(no title)
Lectem | 1 month ago
> - It as an optimal amount of spinning
No it isn't, it has a fixed number of yields, which has a very different duration on various CPUs
> Threads wait (instead of spinning) if the lock is not available immediately-ish
They use parking lots, which is one way to do futew (in fact, WaitOnAddress is implemented similarly). And no if you read the code, they do spin. Worse, they actually yield the thread before properly parking.
pizlonator|1 month ago
You say this with zero data.
I know that yielding 40 times is optimal for WebKit because I measured it. In fact it was re-measured many times because folks like you would doubt that it could’ve optimal, suggest something different, and then again the 40 yields would be shown to be optimal.
> And no if you read the code, they do spin. Worse, they actually yield the thread before properly parking.
Threads wait if the lock is not available immediately-ish.
Yes, they spin by yielding. Spinning by pausing or doing anything else results in worse performance. We measured this countless times.
I think the mistake you’re making is that you’re imagining how locks work. Whereas what I am doing is running rigorous experiments that involved putting WebKit through larger scale tests
ablob|23 days ago
> You say this with zero data.
Wouldn't the null hypothesis be that the same program behaves differently on different CPUs? Is "different people require different amounts of time to run 100m" a statement that requires data?
Lectem|1 month ago
Or so you assume
> Spinning by pausing or doing anything else results in worse performance. We measured this countless times.
And I've seen the issue in hundreds of captures using a profiler. I suppose we just have a different definitions of the what "worse performance" is.
> Whereas what I am doing is running rigorous experiments that involved putting WebKit through larger scale tests
Or perhaps the fish was drown in the stats, or again different metrics.
Phelinofist|1 month ago
The direct link to Intel 404s.
arghwhat|1 month ago
https://github.com/golang/go/blob/2bd7f15dd7423b6817939b199c...
https://github.com/golang/go/blob/2bd7f15dd7423b6817939b199c...
jacobp100|1 month ago
Lectem|1 month ago
For the yield part, I already linked to the part that shows that. Yes it doesn't call yield if it sees others are parked, but on quick lock/unlock of threads it happens that it sees nobody parked and fails, yielding directly to the OS. This is not frequent, but frequent enough that it can introduce delay issues.