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The Grand Metadata Reform #22971

Merged
merged 12 commits into from Mar 3, 2015
Merged

The Grand Metadata Reform #22971

merged 12 commits into from Mar 3, 2015

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lifthrasiir
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This is a series of individual but correlated changes to the metadata format. The changes are significant enough that it (finally) bumps the metadata encoding version. In brief, they altogether reduce the total size of stage1 binaries by 27% (!!!!). Almost every low-hanging fruit has been considered and fixed; see the individual commits for details.

Detailed library (not just metadata) size changes for x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu stage1 binaries (baseline being 3a96d6a):

   before     after  delta path
--------- --------- ------ --------------------------------
  1706146   1050412  38.4% liballoc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   398576    152454  61.8% libarena-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    71441     56892  20.4% libarena-4e7c5e5c.so
 14424754   5084102  64.8% libcollections-4e7c5e5c.rlib
 39143186  14743118  62.3% libcore-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   195574    188150   3.8% libflate-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   153123    152603   0.3% libflate-4e7c5e5c.so
   477152    215262  54.9% libfmt_macros-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    77728     66601  14.3% libfmt_macros-4e7c5e5c.so
  1216936    684104  43.8% libgetopts-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   207846    181116  12.9% libgetopts-4e7c5e5c.so
   349722    147530  57.8% libgraphviz-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    60196     49197  18.3% libgraphviz-4e7c5e5c.so
   729842    259906  64.4% liblibc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   349358    247014  29.3% liblog-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    88878     83163   6.4% liblog-4e7c5e5c.so
  1968508    732840  62.8% librand-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  1968204    696326  64.6% librbml-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   283207    206589  27.1% librbml-4e7c5e5c.so
 72369394  46401230  35.9% librustc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
 11941372  10498483  12.1% librustc-4e7c5e5c.so
  2717894   1983272  27.0% librustc_back-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   501900    464176   7.5% librustc_back-4e7c5e5c.so
    15058     12588  16.4% librustc_bitflags-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  4008268   2961912  26.1% librustc_borrowck-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   837550    785633   6.2% librustc_borrowck-4e7c5e5c.so
  6473348   6095470   5.8% librustc_driver-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  1448785   1433945   1.0% librustc_driver-4e7c5e5c.so
 95483688  94779704   0.7% librustc_llvm-4e7c5e5c.rlib
 43516815  43487809   0.1% librustc_llvm-4e7c5e5c.so
   938140    817236  12.9% librustc_privacy-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   182653    176563   3.3% librustc_privacy-4e7c5e5c.so
  4390288   3543284  19.3% librustc_resolve-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   872981    831824   4.7% librustc_resolve-4e7c5e5c.so
 18176426  14795426  18.6% librustc_trans-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  3657354   3480026   4.8% librustc_trans-4e7c5e5c.so
 16815076  13868862  17.5% librustc_typeck-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  3274439   3123898   4.6% librustc_typeck-4e7c5e5c.so
 21372308  14890582  30.3% librustdoc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  4501971   4172202   7.3% librustdoc-4e7c5e5c.so
  8055028   2951044  63.4% libserialize-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   958101    710016  25.9% libserialize-4e7c5e5c.so
 30810208  15160648  50.8% libstd-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  6819003   5967485  12.5% libstd-4e7c5e5c.so
 58850950  31949594  45.7% libsyntax-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  9060154   7882423  13.0% libsyntax-4e7c5e5c.so
  1474310   1062102  28.0% libterm-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   345577    323952   6.3% libterm-4e7c5e5c.so
  2827854   1643056  41.9% libtest-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   517811    452519  12.6% libtest-4e7c5e5c.so
  2274106   1761240  22.6% libunicode-4e7c5e5c.rlib
--------- --------- ------ --------------------------------
499359187 363465583  27.2% total

Some notes:

  • Uncompressed metadata compacts very well. It is less visible for compressed metadata but still it achieves about 5~10% reduction.
  • Every commit is designed to reduce the metadata in one way. There is absolutely no negative impact associated to changes (that's why the table above doesn't contain a minus delta).
  • I've confirmed that this compiles through make all, making it almost correct. Other platforms have to be tested though.
  • Oh, I'll rebase this as soon as I have spare time, but I guess this needs an extensive review anyway.
  • I haven't rigorously checked the encoder and decoder performance. I tried to minimize the impact (some encodings are actually simpler than the original), but I'm not sure.

