1 | \chapter{Performance}
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2 | \label{c:performance}
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3 |
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4 | Performance is of secondary importance for most of this project.
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5 | Instead, the focus was to get the features working. The only performance
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6 | requirement is to ensure the tests for correctness run in a reasonable
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7 | amount of time. Hence, only a few basic performance tests were performed to
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8 | check this requirement.
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9 |
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10 | \section{Test Set-Up}
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11 | Tests were run in \CFA, C++, Java and Python.
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12 | In addition there are two sets of tests for \CFA,
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13 | one with termination and one with resumption.
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14 |
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15 | GCC C++ is the most comparable language because both it and \CFA use the same
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16 | framework, libunwind.
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17 | In fact, the comparison is almost entirely in quality of implementation.
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18 | Specifically, \CFA's EHM has had significantly less time to be optimized and
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19 | does not generate its own assembly. It does have a slight advantage in that
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20 | \Cpp has to do some extra bookkeeping to support its utility functions,
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21 | but otherwise \Cpp should have a significant advantage.
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22 |
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23 | Java, a popular language with similar termination semantics,
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24 | is implemented in a very different environment, a virtual machine with
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25 | garbage collection.
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26 | It also implements the finally clause on try blocks allowing for a direct
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27 | feature-to-feature comparison.
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28 | As with \Cpp, Java's implementation is mature, has more optimizations
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29 | and extra features as compared to \CFA.
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30 |
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31 | Python is used as an alternative comparison because of the \CFA EHM's
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32 | current performance goals, which is to not be prohibitively slow while the
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33 | features are designed and examined. Python has similar performance goals for
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34 | creating quick scripts and its wide use suggests it has achieved those goals.
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35 |
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36 | Unfortunately, there are no notable modern programming languages with
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37 | resumption exceptions. Even the older programming languages with resumption
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38 | seem to be notable only for having resumption.
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39 | On the other hand, the functional equivalents to resumption are too new.
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40 | There does not seem to be any standard implementations in well-known
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41 | languages; so far, they seem confined to extensions and research languages.
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42 | % There was some maybe interesting comparison to an OCaml extension
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43 | % but I'm not sure how to get that working if it is interesting.
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44 | Instead, resumption is compared to its simulation in other programming
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45 | languages: fixup functions that are explicitly passed into a function.
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46 |
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47 | All tests are run inside a main loop that repeatedly performs a test.
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48 | This approach avoids start-up or tear-down time from
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49 | affecting the timing results.
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50 | The number of times the loop is run is configurable from the command line;
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51 | the number used in the timing runs is given with the results per test.
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52 | The Java tests run the main loop 1000 times before
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53 | beginning the actual test to ``warm up" the JVM.
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54 | % All other languages are precompiled or interpreted.
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55 |
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56 | Timing is done internally, with time measured immediately before and
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57 | after the test loop. The difference is calculated and printed.
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58 | The loop structure and internal timing means it is impossible to test
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59 | unhandled exceptions in \Cpp and Java as that would cause the process to
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60 | terminate.
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61 | Luckily, performance on the ``give up and kill the process" path is not
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62 | critical.
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63 |
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64 | The exceptions used in these tests are always based off of
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65 | the base exception for the language.
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66 | This requirement minimizes performance differences based
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67 | on the object model used to represent the exception.
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68 |
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69 | All tests are designed to be as minimal as possible, while still preventing
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70 | excessive optimizations.
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71 | For example, empty inline assembly blocks are used in \CFA and \Cpp to
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72 | prevent excessive optimizations while adding no actual work.
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73 |
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74 | % We don't use catch-alls but if we did:
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75 | % Catch-alls are done by catching the root exception type (not using \Cpp's
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76 | % \code{C++}{catch(...)}).
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77 |
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78 | When collecting data, each test is run eleven times. The top three and bottom
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79 | three results are discarded and the remaining five values are averaged.
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80 | The test are run with the latest (still pre-release) \CFA compiler,
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81 | using gcc-10 10.3.0 as a backend.
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82 | g++-10 10.3.0 is used for \Cpp.
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83 | Java tests are complied and run with Oracle OpenJDK version 11.0.11.
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84 | Python used CPython version 3.8.10.
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85 | The machines used to run the tests are:
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86 | \begin{itemize}[nosep]
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87 | \item ARM 2280 Kunpeng 920 48-core 2$\times$socket
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88 | \lstinline{@} 2.6 GHz running Linux v5.11.0-25
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89 | \item AMD 6380 Abu Dhabi 16-core 4$\times$socket
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90 | \lstinline{@} 2.5 GHz running Linux v5.11.0-25
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91 | \end{itemize}
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92 | These represent the two major families of hardware architecture.
