <+20>:    mov    0x48c52d(%rip),%rax        # 0x8bd388 <MyProc>

266
267        if (!pgstat_track_activities || !proc)
   0x0000000000430e5b <+27>:    jne    0x430e6c <basebackup_read_file+44>
   0x0000000000430e5d <+29>:    test   %rax,%rax
   0x0000000000430e60 <+32>:    je     0x430e6c <basebackup_read_file+44>

268            return;
269
270        /*
271         * Since this is a four-byte field which is always read and written as
272         * four-bytes, updates are atomic.
273         */
274        proc->wait_event_info = wait_event_info;
   0x0000000000430e62 <+34>:    movl   $0xa000000,0x2c8(%rax)

/home/andres/src/postgresql/src/backend/replication/basebackup.c:
2014        rc = pg_pread(fd, buf, nbytes, offset);
   0x0000000000430e6c <+44>:    call   0xc4790 <pread@plt>

stripping the source:
   0x0000000000430e4d <+13>:    cmpb   $0x1,0x4882e1(%rip)        # 0x8b9135 <pgstat_track_activities>
   0x0000000000430e54 <+20>:    mov    0x48c52d(%rip),%rax        # 0x8bd388 <MyProc>
   0x0000000000430e5b <+27>:    jne    0x430e6c <basebackup_read_file+44>
   0x0000000000430e5d <+29>:    test   %rax,%rax
   0x0000000000430e60 <+32>:    je     0x430e6c <basebackup_read_file+44>
   0x0000000000430e62 <+34>:    movl   $0xa000000,0x2c8(%rax)
   0x0000000000430e6c <+44>:    call   0xc4790 <pread@plt>


just removing the pgstat_track_activities check turns that into

   0x0000000000430d8d <+13>:    mov    0x48c5f4(%rip),%rax        # 0x8bd388 <MyProc>
   0x0000000000430d94 <+20>:    test   %rax,%rax
   0x0000000000430d97 <+23>:    je     0x430da3 <basebackup_read_file+35>
   0x0000000000430d99 <+25>:    movl   $0xa000000,0x2c8(%rax)
   0x0000000000430da3 <+35>:    call   0xc4790 <pread@plt>

which does seem (a bit) nicer.

However, we can improve this further, entirely eliminating branches, by
introducing something like "my_wait_event_info" that initially just
points to a local variable and is switched to shared once MyProc is
assigned.

Obviously incorrect, for comparison: Just removing the MyProc != NULL
check yields:
   0x0000000000430bcd <+13>:    mov    0x48c7b4(%rip),%rax        # 0x8bd388 <MyProc>
   0x0000000000430bd4 <+20>:    movl   $0xa000000,0x2c8(%rax)
   0x0000000000430bde <+30>:    call   0xc47d0 <pread@plt>

using a uint32 *my_wait_event_info yields:
   0x0000000000430b4d <+13>:    mov    0x47615c(%rip),%rax        # 0x8a6cb0 <my_wait_event_info>
   0x0000000000430b54 <+20>:    movl   $0xa000000,(%rax)
   0x0000000000430b5a <+26>:    call   0xc47d0 <pread@plt>

Note how the lack of offset addressing in the my_wait_event_info version
makes the instruction smaller (call is at 26 instead of 30).


Now, perhaps all of this isn't worth optimizing, most of the things done
within pgstat_report_wait_start()/end() are expensive-ish. And forward
branches are statically predicted to be not taken on several
platforms. I have seen this these instructions show up in profiles in
workloads with contended lwlocks at least...

There's also a small win in code size:
   text       data        bss        dec        hex    filename
8932095     192160     204656    9328911     8e590f    src/backend/postgres
8928544     192160     204656    9325360     8e4b30    src/backend/postgres_my_wait_event_info


If we went for the my_wait_event_info approach there is one further
advantage, after my change to move the wait event code into a separate
file: wait_event.h does not need to include proc.h anymore, which seems
architecturally nice for things like fd.c.


Attached is patch series doing this.


I'm inclined to separately change the comment format for
wait_event.[ch], there's no no reason to stick with the current style:

/* ----------
 * pgstat_report_wait_start() -
 *
 *    Called from places where server process needs to wait.  This is called
 *    to report wait event information.  The wait information is stored
 *    as 4-bytes where first byte represents the wait event class (type of
 *    wait, for different types of wait, refer WaitClass) and the next
 *    3-bytes represent the actual wait event.  Currently 2-bytes are used
 *    for wait event which is sufficient for current usage, 1-byte is
 *    reserved for future usage.
 *
 * NB: this *must* be able to survive being called before MyProc has been
 * initialized.
 * ----------
 */

I.e. I'd like to remove the ----- framing, the repetition of the
function name, and the varying indentation in the comment.

Greetings,

Andres Freund

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