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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-10307?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=18055556#comment-18055556
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ASF GitHub Bot commented on GROOVY-10307:
-----------------------------------------
jonnybot0 commented on code in PR #2374:
URL: https://github.com/apache/groovy/pull/2374#discussion_r2748257838
##########
src/main/java/org/codehaus/groovy/vmplugin/v8/Selector.java:
##########
@@ -940,9 +941,18 @@ public void setGuards(Object receiver) {
}
}
- // handle constant metaclass and category changes
- handle = switchPoint.guardWithTest(handle, fallback);
- if (LOG_ENABLED) LOG.info("added switch point guard");
+ // Skip the global switchpoint guard by default.
+ // The switchpoint causes ALL call sites to fail when ANY
metaclass changes.
+ // In Grails and similar frameworks with frequent metaclass
changes, this causes
+ // massive guard failures and performance degradation.
+ // The other guards (metaclass identity, class receiver, category)
should be
+ // sufficient, combined with cache invalidation on metaclass
changes.
+ //
+ // If you need strict metaclass change detection, set
groovy.indy.switchpoint.guard=true
+ if (SystemUtil.getBooleanSafe("groovy.indy.switchpoint.guard")) {
Review Comment:
This is part of why I'd like to run this branch against the current
benchmarks on CI. That would likely provide some confidence as to whether this
was "safe" to merge without impacting anyone's expectations about how the
language behaves.
> Groovy 4 runtime performance on average 2.4x slower than Groovy 3
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: GROOVY-10307
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-10307
> Project: Groovy
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: bytecode, performance
> Affects Versions: 4.0.0-beta-1, 3.0.9
> Environment: OpenJDK Runtime Environment AdoptOpenJDK-11.0.11+9
> (build 11.0.11+9)
> OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM AdoptOpenJDK-11.0.11+9 (build 11.0.11+9, mixed mode)
> WIN10 (tests) / REL 8 (web application)
> IntelliJ 2021.2
> Reporter: mgroovy
> Priority: Major
> Attachments: groovy_3_0_9_gc.png, groovy_3_0_9_loop2.png,
> groovy_3_0_9_loop4.png, groovy_3_0_9_mem.png, groovy_4_0_0_b1_loop2.png,
> groovy_4_0_0_b1_loop4.png, groovy_4_0_0_b1_loop4_gc.png,
> groovy_4_0_0_b1_loop4_mem.png,
> groovysql_performance_groovy4_2_xx_yy_zzzz.groovy, loops.groovy,
> profile3.txt, profile4-loops.txt, profile4.txt, profile4d.txt
>
>
> Groovy 4.0.0-beta-1 runtime performance in our framework is on average 2 to 3
> times slower compared to using Groovy 3.0.9 (regular i.e. non-INDY)
> * Our complete framework and application code is completely written in
> Groovy, spread over multiple IntelliJ modules
> ** mixed @CompileDynamic/@TypeChecked and @CompileStatic
> ** No Java classes left in project, i.e. no cross compilation occurs
> * We build using IntelliJ 2021.2 Groovy build process, then run / deploy the
> compiled class files
> ** We do _not_ use a Groovy based DSL, nor do we execute Groovy scripts
> during execution
> * Performance degradation when using Groovy 4.0.0-beta-1 instead of Groovy
> 3.0.9 (non-INDY):
> ** The performance of the largest of our web applications has dropped 3x
> (startup) / 2x (table refresh) respectively
> *** Stack: Tomcat/Vaadin/Ebean plus framework generated SQL
> ** Our test suite runs about 2.4 times as long as before (120 min when using
> G4, compared to about 50 min with G3)
> *** JUnit 5
> *** test suite also contains no scripts / dynamic code execution
> *** Individual test performance varies: A small number of tests runs faster,
> but the majority is slower, with some extreme cases taking nearly 10x as long
> to finish
> * Using Groovy 3.0.9 INDY displays nearly identical performance degradation,
> so it seems that the use of invoke dynamic is somehow at fault
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