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93 |
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94 | \section{Tests}
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95 | The following tests were selected to test the performance of different
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96 | components of the exception system.
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97 | They should provide a guide as to where the EHM's costs are found.
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98 |
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99 | \paragraph{Stack Traversal}
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100 | This group of tests measures the cost of traversing the stack
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101 | (and in termination, unwinding it).
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102 | Inside the main loop is a call to a recursive function.
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103 | This function calls itself F times before raising an exception.
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104 | F is configurable from the command line, but is usually 100.
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105 | This builds up many stack frames, and any contents they may have,
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106 | before the raise.
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107 | The exception is always handled at the base of the stack.
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108 | For example the Empty test for \CFA resumption looks like:
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109 | \begin{cfa}
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110 | void unwind_empty(unsigned int frames) {
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111 | if (frames) {
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112 | unwind_empty(frames - 1);
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113 | } else {
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114 | throwResume (empty_exception){&empty_vt};
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115 | }
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116 | }
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117 | \end{cfa}
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118 | Other test cases have additional code around the recursive call adding
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119 | something besides simple stack frames to the stack.
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120 | Note that both termination and resumption have to traverse over
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121 | the stack but only termination has to unwind it.
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122 | \begin{itemize}[nosep]
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123 | % \item None:
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124 | % Reuses the empty test code (see below) except that the number of frames
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125 | % is set to 0 (this is the only test for which the number of frames is not
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126 | % 100). This isolates the start-up and shut-down time of a throw.
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127 | \item Empty:
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128 | The repeating function is empty except for the necessary control code.
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129 | As other traversal tests add to this, it is the baseline for the group
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130 | as the cost comes from traversing over and unwinding a stack frame
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131 | that has no other interactions with the exception system.
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132 | \item Destructor:
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133 | The repeating function creates an object with a destructor before calling
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134 | itself.
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135 | Comparing this to the empty test gives the time to traverse over and
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136 | unwind a destructor.
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137 | \item Finally:
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138 | The repeating function calls itself inside a try block with a finally clause
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139 | attached.
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140 | Comparing this to the empty test gives the time to traverse over and
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141 | unwind a finally clause.
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142 | \item Other Handler:
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143 | The repeating function calls itself inside a try block with a handler that
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144 | does not match the raised exception, but is of the same kind of handler.
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145 | This means that the EHM has to check each handler, and continue
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146 | over all of them until it reaches the base of the stack.
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147 | Comparing this to the empty test gives the time to traverse over and
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148 | unwind a handler.
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149 | \end{itemize}
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150 |
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151 | \paragraph{Cross Try Statement}
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152 | This group of tests measures the cost for setting up exception handling,
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153 | if it is
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154 | not used because the exceptional case did not occur.
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155 | Tests repeatedly cross (enter, execute and leave) a try statement but never
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156 | perform a raise.
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157 | \begin{itemize}[nosep]
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158 | \item Handler:
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159 | The try statement has a handler (of the appropriate kind).
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160 | \item Finally:
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161 | The try statement has a finally clause.
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162 | \end{itemize}
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163 |
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164 | \paragraph{Conditional Matching}
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165 | This group measures the cost of conditional matching.
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166 | Only \CFA implements the language level conditional match,
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167 | the other languages mimic it with an ``unconditional" match (it still
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168 | checks the exception's type) and conditional re-raise if it is not supposed
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169 | to handle that exception.
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170 |
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171 | Here is the pattern shown in \CFA and \Cpp. Java and Python use the same
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172 | pattern as \Cpp, but with their own syntax.
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173 |
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174 | \begin{minipage}{0.45\textwidth}
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175 | \begin{cfa}
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176 | try {
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177 | ...
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178 | } catch (exception_t * e ;
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179 | should_catch(e)) {
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180 | ...
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181 | }
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182 | \end{cfa}
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183 | \end{minipage}
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184 | \begin{minipage}{0.55\textwidth}
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185 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=C++]
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186 | try {
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187 | ...
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188 | } catch (std::exception & e) {
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189 | if (!should_catch(e)) throw;
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190 | ...
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191 | }
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192 | \end{lstlisting}
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193 | \end{minipage}
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194 | \begin{itemize}[nosep]
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195 | \item Match All:
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196 | The condition is always true. (Always matches or never re-raises.)
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197 | \item Match None:
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198 | The condition is always false. (Never matches or always re-raises.)