Fixes #2743, #9303 (partially) and #21482.

@rust-highfive
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Thanks for the pull request, and welcome! The Rust team is excited to review your changes, and you should hear from @huonw (or someone else) soon.

If any changes to this PR are deemed necessary, please add them as extra commits. This ensures that the reviewer can see what has changed since they last reviewed the code. The way Github handles out-of-date commits, this should also make it reasonably obvious what issues have or haven't been addressed. Large or tricky changes may require several passes of review and changes.

Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.

@alexcrichton
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Wow, this looks amazing! Fantastic work @lifthrasiir!

I haven't rigorously checked the encoder and decoder performance

I've found a good "benchmark" to just be timing a compile of "hello world" which involves reading a fair amount of metadata. Not super scientific but it may put you in the ballpark of whether it's 10x faster, 10x slower, or basically the same.

@huonw
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huonw commented Mar 2, 2015

This is awesome!

//!
//! - `F64` (`0a`): 8-byte big endian unsigned integer representing
//! IEEE 754 binary64 floating-point format.
//! - `F32` (`0b`): 4-byte big endian unsigned integer representing
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I wonder if we could detect if an f64 can be represented as a f32 without loosing precision, and hence save 4 bytes (I guess this doesn't turn up much?).

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They actually don't exist in the metadata as far as I know, so it seemed fine as it is.

@lifthrasiir
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Rebased onto 2ca6eae. Slightly fixed several commits (mostly error handling and type safety things) and added one commit for tag reordering. I'm currently rebuilding new commits.

They are, with a conjunction of `start_tag` and `end_tag`, commonly
used to write a document with a binary data of known size. However
the use of `start_tag` makes the length always 4 bytes long, which
is almost not optimal (requiring the relaxation step to remedy).
Directly using `wr_tagged_*` methods is better for both readability
and resulting metadata size.
EBML tags are encoded in a variable-length unsigned int (vuint),
which is clever but causes some tags to be encoded in two bytes
while there are really about 180 tags or so. Assuming that there
wouldn't be, say, over 1,000 tags in the future, we can use much
more efficient encoding scheme. The new scheme should support
at most 4,096 tags anyway.

This also flattens a scattered tag namespace (did you know that
0xa9 is followed by 0xb0?) and makes a room for autoserialized tags
in 0x00 through 0x1f.
Many auto-serialization tags are fixed-size (note: many ordinary
tags are also fixed-size but for now this commit ignores them),
so having an explicit length is a waste. This moves any
auto-serialization tags with an implicit length before other tags,
so a test for them is easy. A preliminary experiment shows this
has at least 1% gain over the status quo.
It doesn't serve any useful purpose. It *might* be useful when
there are some tags that are generated by `Encodable` and
not delimited by any tags, but IIUC it's not the case.

Previous:

                  <-------------------- len1 ------------------->
    EsEnum <len1> EsEnumVid <vid> EsEnumBody <len2> <arg1> <arg2>
                                                    <--- len2 -->

Now:

                  <----------- len1 ---------->
    EsEnum <len1> EsEnumVid <vid> <arg1> <arg2>
For the reference, while it is designed to be selectively enabled,
it was essentially enabled throughout every snapshot and nightly
as far as I can tell. This makes the usefulness of `EsLabel` itself
questionable, as it was quite rare that `EsLabel` broke the build.
It had consumed about 20~30% of metadata (!) and so this should be
a huge win.
They replace the existing `EsEnumVid`, `EsVecLen` and `EsMapLen`
tags altogether; the meaning of them can be easily inferred
from the enclosing tag. It also has an added benefit of
encodings for smaller variant ids or lengths being more compact
(5 bytes to 2 bytes).
We try to move the data when the length can be encoded in
the much smaller number of bytes. This interferes with indices and
type abbreviations however, so this commit introduces a public
interface to get and mark a "stable" (i.e. not affected by
relaxation) position of the current pointer.

