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Re: Slowness in bignum mode ( gmp | gawk -M ) when doubling extremely la


From: arnold
Subject: Re: Slowness in bignum mode ( gmp | gawk -M ) when doubling extremely large inputs
Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2022 06:22:30 -0700
User-agent: Heirloom mailx 12.5 7/5/10

If I can't understand the awk code I can't begin to figure out if
the problem is in gawk or elsewhere.

There is no "I/O" between gawk and GMP, it's all binary data structures
passed around in memory.

"Jason C. Kwan" <jasonckwan@yahoo.com> wrote:

> Have you tried even just straight up pasting it and run it as is ? when 
> interpreted scripting for the same platform is generating some 65% reduction 
> in execution time versus the built in compiled binary from C code source, 
> don’t you think it should at least warrant a quick look to see if there are 
> potential I/O bottlenecks between gawk and the GMP add-on module it uses ?
>
> i already used LC_ALL=C locale, per the bug reporting page, as you could see 
> below. I even let gawk -M go second so if there were any gains from caching, 
> it would be gawk -M that benefited from it. Maybe it’s an ARM thing, being 
> that I’m on m1max instead of x64
>
> I only sent here first because I’m somewhat certain the GMP side would 
> instantly send me back here, seeing that I couldn’t isolate out whether the 
> potential bottlenecks exists on gawk side or gmp side, and I haven’t written 
> in C since 2002. I even tried reading the gawk 5.1.1 source code to see if I 
> could identify anything that could be help, but haven’t been lucky.
>
> Do u want me to read through the gmp source first ?
>
> Regards,
> Jason K
>
> > arnold@skeeve.com於2022年1月27日 01:42寫道:
> > 
> > Hello.
> > 
> > Thank you for taking the time to report an issue.
> > 
> > Please read the instructions for bug reporting at
> > https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/html_node/Bugs.html.
> > It was updated recently, please reread it if you haven't looked at
> > it in a long time.
> > 
> > I'm afraid that your "proof of concept" code is so unreadable that
> > I won't even try to determine what it's doing.
> > 
> > With respect to GMP performance, I suggest that you report an
> > issue directly to the GMP developers.  The gawk code that uses
> > GMP isn't going to change.  For this reason, I don't think you
> > need to bother redoing your example code, unless you want to send
> > it to the GMP developers.
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > 
> > Arnold
> > 
> > "Jason C. Kwan" via "Bug reports only for gawk." <bug-gawk@gnu.org> wrote:
> > 
> >> Hi GAWK team,
> >> Not sure if I should be reporting this to the gawk team or the GnuMP team 
> >> - it's neither a bug or nor new feature per se, but merely a performance 
> >> one - I've noticed on that for extremely large inputs, say, integers with 
> >> more than 5 million digits, the bignum gawk -M mode could be somewhat 
> >> slow, with possible room for speed improvement (proof-of-concept attached 
> >> below). my gawk version information : 
> >> GNU Awk 5.1.1, API: 3.1 (GNU MPFR 4.1.0, GNU MP 6.2.1)
> >> Darwin MacBook-Pro.local 21.2.0 Darwin Kernel Version 21.2.0: Sun Nov 28 
> >> 20:28:41 PST 2021; root:xnu-8019.61.5~1/RELEASE_ARM64_T6000 arm64
> >> On my test-case of 71.5 million digits, it's possible to to save 63.7% of 
> >> time , even in regular gawk, when compared to gawk -M  : 
> >> ==================
> >> gawk -be '{ print length($0) }' test.txt71591842
> >> test command ::
> >> echo; time ( pv -q < test.txt | LC_ALL=C gawkmx -b -e '{ print _2x_($0) }' 
> >> ) | xxh128sum ; echo; time (pv -q < test.txt | LC_ALL=C gawk -M -b -e '{ 
> >> print $0+$0 }' ) | xxh128sum ; echo
> >> a56c2d2302d9ea8751f810b848e6f354  stdin( pv -q < test.txt | LC_ALL=C 
> >> LC_ALL=C gawk -e "${mfx}" -b) 8.16s user 0.60s system 99% cpu 8.789 
> >> totalxxh128sum  0.01s user 0.00s system 0% cpu 8.789 total
> >> a56c2d2302d9ea8751f810b848e6f354  stdin( pv -q < test.txt | LC_ALL=C gawk 
> >> -M -b -e ; )  23.26s user 0.96s system 99% cpu 24.240 totalxxh128sum  