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199 | \end{itemize}
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200 |
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201 | \paragraph{Resumption Simulation}
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202 | A slightly altered version of the Empty Traversal test is used when comparing
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203 | resumption to fix-up routines.
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204 | The handler, the actual resumption handler or the fix-up routine,
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205 | always captures a variable at the base of the loop,
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206 | and receives a reference to a variable at the raise site, either as a
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207 | field on the exception or an argument to the fix-up routine.
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208 | % I don't actually know why that is here but not anywhere else.
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209 |
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210 | %\section{Cost in Size}
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211 | %Using exceptions also has a cost in the size of the executable.
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212 | %Although it is sometimes ignored
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213 | %
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214 | %There is a size cost to defining a personality function but the later problem
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215 | %is the LSDA which will be generated for every function.
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216 | %
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217 | %(I haven't actually figured out how to compare this, probably using something
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218 | %related to -fexceptions.)
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219 |
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220 | \section{Results}
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221 | % First, introduce the tables.
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222 | \autoref{t:PerformanceTermination},
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223 | \autoref{t:PerformanceResumption}
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224 | and~\autoref{t:PerformanceFixupRoutines}
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225 | show the test results.
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226 | In cases where a feature is not supported by a language, the test is skipped
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227 | for that language and the result is marked N/A.
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228 | There are also cases where the feature is supported but measuring its
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229 | cost is impossible. This happened with Java, which uses a JIT that optimizes
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230 | away the tests and cannot be stopped.\cite{Dice21}
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231 | These tests are marked N/C.
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232 | To get results in a consistent range (1 second to 1 minute is ideal,
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233 | going higher is better than going low) N, the number of iterations of the
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234 | main loop in each test, is varied between tests. It is also given in the
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235 | results and has a value in the millions.
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236 |
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237 | An anomaly in some results came from \CFA's use of GCC nested functions.
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238 | These nested functions are used to create closures that can access stack
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239 | variables in their lexical scope.
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240 | However, if they do so, then they can cause the benchmark's run time to
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241 | increase by an order of magnitude.
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242 | The simplest solution is to make those values global variables instead
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243 | of function-local variables.
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244 | % Do we know if editing a global inside nested function is a problem?
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245 | Tests that had to be modified to avoid this problem have been marked
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246 | with a ``*'' in the results.
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247 |
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248 | % Now come the tables themselves:
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249 | % You might need a wider window for this.
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250 |
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251 | \begin{table}[htb]
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252 | \centering
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253 | \caption{Termination Performance Results (sec)}
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254 | \label{t:PerformanceTermination}
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255 | \begin{tabular}{|r|*{2}{|r r r r|}}
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256 | \hline
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257 | & \multicolumn{4}{c||}{AMD} & \multicolumn{4}{c|}{ARM} \\
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258 | \cline{2-9}
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259 | N\hspace{8pt} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{\CFA} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{\Cpp} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{Java} & \multicolumn{1}{c||}{Python} &
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260 | \multicolumn{1}{c}{\CFA} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{\Cpp} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{Java} & \multicolumn{1}{c|}{Python} \\
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261 | \hline
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262 | Empty Traversal (1M) & 23.0 & 9.6 & 17.6 & 23.4 & 30.6 & 13.6 & 15.5 & 14.7 \\
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263 | D'tor Traversal (1M) & 48.1 & 23.5 & N/A & N/A & 64.2 & 29.2 & N/A & N/A \\
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264 | Finally Traversal (1M) & 3.2* & N/A & 17.6 & 29.2 & 3.9* & N/A & 15.5 & 19.0 \\
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265 | Other Traversal (1M) & 3.3* & 23.9 & 17.7 & 32.8 & 3.9* & 24.5 & 15.5 & 21.6 \\
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266 | Cross Handler (1B) & 6.5 & 0.9 & N/C & 38.0 & 9.6 & 0.8 & N/C & 32.1 \\
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267 | Cross Finally (1B) & 0.8 & N/A & N/C & 44.6 & 0.6 & N/A & N/C & 37.3 \\
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268 | Match All (10M) & 30.5 & 20.6 & 11.2 & 3.9 & 36.9 & 24.6 & 10.7 & 3.1 \\
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269 | Match None (10M) & 30.6 & 50.9 & 11.2 & 5.0 & 36.9 & 71.9 & 10.7 & 4.1 \\
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270 | \hline
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271 | \end{tabular}
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272 | \end{table}
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273 |
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274 | \begin{table}[htb]
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275 | \centering
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276 | \caption{Resumption Performance Results (sec)}
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277 | \label{t:PerformanceResumption}
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278 | \begin{tabular}{|r||r||r|}
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279 | \hline
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280 | N\hspace{8pt}
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281 | & AMD & ARM \\
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282 | \hline