The relaxation logic only moves a small data, currently at most
256 bytes, as moving the data can be costly. There might be
further opportunities to allow more relaxation by moving fields
around, which I didn't seriously try.
So that `EsVec 82 EsSub8 00` becomes `EsVec 80` now.
This avoids a biggish eight-byte `tag_table_id` tag in favor of
autoserialized integer tags, which are smaller and can be later
used to encode them in the optimal number of bytes. `NodeId` was
u32 after all.

Previously:

                       <------------- len1 -------------->
    tag_table_* <len1> tag_table_id 88 <nodeid in 8 bytes>
                       tag_table_val <len2> <actual data>
                                            <-- len2 --->

Now:

                      <--------------- len --------------->
    tag_table_* <len> U32 <nodeid in 4 bytes> <actual data>
Previously every auto-serialized tags are strongly typed. However
this is not strictly required, and instead it can be exploited
to provide the optimal encoding for smaller integers. This commit
repurposes `EsI8`/`EsU8` through `EsI64`/`EsU64` tags to represent
*any* integers with given ranges: It is now possible to encode
`42u64` as two bytes `EsU8 0x2a`, for example.

There are some limitations:

* It does not apply to non-auto-serialized tags for obvious reasons.
  Fortunately, we have already eliminated the biggest source of
  such tag in favor of auto-serialized tags: `tag_table_id`.
* Bigger tags cannot be used to represent smaller types.
* Signed tags and unsigned tags do not mix.
We have changed the encoding enough to bump that.
Also added some notes about metadata encoding to librbml/lib.rs.
@lifthrasiir
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Re-rebased onto b4c965e. I had made a stupid mistake :S

Edit: This passes make check locally except for a few failures from (I think) librustc_lint additions. Maybe due to the fact that it wasn't a clean rebuild.

EsF32 = 0x0a, // + 4 bytes
EsF64 = 0x0b, // + 8 bytes
EsSub8 = 0x0c, // + 1 byte
EsSub32 = 0x0d, // + 4 bytes
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Maybe this should be 0x0e, so that EsSub16 can go between 8 and 32?

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I originally tried to do so. But this would mean that we need to encode implicit lengths for tag 0x0d without knowing what it would actually be. I guess we can trade a slight inconsistency for backward compatibility (of sorta). And if we don't value compatibility, we can simply move EsSub32.

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There were never any compatibility guarantees about metadata (any kind of versioning scheme should be encoded outside of RBML).

Also clarified the mysterious `_next_int` method.
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huonw commented Mar 3, 2015

@bors r+

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bors commented Mar 3, 2015

@bors r=huonw 2008b54

@Manishearth
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@bors: p=1

@lifthrasiir
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@alexcrichton On the performance: I've built a simple Hello, world program with both nightly and stage2. Performance figures are roughly same, but curiously (or obviously?) the new rustc is both faster (best time being 0.56s vs. 0.62s) and consumes less memory (best max resident being 45.3M vs. 57.9M). I guess it is an impact of decoder changes plus metadata reduction, but would never be sure.

I've also run make dist. The resulting tarball is 88MB while the current nightly is 97MB. Considering that the encoder/decoder changes do not reduce inherent information entropy, this is actually a huge win (or gzip is that much gullible). For fun I've also zcat | xzcat -z-ed the tarball; the result is, not surprisingly, 68MB. Maybe we should ship .tar.xz alongside of existing .tar.gz archives 😉

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bors commented Mar 3, 2015

⌛ Testing commit 2008b54 with merge 2e0e16e...

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bors commented Mar 3, 2015

⌛ Testing commit 2008b54 with merge 24a840d...

bors added a commit that referenced this pull request Mar 3, 2015
This is a series of individual but correlated changes to the metadata format. The changes are significant enough that it (finally) bumps the metadata encoding version. In brief, they altogether reduce the total size of stage1 binaries by 27% (!!!!). Almost every low-hanging fruit has been considered and fixed; see the individual commits for details.

Detailed library (not just metadata) size changes for x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu stage1 binaries (baseline being 3a96d6a):

````
   before     after  delta path
--------- --------- ------ --------------------------------
  1706146   1050412  38.4% liballoc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   398576    152454  61.8% libarena-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    71441     56892  20.4% libarena-4e7c5e5c.so
 14424754   5084102  64.8% libcollections-4e7c5e5c.rlib
 39143186  14743118  62.3% libcore-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   195574    188150   3.8% libflate-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   153123    152603   0.3% libflate-4e7c5e5c.so
   477152    215262  54.9% libfmt_macros-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    77728     66601  14.3% libfmt_macros-4e7c5e5c.so
  1216936    684104  43.8% libgetopts-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   207846    181116  12.9% libgetopts-4e7c5e5c.so
   349722    147530  57.8% libgraphviz-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    60196     49197  18.3% libgraphviz-4e7c5e5c.so
   729842    259906  64.4% liblibc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   349358    247014  29.3% liblog-4e7c5e5c.rlib
    88878     83163   6.4% liblog-4e7c5e5c.so
  1968508    732840  62.8% librand-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  1968204    696326  64.6% librbml-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   283207    206589  27.1% librbml-4e7c5e5c.so
 72369394  46401230  35.9% librustc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
 11941372  10498483  12.1% librustc-4e7c5e5c.so
  2717894   1983272  27.0% librustc_back-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   501900    464176   7.5% librustc_back-4e7c5e5c.so
    15058     12588  16.4% librustc_bitflags-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  4008268   2961912  26.1% librustc_borrowck-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   837550    785633   6.2% librustc_borrowck-4e7c5e5c.so
  6473348   6095470   5.8% librustc_driver-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  1448785   1433945   1.0% librustc_driver-4e7c5e5c.so
 95483688  94779704   0.7% librustc_llvm-4e7c5e5c.rlib
 43516815  43487809   0.1% librustc_llvm-4e7c5e5c.so
   938140    817236  12.9% librustc_privacy-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   182653    176563   3.3% librustc_privacy-4e7c5e5c.so
  4390288   3543284  19.3% librustc_resolve-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   872981    831824   4.7% librustc_resolve-4e7c5e5c.so
 1817642  14795426  18.6% librustc_trans-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  3657354   3480026   4.8% librustc_trans-4e7c5e5c.so
 16815076  13868862  17.5% librustc_typeck-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  3274439   3123898   4.6% librustc_typeck-4e7c5e5c.so
 21372308  14890582  30.3% librustdoc-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  4501971   4172202   7.3% librustdoc-4e7c5e5c.so
  8055028   2951044  63.4% libserialize-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   958101    710016  25.9% libserialize-4e7c5e5c.so
 30810208  15160648  50.8% libstd-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  6819003   5967485  12.5% libstd-4e7c5e5c.so
 58850950  31949594  45.7% libsyntax-4e7c5e5c.rlib
  9060154   7882423  13.0% libsyntax-4e7c5e5c.so
  1474310   1062102  28.0% libterm-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   345577    323952   6.3% libterm-4e7c5e5c.so
  2827854   1643056  41.9% libtest-4e7c5e5c.rlib
   517811    452519  12.6% libtest-4e7c5e5c.so
  2274106   1761240  22.6% libunicode-4e7c5e5c.rlib
--------- --------- ------ --------------------------------
499359187 363465583  27.2% total
````

Some notes:

* Uncompressed metadata compacts very well. It is less visible for compressed metadata but still it achieves about 5~10% reduction.
* *Every* commit is designed to reduce the metadata in one way. There is absolutely no negative impact associated to changes (that's why the table above doesn't contain a minus delta).
* I've confirmed that this compiles through `make all`, making it almost correct. Other platforms have to be tested though.
* Oh, I'll rebase this as soon as I have spare time, but I guess this needs an extensive review anyway.
* I haven't rigorously checked the encoder and decoder performance. I tried to minimize the impact (some encodings are actually simpler than the original), but I'm not sure.

Fixes #2743, #9303 (partially) and #21482.
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ghost commented Mar 3, 2015

@lifthrasiir You are a hero.

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Optimize EBML encoding
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