Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=64518&edit=1

 ID:                 64518
 Updated by:         ni...@php.net
 Reported by:        php at richardneill dot org
 Summary:            optimisation for "for ($i=0; $i<count($array);$i++)"
                     when $array is global
-Status:             Open
+Status:             Not a bug
 Type:               Bug
 Package:            Performance problem
 PHP Version:        5.4.13
 Block user comment: N
 Private report:     N

 New Comment:

The issue you are seeing is that `global $data` is a by-reference fetch (unlike 
`$data = $GLOBALS['data']`, which is by-value). The by-ref pass prevents us 
from doing a copy-on-write optimization when passing the array to the by-value 
count() function, so the array has to be copied every single time.

The specific count() case is something we could optimize by adding a read-only 
passing mode for function arguments (that never separates zvals). As that is 
something that's also useful for a few other things, it might well be worth 
doing.


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-03-26 06:34:44] php at richardneill dot org

... and getting closer to the source of the problem...

function a(){      //about 1400 us
        global $data;
        $n = $data;
}

function b(){      //much much quicker: about 18us
        $n = $GLOBALS['data'];
}


Something is definitely wrong here, that makes "global" so much slower than 
$GLOBALS.



Also, this isn't a read-only optimisation which makes b() much quicker than 
a(); 
it still applies even when we want to copy back into the global scope. 
Consider:

function x(){
     $n = $GLOBALS['data'];
     $GLOBALS['data'] = count($n);
}

and x() is always about as fast as b().


A secondary problem: if x() is rewritten as:

function y(){
     $GLOBALS['data'] = count($GLOBALS['data']);
}

then it can be either fast or slow depending on whether other function calls 
contain "global $data" or not.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-03-26 06:09:30] php at richardneill dot org

Here's a simpler test case. The problem is actually that accessing global 
variables from functions is much slower than local variables (and I was seeing 
this exacerbated by looping over them with count).

Note that passing the data directly as a function argument is much faster than 
passing it as a global variable - this seems to me to be the root of the 
problem. i.e. 

function ($a,$b,$c,$large_array){
   //do stuff  - this is fast.
}

function ($a,$b,$c){
   global $large_array
   //do stuff  - this is SLOW.
}




--------------------------------------------
#!/usr/bin/php  -ddisplay_errors=E_ALL
<?
$NUMBER = 100000; //adjust for your computer.
for ($i = 0; $i< $NUMBER; $i++){
        $data[$i] = "$i";
}

echo "Copy in main()...\n";
$t1 = microtime(true);
$copy = $data;
$t2 = microtime(true);
$time = ($t2 - $t1) * 1E6;
echo "Finished in $time microseconds.\n\n";     #5.0 us


function f1(){
        global $NUMBER;
        echo "Copy local variable in function...\n";
        for ($i = 0; $i< $NUMBER; $i++){
                $data_loc[$i] = "$i";
        }
        $t1 = microtime(true);
        $copy =  $data_loc;
        $t2 = microtime(true);
        $time = ($t2 - $t1) *1E6;
        echo "Finished in $time microseconds.\n\n"; #1.9 us
}

function f2(){
        global $data;
        echo "Copy global variable into function...\n";
        $t1 = microtime(true);
        $n = $data;
        $t2 = microtime(true);
        $time = ($t2 - $t1) *1E6;
        echo "Finished in $time microseconds.\n\n"; #9557 us
}

function f3($data){
        echo "Pass variable into function...\n";
        $t1 = microtime(true);
        $n = $data;
        $t2 = microtime(true);
        $time = ($t2 - $t1) *1E6;
        echo "Finished in $time microseconds.\n\n"; #0.95 us
}

f1();
f2();
f3($data);

echo "Note that as \$NUMBER is changed by factors of 10, the first two times 
don't change much, but the latter scales as O(\$NUMBER).\n";

?>

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2013-03-26 05:17:44] php at richardneill dot org

Description:
------------
If an array is counted inside a for-loop, this is normally slightly inefficient.

$n = count ($array);                  //[1] optimised and a bit faster.
for ($i=0; $i< $n;$i++){
  //do stuff
}   

for ($i=0; $i<count($array);$i++){    //[2] perfectly respectable speed.
  //do stuff                          //very nearly as fast as [1].
}   



BUT, if our for-loop is inside a function AND our $array is a global variable, 
then method [2] becomes really really slow (though method [1] remains 
unaffected).

Below, the problematic function is add_slow(); the script does the same thing 4 
ways to demonstrate that 3 of them work well and one works slowly.

Test script:
---------------
#!/usr/bin/php  -ddisplay_errors=E_ALL
<?
echo "This demonstrates the problem with counting global arrays inside loops 
inside functions.\n";
$NUMBER = 10000; //adjust for your computer.
for ($i = 0; $i< $NUMBER; $i++){
        $data[$i] = "$i";
}

function add_slow(){    //This is the problematic function. $data is global, 
and the count() is inside the for().
        global $data;   //It is REALLY slow: 4000 times slower than the others!
        $sum=0;
        for ($i = 0; $i < count($data); $i++){  
                $sum += $data[$i];
        }
        echo "Total (slow) is $sum.\n";
}

function add_fast(){    //This one is fine. The count() is optimised by taking 
it out of the for().
        global $data;   //... but we're still using a global array, so that's 
not the problem.
        $sum=0;
        $n = count($data);                      
        for ($i = 0; $i < $n; $i++){
                $sum += $data[$i];
        }
        echo "Total (fast) is $sum.\n";
}

function add_local(){  //This one is also fine. The count() is NOT optimised, 
but it still runs almost as quickly.
        global $NUMBER;
        for ($i = 0; $i< $NUMBER; $i++){
                $data[$i] = "$i";
        }
        $sum=0;
        for ($i = 0; $i < count($data); $i++){   
                $sum += $data[$i];
        }
        echo "Total (local) is $sum.\n";
}       
        
echo "Calling add_slow()...\n";
$t1 = microtime(true); 
add_slow();
$t2 = microtime(true);
$time = round($t2 - $t1, 3);
echo "Finished in $time seconds.\n\n";  

echo "Calling add_fast()...\n";
$t1 = microtime(true);
add_fast();
$t2 = microtime(true);
$time = round($t2 - $t1, 3);
echo "Finished in $time seconds.\n\n";

echo "Calling add_local()...\n";
$t1 = microtime(true);
add_local();
$t2 = microtime(true);
$time = round($t2 - $t1, 3);
echo "Finished in $time seconds.\n\n";

echo "Not using a function...\n";
$t1 = microtime(true);
$sum=0;
for ($i = 0; $i < count($data); $i++){   //This one is in the main() scope, 
it's also fast.
        $sum += $data[$i];
}
echo "Total (main loop) is $sum.\n";
$t2 = microtime(true);
$time = round($t2 - $t1, 3);
echo "Finished in $time seconds.\n\n";
?>

Expected result:
----------------
All 4 ways of summing this array should run in similar amounts of time (a few 
milliseconds). 

But actually add_slow() is 3900 times slower. 


Actual result:
--------------
This demonstrates the problem with counting global arrays inside loops inside 
functions.
Calling add_slow()...
Total (slow) is 49995000.
Finished in 7.86 seconds.

Calling add_fast()...
Total (fast) is 49995000.
Finished in 0.002 seconds.

Calling add_local()...
Total (local) is 49995000.
Finished in 0.006 seconds.

Not using a function...
Total (main loop) is 49995000.
Finished in 0.002 seconds.




------------------------------------------------------------------------



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