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Make the specializing interpreter thread-safe in --disable-gil
builds
#115999
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(subscribing myself) |
…aded builds (#116013) For now, disable all specialization when the GIL might be disabled.
This is now a performance (rather than correctness) issue for free-threaded builds, so I'm going to focus on more time-sensitive issues for a while. |
…e-threaded builds (python#116013) For now, disable all specialization when the GIL might be disabled.
…e-threaded builds (python#116013) For now, disable all specialization when the GIL might be disabled.
…e-threaded builds (python#116013) For now, disable all specialization when the GIL might be disabled.
@swtaarrs Out of curiosity, is there any progress or plan for this issue? |
@corona10 I'm planning to work on this after I get the deferred reference stack in. However, there are no concrete plans as of now. I'm really happy for you or anyone else to propose a design for the specializing interpreter with free-threaded safety! |
@Fidget-Spinner cc @swtaarrs By the way, in the short term, can we enable the specializer to be used only for the main thread if we can not solve the issue before 3.13 is released? |
@corona10 for 3.13, I think generally we're focusing on scalability across multicore rather than single-threaded perf for 3.13. It's a bit too near to feature freeze for me to feel safe re-enabling specialization at this point. There are a lot of unsolved problems still even with specialization only on the main thread. Consider the following:
I'm reading a few papers to get some inspiration and also looking at how CRuby and other runtimes deal with this. Will post back when I have an actual plan. |
Stop the world when invalidating function versions The tier1 interpreter specializes `CALL` instructions based on the values of certain function attributes (e.g. `__code__`, `__defaults__`). The tier1 interpreter uses function versions to verify that the attributes of a function during execution of a specialization match those seen during specialization. A function's version is initialized in `MAKE_FUNCTION` and is invalidated when any of the critical function attributes are changed. The tier1 interpreter stores the function version in the inline cache during specialization. A guard is used by the specialized instruction to verify that the version of the function on the operand stack matches the cached version (and therefore has all of the expected attributes). It is assumed that once the guard passes, all attributes will remain unchanged while executing the rest of the specialized instruction. Stopping the world when invalidating function versions ensures that all critical function attributes will remain unchanged after the function version guard passes in free-threaded builds. It's important to note that this is only true if the remainder of the specialized instruction does not enter and exit a stop-the-world point. We will stop the world the first time any of the following function attributes are mutated: - defaults - vectorcall - kwdefaults - closure - code This should happen rarely and only happens once per function, so the performance impact on majority of code should be minimal. Additionally, refactor the API for manipulating function versions to more clearly match the stated semantics.
…ython#124997) Stop the world when invalidating function versions The tier1 interpreter specializes `CALL` instructions based on the values of certain function attributes (e.g. `__code__`, `__defaults__`). The tier1 interpreter uses function versions to verify that the attributes of a function during execution of a specialization match those seen during specialization. A function's version is initialized in `MAKE_FUNCTION` and is invalidated when any of the critical function attributes are changed. The tier1 interpreter stores the function version in the inline cache during specialization. A guard is used by the specialized instruction to verify that the version of the function on the operand stack matches the cached version (and therefore has all of the expected attributes). It is assumed that once the guard passes, all attributes will remain unchanged while executing the rest of the specialized instruction. Stopping the world when invalidating function versions ensures that all critical function attributes will remain unchanged after the function version guard passes in free-threaded builds. It's important to note that this is only true if the remainder of the specialized instruction does not enter and exit a stop-the-world point. We will stop the world the first time any of the following function attributes are mutated: - defaults - vectorcall - kwdefaults - closure - code This should happen rarely and only happens once per function, so the performance impact on majority of code should be minimal. Additionally, refactor the API for manipulating function versions to more clearly match the stated semantics.
…{globals, builtins} keys (gh-124953) Each of the `LOAD_GLOBAL` specializations is implemented roughly as: 1. Load keys version. 2. Load cached keys version. 3. Deopt if (1) and (2) don't match. 4. Load keys. 5. Load cached index into keys. 6. Load object from (4) at offset from (5). This is not thread-safe in free-threaded builds; the keys object may be replaced in between steps (3) and (4). This change refactors the specializations to avoid reloading the keys object and instead pass the keys object from guards to be consumed by downstream uops.
…for `BINARY_OP` (#123926) Each thread specializes a thread-local copy of the bytecode, created on the first RESUME, in free-threaded builds. All copies of the bytecode for a code object are stored in the co_tlbc array on the code object. Threads reserve a globally unique index identifying its copy of the bytecode in all co_tlbc arrays at thread creation and release the index at thread destruction. The first entry in every co_tlbc array always points to the "main" copy of the bytecode that is stored at the end of the code object. This ensures that no bytecode is copied for programs that do not use threads. Thread-local bytecode can be disabled at runtime by providing either -X tlbc=0 or PYTHON_TLBC=0. Disabling thread-local bytecode also disables specialization. Concurrent modifications to the bytecode made by the specializing interpreter and instrumentation use atomics, with specialization taking care not to overwrite an instruction that was instrumented concurrently.
…de change (#126440) Fix the gdb pretty printer in the face of --enable-shared by delaying the attempt to load the _PyInterpreterFrame definition until after .so files are loaded.
- The specialization logic determines the appropriate specialization using only the operand's type, which is safe to read non-atomically (changing it requires stopping the world). We are guaranteed that the type will not change in between when it is checked and when we specialize the bytecode because the types involved are immutable (you cannot assign to `__class__` for exact instances of `dict`, `set`, or `frozenset`). The bytecode is mutated atomically using helpers. - The specialized instructions rely on the operand type not changing in between the `DEOPT_IF` checks and the calls to the appropriate type-specific helpers (e.g. `_PySet_Contains`). This is a correctness requirement in the default builds and there are no changes to the opcodes in the free-threaded builds that would invalidate this.
Introduce helpers for (un)specializing instructions Consolidate the code to specialize/unspecialize instructions into two helper functions and use them in `_Py_Specialize_BinaryOp`. The resulting code is more concise and keeps all of the logic at the point where we decide to specialize/unspecialize an instruction.
#126414 broke the main branch.
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Feature or enhancement
Proposal:
In free-threaded builds, the specializing adaptive interpreter needs to be made thread-safe. We should start with a small PR to simply disable it in free-threaded builds, which will be correct but will incur a performance penalty. Then we can work out how to properly support specialization in a free-threaded build.
These two commits from Sam's nogil-3.12 branch can serve as inspiration:
There are two primary concerns to balance while implementing this functionality on
main
:Has this already been discussed elsewhere?
I have already discussed this feature proposal on Discourse
Links to previous discussion of this feature:
Linked PRs
BINARY_OP
#123926LOAD_GLOBAL
specializations to avoid reloading {globals, builtins} keys #124953The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: