From: "Michael D. Adams" <mdmkolbe@gmail.com>
To: caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Efficency of varient types
Date: Sun, 27 Nov 2005 00:06:32 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <c62c8d860511262106g59cb7bccwcfa24124b97a0a2b@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4387ACC9.2040107@motion-twin.com>
On 11/25/05, Nicolas Cannasse <ncannasse@motion-twin.com> wrote:
> Michael D. Adams wrote:
> > I have recently learned about OCaml and have been impressed by how
> > fast it is in the benchmarks. However I have discovered that variant
> > types can slow down a program quite a bit. For example, consider the
> > Ackermann function implemented for int (see program 1) and the same
> > Ackermann function implemented for a "type value = Int of int | String
> > of int" (program 2). The second one is ten times slower! (Using
> > ocamlopt.)
>
> In order to understand what there is such difference, it's useful to
> learn the ocaml memory model at runtime :
>
> - int are 31 bits unboxed value with last bit set to 1 in order to
> differenciate them with GC allocated pointers.
> - tagged variants are GC allocated blocks with a discriminating "tag" in
> the header.
> - chars and booleans are integers at runtime
That all makes sense.
> The second bit is used to mark an exception but it's only internal and
> temporary when dealing with callbacks.
Could to elaborate on this "second bit"? (I assume you mean the bit
in the two's position.) Or is there a document that might describe
it?
I am very interested in how this bit is used and whether the GC will
ignore values ending with the bits 10.
> If you have a tagged variant where all constructors have a parameter,
> you can use Obj module to unbox the Int variant but the code is a lot
> less readable.
I agree, which is why it was my hope that OCaml might do some of that
for me. Consider a home brew bool type, "type mybool = Mytrue |
Myfalse". If the compiler were smart enough, it could represent that
as an unboxed type. From there it might be a small step to
semi-unboxed types such as the one I started this discussion with,
"type value = Int of int | Bool of bool | String of string".
It sounds like that is not possible, so I have to settle for the Obj module.
Michael D. Adams
mdmkolbe@gmail.com
P.S. I should note that experiments using the Obj module to manually
do semi-boxing show very good performance. The following code
performs only 50% slower than a completely unboxed version. Compare
that with 900% slower with boxed, variant types.
let plus x y =
if Obj.is_int (Obj.repr x) && Obj.is_int (Obj.repr y)
then Obj.magic ((Obj.magic x) + (Obj.magic y))
else Obj.magic (0)
let minus x y =
if Obj.is_int (Obj.repr x) && Obj.is_int (Obj.repr y)
then Obj.magic ((Obj.magic x) - (Obj.magic y))
else Obj.magic (0)
let zero = 0
let one = 1
let rec ack m n =
if m = zero then plus n one
else if n = zero then ack (minus m one) one
else ack (minus m one) (ack m (minus n one))
let _ = ack (3) (9)
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-11-27 5:06 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 27+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-11-25 23:53 Michael D. Adams
2005-11-26 0:31 ` [Caml-list] " Nicolas Cannasse
2005-11-26 1:22 ` Brian Hurt
2005-11-26 9:39 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2005-11-28 0:17 ` Obj or not Obj Christophe Raffalli
2005-11-28 8:41 ` [Caml-list] " Nicolas Cannasse
2005-11-28 9:27 ` Christophe Raffalli
2005-11-28 9:33 ` skaller
2005-11-28 8:43 ` Alain Frisch
2005-11-26 2:54 ` [Caml-list] Efficency of varient types skaller
2005-11-27 5:06 ` Michael D. Adams [this message]
2005-11-27 5:45 ` Brian Hurt
2005-11-27 10:02 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2005-11-27 15:35 ` Michael D. Adams
2005-11-27 18:08 ` Brian Hurt
2005-12-02 15:07 ` Michael D. Adams
2005-11-26 1:18 ` Jon Harrop
2005-11-27 14:57 ` Lukasz Stafiniak
2005-11-27 15:47 ` Lukasz Stafiniak
2005-11-28 8:14 ` Christophe Raffalli
2005-11-28 7:24 ` David Baelde
2005-11-28 7:49 ` Jacques Garrigue
2005-11-28 10:01 ` Jon Harrop
2005-11-28 10:26 ` Luc Maranget
2005-11-28 7:53 ` Ville-Pertti Keinonen
2005-12-01 17:05 ` Stefan Monnier
2005-12-02 15:07 ` [Caml-list] " Michael D. Adams
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