Hi, On Monday, 26 September 2016 17:07:41 CEST Carl-Daniel Hailfinger wrote: > the nbdkit python plugin example has suboptimal memory management: > - it creates the disk image as a string on init > - it casts the string to bytearray on every read > - it copies the string before and the string after the written region, > then reassembles those pieces together with the written region to a new > disk image string > > This is not a problem as long as the image is small, but in my tests > with a 5 GB sized image nbdkit already used 15 GB RAM directly after > startup, and even more (20-25 GB) on the first write. > > This changes the code to use bytearray everywhere and use the proper > methods to change bytearray objects directly. With the patch applied, > nbdkit with a 5 GB image will still only use 5 GB RAM even during heavy > read/write activity. > > Regards, > Carl-Daniel > > diff -r 521366d1854b -r d7d5078d08c7 plugins/python/example.py > --- a/plugins/python/example.py Sun Jul 10 17:10:30 2016 +0100 > +++ b/plugins/python/example.py Sun Sep 25 05:04:02 2016 +0200 > @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ > # reconnect to the same server you should see the same disk. You > # could also put this into the handle, so there would be a fresh disk > # per handle. > -disk = "\0" * (1024*1024); > +disk = bytearray(1024 * 1024) > > # This just prints the extra command line parameters, but real plugins > # should parse them and reject any unknown parameters. > @@ -50,9 +50,9 @@ > > def pread(h, count, offset): > global disk > - return bytearray (disk[offset:offset+count]) > + return disk[offset:offset+count] > > def pwrite(h, buf, offset): > global disk > end = offset + len (buf) > - disk = disk[:offset] + buf + disk[end:] > + disk[offset:end] = buf
I'd look fine to me -- I guess it should work with both Python 2 and 3, right? Thanks, -- Pino Toscano
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