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283 | Empty Traversal (10M) & 1.4 & 1.2 \\
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284 | D'tor Traversal (10M) & 1.8 & 1.0 \\
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285 | Finally Traversal (10M) & 1.8 & 1.0 \\
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286 | Other Traversal (10M) & 22.6 & 25.8 \\
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287 | Cross Handler (1B) & 9.0 & 11.9 \\
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288 | Match All (100M) & 2.3 & 3.2 \\
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289 | Match None (100M) & 3.0 & 3.8 \\
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290 | \hline
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291 | \end{tabular}
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292 | \end{table}
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293 |
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294 | \begin{table}[htb]
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295 | \centering
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296 | \small
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297 | \caption{Resumption/Fixup Routine Comparison (sec)}
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298 | \label{t:PerformanceFixupRoutines}
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299 | \setlength{\tabcolsep}{5pt}
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300 | \begin{tabular}{|r|*{2}{|r r r r r|}}
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301 | \hline
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302 | & \multicolumn{5}{c||}{AMD} & \multicolumn{5}{c|}{ARM} \\
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303 | \cline{2-11}
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304 | N\hspace{8pt} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{Raise} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{\CFA} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{\Cpp} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{Java} & \multicolumn{1}{c||}{Python} &
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305 | \multicolumn{1}{c}{Raise} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{\CFA} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{\Cpp} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{Java} & \multicolumn{1}{c|}{Python} \\
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306 | \hline
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307 | Resume Empty (10M) & 1.4 & 1.4 & 15.4 & 2.3 & 178.0 & 1.2 & 1.2 & 8.9 & 1.2 & 118.4 \\
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308 | \hline
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309 | \end{tabular}
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310 | \end{table}
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311 |
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312 | % Now discuss the results in the tables.
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313 | One result not directly related to \CFA but important to keep in mind is that,
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314 | for exceptions, the standard intuition about which languages should go
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315 | faster often does not hold.
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316 | For example, there are a few cases where Python out-performs
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317 | \CFA, \Cpp and Java.
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318 | % To be exact, the Match All and Match None cases.
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319 | The most likely explanation is that
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320 | the generally faster languages have made ``common cases fast" at the expense
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321 | of the rarer cases. Since exceptions are considered rare, they are made
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322 | expensive to help speed up common actions, such as entering and leaving try
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323 | statements.
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324 | Python, on the other hand, while generally slower than the other languages,
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325 | uses exceptions more and has not sacrificed their performance.
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326 | In addition, languages with high-level representations have a much
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327 | easier time scanning the stack as there is less to decode.
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328 |
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329 | As stated,
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330 | the performance tests are not attempting to show \CFA has a new competitive
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331 | way of implementing exception handling.
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332 | The only performance requirement is to insure the \CFA EHM has reasonable
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333 | performance for prototyping.
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334 | Although that may be hard to exactly quantify, I believe it has succeeded
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335 | in that regard.
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336 | Details on the different test cases follow.
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337 |
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338 | \subsection{Termination \texorpdfstring{(\autoref{t:PerformanceTermination})}{}}
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339 |
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340 | \begin{description}
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341 | \item[Empty Traversal]
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342 | \CFA is slower than \Cpp, but is still faster than the other languages
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343 | and closer to \Cpp than other languages.
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344 | This result is to be expected,
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345 | as \CFA is closer to \Cpp than the other languages.
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346 |
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347 | \item[D'tor Traversal]
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348 | Running destructors causes a huge slowdown in the two languages that support
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349 | them. \CFA has a higher proportionate slowdown but it is similar to \Cpp's.
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350 | Considering the amount of work done in destructors is effectively zero
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351 | (an assembly comment), the cost
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352 | must come from the change of context required to run the destructor.
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353 |
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354 | \item[Finally Traversal]
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355 | Performance is similar to Empty Traversal in all languages that support finally
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356 | clauses. Only Python seems to have a larger than random noise change in
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357 | its run time and it is still not large.
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358 | Despite the similarity between finally clauses and destructors,
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359 | finally clauses seem to avoid the spike that run time destructors have.
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360 | Possibly some optimization removes the cost of changing contexts.
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361 |
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362 | \item[Other Traversal]
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363 | For \Cpp, stopping to check if a handler applies seems to be about as
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364 | expensive as stopping to run a destructor.
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365 | This results in a significant jump.
