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authorAaron Patterson <aaron.patterson@gmail.com>2015-10-15 13:33:15 -0700
committerAaron Patterson <aaron.patterson@gmail.com>2015-10-15 13:33:42 -0700
commit3253185b363da4e98a63f3f82b94e8e5e33154c9 (patch)
tree23a036b3f357dcd0273804baa57d0bd6c67dcecc /activerecord/test/models/carrier.rb
parent3acc590d5080279fe726ac978b713304e11f35da (diff)
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make string allocation constant regardless of column count
deep_dup'ing a hash will dup the keys as well as the values. Since string keys from the source hash will be frozen, and the dup'd objects are immediately dup'd and frozen on insert in to the hash, the end user will only ever see two frozen strings. Since the strings are immutable, this commit just cheats a little and reuses the immutable strings. Just to reiterate, before this commit, deep duping a hash that looks like this: `{ "foo" => "bar" }` will generate two new instances of "foo". One is created when `deep_dup` is called on "foo", and the other is created when the newly allocated "foo" string is inserted in to the hash. The user never sees the intermediate "foo", and both copies of "foo" that the user *can* access will be frozen, so in this case we just reuse the existing frozen key. The upshot is that after this change, string allocations on AR allocations become constant regardless of the number of columns the model has. ```ruby require 'active_record' class Topic < ActiveRecord::Base end 20.times do |i| Process.waitpid fork { ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection adapter: 'sqlite3', database: ':memory:' ActiveRecord::Base.connection.instance_eval do create_table(:topics) do |t| t.string :title, limit: 250 t.string :author_name t.string :author_email_address t.string :parent_title t.string :type t.string :group i.times do |j| t.integer :"aaa#{j}" end t.timestamps null: true end end ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.setup(%i{type}) Topic.create title: "aaron" # heat cache result = ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.trace do 10.times do |i| Topic.create title: "aaron #{i}" end end puts "#{Topic.columns.length},#{(result.find { |k,v| k.first == :T_STRING }.last.first / 10)}" } end ``` If you run the above script before this commit, the output looks like this: ``` [aaron@TC rails (master)]$ be ruby -rallocation_tracer test.rb 9,105 10,107 11,109 12,111 13,113 14,115 15,117 16,119 17,121 18,123 19,125 20,127 21,129 22,131 23,133 24,135 25,137 26,139 27,141 28,143 ``` The left column is the number of methods, the right column is the number of string allocations. Running against this commit, the output is: ``` [aaron@TC rails (master)]$ be ruby -rallocation_tracer test.rb 9,87 10,87 11,87 12,87 13,87 14,87 15,87 16,87 17,87 18,87 19,87 20,87 21,87 22,87 23,87 24,87 25,87 26,87 27,87 28,87 ``` As you can see, there is now only a constant number of strings allocated, regardless of the number of columns the model has.
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