> >> 0.01s user 0.00s system 0% cpu 24.239 total
> >> =====================
> >> In another test case of slightly over 275 milion digits, the time savings 
> >> are 71.7% : 
> >> fc2231bdff375b7870586d8dffc0841c  stdin( pv -q < 
> >> jwengowengonoewgnwoegn.txt | LC_ALL=C gawk -b -e "${mfx}" -e ; )  27.25s 
> >> user 6.48s system 98% cpu 34.350 totalxxh128sum  0.04s user 0.02s system 
> >> 0% cpu 34.349 total
> >> fc2231bdff375b7870586d8dffc0841c  stdin( pv -q < 
> >> jwengowengonoewgnwoegn.txt | LC_ALL=C gawk -M -b -e ; )  116.58s user 
> >> 4.78s system 99% cpu 2:01.42 totalxxh128sum  0.04s user 0.02s system 0% 
> >> cpu 2:01.42 total
> >> ====================
> >> Attached below is the full proof-of-concept code for function _2x_( ) to 
> >> demostrate that the time savings are very much concrete and possible, not 
> >> simply theoretical. The test file, being 70MB+, is a big large for email, 
> >> but basically any file using ASCII digits 0-9 to represent any integer 
> >> over 5 million digits will do. The speed difference isn't noticeable for 
> >> smaller inputs, and for inputs fewer than 7 digits, most likely it would 
> >> be slower than gawk -M. 
> >> I tried maximizing portability of the proof-of-concept function by 
> >> refraining from any gawk-specific extensions of awk - this same code has 
> >> also been tested in mawk 1.3.4, mawk 1.9.9.6, and macos 12.1 awk/nawk. 
> >> It's entirely self-contained, performs no recursion, has no external 
> >> dependencies, no bit-wise ops, and doesn't include any advanced/fancy math 
> >> - just straight up grade-school long-form addition, doubling them 
> >> 15-digits per chunk, and 2 chunks per while loop. The carrying part is 
> >> performed by gsub( ) prior to the while( ) loop, and thus, eliminating the 
> >> need to track them along the way. Performance scales linearly at the 
> >> log-base-10 level.
> >> ( I didn't include any copyright notice or credits to a priori since I 
> >> don't think grade school addition is something copyrightable) 
> >> Obviously this is simply awk scripting code and can't be directly 
> >> incorporated into the C code base - I'm merely raising awareness of the 
> >> issue.
> >> Thanks for your time.
> >> Jason
> >> ===================================================================================
> >> ( I can reformat the code for readability if you prefer )  : 
> >> function _2x_(__,_,_______,____,_________,      
> >> ___________,__________,____________,              
> >> ________,_____,______,___) {    if(__!~/[1-9]/) {        return +_ }    
> >> ___=(__~/^[-]/)    sub("^[+-]?["(-"")"]*","",__)    if 
> >> (length(__)<(_____=((_+=++_)^_^_-!!_))+_) {        if 
> >> (_________^((_____+(_~____))^(_____-_)<+__)) {            return 
> >> (-!-"")^___*(+__+__)    } }    ___=substr("-",_~"",___)    if 
> >> (__!~"[5-9]") {        gsub(/4/,"8",__)-gsub(/3/,"6",__)        
> >> gsub(/2/,"4",__)-gsub(/1/,"2",__)        return (___)__    }; 
> >> _______=____=________="";    
> >> __=(_____=substr(________=(_++^_--+_)^_____,_))(__)    gsub(/./,".",_____) 
> >>         sub("("(_____)")+$","_&",__)    __=substr(__,index(__,"_")+!+"")   
> >>  ________+=+________;_="";    if 
> >> ((gsub(_____,"&_",__)+gsub(/[_][5-9]/,".5&",__)*(+""))%2) {        
> >> _=(":")(________+__+__)        __=substr(__,index(__,"_")+!+"")    }    
> >> for(_____ in ______) { }    if (______[_____=split(__,______,/[_]/)]=="") 
> >> {        delete ______[_____--] };__=____~____;    
> >> __________=____________*=\    ____________=___________=_________=32;    
> >> while(__<_____) { if(!--__________){        
> >> __________=____________;_______=(_______)_;_="";        
> >> if(!--___________){        
> >> ___________=_________;____=(____)_______;_______="";        } }        
> >> _=(_)(":")(+______[__++]*2+________)\             
> >> (":")(+______[__++]*2+________) }    ____=(____)(_______)(_)\         
> >> (__==_____?(":")(________+2*______[_____]):"")    gsub(/[:]+[^:]/,"",____) 
> >>          sub(/^0*/,"",____); return (___)____ }
>



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