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366 |
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367 | Other languages experience a small increase in run time.
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368 | The small increase likely comes from running the checks,
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369 | but they could avoid the spike by not having the same kind of overhead for
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370 | switching to the check's context.
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371 |
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372 | \item[Cross Handler]
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373 | Here, \CFA falls behind \Cpp by a much more significant margin.
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374 | This is likely due to the fact that \CFA has to insert two extra function
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375 | calls, while \Cpp does not have to execute any other instructions.
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376 | Python is much further behind.
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377 |
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378 | \item[Cross Finally]
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379 | \CFA's performance now matches \Cpp's from Cross Handler.
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380 | If the code from the finally clause is being inlined,
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381 | which is just an asm comment, than there are no additional instructions
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382 | to execute again when exiting the try statement normally.
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383 |
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384 | \item[Conditional Match]
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385 | Both of the conditional matching tests can be considered on their own.
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386 | However, for evaluating the value of conditional matching itself, the
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387 | comparison of the two sets of results is useful.
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388 | Consider the massive jump in run time for \Cpp going from match all to match
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389 | none, which none of the other languages have.
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390 | Some strange interaction is causing run time to more than double for doing
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391 | twice as many raises.
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392 | Java and Python avoid this problem and have similar run time for both tests,
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393 | possibly through resource reuse or their program representation.
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394 | However, \CFA is built like \Cpp, and avoids the problem as well.
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395 | This matches
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396 | the pattern of the conditional match, which makes the two execution paths
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397 | very similar.
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398 |
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399 | \end{description}
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400 |
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401 | \subsection{Resumption \texorpdfstring{(\autoref{t:PerformanceResumption})}{}}
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402 |
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403 | Moving on to resumption, there is one general note:
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404 | resumption is \textit{fast}. The only test where it fell
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405 | behind termination is Cross Handler.
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406 | In every other case, the number of iterations had to be increased by a
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407 | factor of 10 to get the run time in an appropriate range
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408 | and in some cases resumption still took less time.
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409 |
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410 | % I tried \paragraph and \subparagraph, maybe if I could adjust spacing
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411 | % between paragraphs those would work.
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412 | \begin{description}
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413 | \item[Empty Traversal]
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414 | See above for the general speed-up notes.
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415 | This result is not surprising as resumption's linked-list approach
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416 | means that traversing over stack frames without a resumption handler is
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417 | $O(1)$.
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418 |
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419 | \item[D'tor Traversal]
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420 | Resumption does have the same spike in run time that termination has.
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421 | The run time is actually very similar to Finally Traversal.
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422 | As resumption does not unwind the stack, both destructors and finally
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423 | clauses are run while walking down the stack during the recursive returns.
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424 | So it follows their performance is similar.
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425 |
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426 | \item[Finally Traversal]
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427 | Same as D'tor Traversal,
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428 | except termination did not have a spike in run time on this test case.
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429 |
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430 | \item[Other Traversal]
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431 | Traversing across handlers reduces resumption's advantage as it actually
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432 | has to stop and check each one.
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433 | Resumption still came out ahead (adjusting for iterations) but by much less
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434 | than the other cases.
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435 |
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436 | \item[Cross Handler]
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437 | The only test case where resumption could not keep up with termination,
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438 | although the difference is not as significant as many other cases.
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439 | It is simply a matter of where the costs come from:
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440 | both termination and resumption have some work to set up or tear down a
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441 | handler. It just so happens that resumption's work is slightly slower.
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442 |
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443 | \item[Conditional Match]
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444 | Resumption shows a slight slowdown if the exception is not matched
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445 | by the first handler, which follows from the fact the second handler now has
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446 | to be checked. However, the difference is not large.
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447 |
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448 | \end{description}
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449 |
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450 | \subsection{Resumption/Fixup \texorpdfstring{(\autoref{t:PerformanceFixupRoutines})}{}}
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451 |
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452 | Finally are the results of the resumption/fixup routine comparison.
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453 | These results are surprisingly varied. It is possible that creating a closure
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454 | has more to do with performance than passing the argument through layers of
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455 | calls.
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456 | At 100 stack frames, resumption and manual fixup routines have similar
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457 | performance in \CFA.
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458 | More experiments could try to tease out the exact trade-offs,
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459 | but the prototype's only performance goal is to be reasonable.
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460 | It is already in that range, and \CFA's fixup routine simulation is
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461 | one of the faster simulations as well.
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462 | Plus, exceptions add features and remove syntactic overhead,
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463 | so even at similar performance, resumptions have advantages
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464 | over fixup routines.
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