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9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Colin Cross
95bec3331c Use strings instead of simpleNinjaStrings where possible
Storing every string without ninja variable references through
simpleNinjaString costs 24 bytes and a heap allocation.  16 bytes
is used for the ninjaString.str string, 8 bytes for the
ninjaString.variables *[]variableReference.  An additional 8 bytes
is used for the resulting pointer into the heap.

The vast majority of calls to simpleNinjaString originate in
blueprint.parseBuildParams, which converts all of the parameters
passed to ctx.Build into ninjaStrings.  All together this was
allocating 1.575 GB of *ninjaString objects.

Add a parseNinjaOrSimpleStrings function that converts input strings
into ninjaStrings if they have ninja variable references, but also
returns a slice of plain strings for input strings without any ninja
variable references.  That still results in 1.39 GB of allocations just
for the output string slice, so also add an optimization that reuses
the input string slice as the output slice if all of the strings had
no variable references.

Plumb the resulting strings through everywhere that the []*ninjaStrings
were used.

This reduces the total memory allocations inside
blueprint.parseBuildParams in my AOSP aosp_cf_x86_64_phone-userdebug
build from 3.337 GB to 1.786 GB.

Test: ninja_strings_test.go
Change-Id: I51bc138a2a6b1cc7383c7df0a483ccb067ffa02b
2023-11-01 15:15:15 -07:00
Colin Cross
6126fe8067 Optimize memory usage of ninjaString
ninjaString is an interface, which uses 16 bytes of memory on top
of the size of the concrete type.  A literalNinjaString is a string,
which is another 16 bytes for the string header for a total of 32
bytes.  A varNinjaString is two slices, which are 24 bytes each
for the slice headers, for a total of 64 bytes.  The slices contain
the first constant string, and then altenrating variable and string
parts of the ninjaString, resulting in 16 bytes plus 32 bytes per
variable.

This patch replaces the ninjaString interface with a *ninjaString
concrete struct type.  The ninjaString struct is a string and a
pointer to a slice of variable references, for a total of 24 bytes.

ninjaStrings with no variable references (the equivalent of the old
literalNinjaString) have a nil slice, and now use 24 bytes instead
of 32 bytes.

ninjaStrings with variable references allocate a slice of variable
references that contain 32-bit start and end offsets and a Variable
interface, but reuse the original string and so avoid the extra
string headers, resulting in 24 bytes for the slice header, and
24 bytes per variable.

These savings reduce the peak memory usage averaged across 10 runs of
/bin/time -v build/soong/soong_ui.bash --make-mode nothing
on the internal master branch cf_x86_64_phone-userdebug build
from 50114842kB to 45577638kB, a savings of 4537204kB or 9%.

The new Benchmark_parseNinjaString shows savings in both time and
memory.  Before:
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/1-128       	594251787	         2.006 ns/op	       0 B/op	       0 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/10-128      	21191347	        65.57 ns/op	      16 B/op	       1 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/100-128     	 9983748	       130.2 ns/op	     112 B/op	       1 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/1000-128    	 2632527	       445.1 ns/op	    1024 B/op	       1 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/1-128       	 2964896	       419.4 ns/op	     176 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/10-128      	 1807341	       670.6 ns/op	     192 B/op	       7 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/100-128     	 1000000	      1092 ns/op	     352 B/op	       7 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/1000-128    	  300649	      3773 ns/op	    1584 B/op	       7 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/1-128      	 2858432	       441.6 ns/op	     176 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/2-128      	 2360505	       513.4 ns/op	     208 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/3-128      	 1867136	       635.6 ns/op	     240 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/4-128      	 1584045	       752.1 ns/op	     272 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/5-128      	 1338189	       885.8 ns/op	     304 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/10-128     	 1000000	      1468 ns/op	     464 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/100-128    	   88768	     12895 ns/op	    3712 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/1000-128   	    8972	    133627 ns/op	   32896 B/op	       4 allocs/op

After:
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/1-128       	584600864	         2.004 ns/op	       0 B/op	       0 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/10-128      	19274581	        64.84 ns/op	      16 B/op	       1 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/100-128     	 9017640	       127.6 ns/op	     112 B/op	       1 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/constant/1000-128    	 2630797	       453.0 ns/op	    1024 B/op	       1 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/1-128       	 3460422	       347.0 ns/op	     136 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/10-128      	 2103404	       519.9 ns/op	     152 B/op	       7 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/100-128     	 1315778	       906.5 ns/op	     312 B/op	       7 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variable/1000-128    	  354812	      3284 ns/op	    1544 B/op	       7 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/1-128      	 3386868	       361.5 ns/op	     136 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/2-128      	 2675594	       456.9 ns/op	     160 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/3-128      	 2344670	       520.0 ns/op	     192 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/4-128      	 1919482	       648.1 ns/op	     208 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/5-128      	 1560556	       723.9 ns/op	     240 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/10-128     	 1000000	      1169 ns/op	     352 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/100-128    	  116738	     10168 ns/op	    2800 B/op	       4 allocs/op
Benchmark_parseNinjaString/variables/1000-128   	   10000	    105646 ns/op	   24688 B/op	       4 allocs/op

Bug: 286423944
Test: ninja_strings_test.go
Test: out/soong/build*.ninja is the same before and after this change
Change-Id: I1ecffbaccb0d0469a41fa31255c1b17311e01687
2023-06-15 21:53:56 -07:00
Colin Cross
8a40148408 Write build definitions directly to output writer
buildDef.WriteTo was calling valueList to convert all the build
parameter ninjaStrings into strings, which uses ValueWithEscaper
to build a strings.Builder.  This results in building a string
only to immediately copy it into the output writer's buffer.

Instead, pass an io.StringWriter to ValueWithEscaper so it can
build the string directly into the output writer's buffer.  This
requires converting ninjaWriterWithWrap into an io.StringWriter.

Test: ninja_writer_test.go
Change-Id: I02e1cf8259306267b9d2d0ebe8c81e13dd443725
2021-01-21 22:02:30 -08:00
Colin Cross
9ece72b055 Add Validations support to Blueprint
The Android fork of Ninja supports "validations", a node that is
added to the top level of the build graph whenever another node
is in the build graph.  Add support in Blueprint to specify them
on build statements and write them to the ninja.

Test: ninja_writer_test.go
Change-Id: I87cd1281dbd2ed113cc26a265c50d20c65118c91
2020-07-09 14:28:20 -07:00
Dan Willemsen
ab223a512b Run globs during earlier bootstrap phases
Instead of sometimes re-running minibp/the primary builder during the
next phase, run bpglob earlier to check dependencies.

We've run into issues where the environment is slightly different
between bootstrapping phase and the main build phase. It's also a
problem because our primary builder (Soong) exports information used by
another tool (Kati) that runs in between the bootstrapping phases and
the main phase. When Soong would run in the main phase, it could get out
of sync, and would require the build to be run again.

To do this, add a "subninja" include a build-globs.ninja file to each
build.ninja file. The first time, this will be an empty file, but we'll
always run minibp / the primary builder anyway. When the builder runs,
in addition to writing a dependency file, write out the
build-globs.ninja file with the rules to run bpglob.

Since bpglob may need to be run very early, before it would normally be
built, build it with microfactory.

Change-Id: I89fcd849a8729e892f163d40060ab90b5d4dfa5d
2018-07-06 10:39:38 -07:00
Dan Willemsen
5c43e07937 Support implicit outputs
Added in Ninja 1.7, for outputs that will not show up in $out.
2016-10-31 17:36:49 -07:00
Doug Evans
fcc6739e34 Support comments in build rules.
Tested: sh tests/test.sh
2015-11-08 12:21:58 -08:00
Colin Cross
8e0c51192a Add license headers and LICENSE file
Change-Id: I6f7c7374093c0745ee4aa677480376a06648b358
2015-01-23 14:23:27 -08:00
Colin Cross
3e8e74f276 Move blueprint/* up a directory
Make integrating with go tools easier by putting the blueprint package
files in the top level directory of the git project instead of in a
subdirectory called blueprint.

Change-Id: I35c144c5fe7ddf34e478d0c47c50b2f6c92c2a03
2015-01-23 14:23:27 -08:00
Renamed from blueprint/ninja_writer_test.go (Browse further)