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Reduce excess memory usage in TransparentCompiler #17543
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@@ -258,45 +258,119 @@ module private TypeCheckingGraphProcessing = | |||
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return finalFileResults, state | |||
} | |||
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type internal CompilerCaches(sizeFactor: int) = | |||
type CacheSizes = { |
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Probably should be internal
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This allows an editor to finely tweak these options. This potentially trades memory for CPU usage but on larger solutions it a tradeoff someone can make it possible to have multiple solutions open.
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So, how would the editor come up with these numbers? I wouldn't suggest to expose this to the user.
I think you should be able to say "use more memory" or "use less memory", potentially even "hold more/less stuff strongly/weakly" but does it really make sense to have such granular control in the editor? So that different editors would benefit from different configurations somehow?
And if there is some smart way to set these based the solutions the user is working here it would be nice to have that code here so everyone can use it.
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I exposed these numbers so it was easier to try to adjust them individually but I do agree it's not something I'd want to expose to a user directly.
I think the only settings come down to "memory" vs "recacluating". Specifically, my work project can be around 10-15gb once fully type checked, if I have multiple versions of open for various reasons, I'd rather try to be aggressive with collecting and keeping it's profile small.
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I guess we can expose it now for easier experimenting with some [<Experimental>]
comment that it will be removed/simplified for sure. What I initially put there was pretty arbitrary but hopefully we can eventually come to some consensus here and expose only a few parameters that will be enough to tweak it.
@@ -559,7 +559,7 @@ and [<Experimental("This FCS API is experimental and subject to change.")>] FSha | |||
referencedProjects: FSharpReferencedProjectSnapshot list, | |||
isIncompleteTypeCheckEnvironment: bool, | |||
useScriptResolutionRules: bool, | |||
loadTime: DateTime, | |||
loadTime: DateTime, |
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Why the space?
<InternalsVisibleTo Include="FsAutoComplete.Core" /> | ||
<InternalsVisibleTo Include="FsAutoComplete" /> |
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The FSAC InternalsVisibleTo to allow the cache tweaks
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This feels very wrong, is this a temporary thing?
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The transparent compiler itself is marked internal and unless the F# team wants to make it public, this is a better method than forcing FSAC to do reflection all the time.
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Yeah, that's true, but there's actually a way to enable it using FSharpChecker.Create(useTransparentCompiler = true)
. Shouldn't more things be driven by that?
I just think this approach feels like a workaround that avoids proper communication, which seems like a missed opportunity. But if the team doesn't see it that way and everyone's fine with it, then I suppose it's okay.
One other thing that concerns me is that this could potentially be a common request for every FCS user.
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I wonder if we should expose everything before we stabilize it? Or, we can expose necessary parts, but put Experimental
on them. Or expose them via the checker?
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I don't have a strong preference here. I went with the least invasive changes first to do exactly this, facilitate discussion :)
One other thing that concerns me is that this could potentially be a common request for every FCS user.
Yeah I agree here. Though, it would be nice to also be able to access other things like LanguageFeatures instead of our hack
I wonder if we should expose everything before we stabilize it? We can expose necessary parts, but put Experimental on them. Or expose them via the checker?
Since FCS makes breaking changes that FSAC needs to handle anyway, it's all kind of the same thing in the end to me. Whatever makes more sense for your team.
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We'd be happy to have such InternalsVisibleTo
entries too in Rider plugin. 🙂
We're also used to the changes in APIs.
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In this case we should just expose everything needed via APIs.
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I would also propose to add [Experimental] APIs for everything you need. Then at least we see everything that's needed when deciding on a stable API.
let internal snapshotTable = ConditionalWeakTable<ProjectSnapshot, FSharpProjectOptions>() | ||
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let rec internal snapshotToOptions (projectSnapshot: ProjectSnapshot) = | ||
snapshotTable.GetValue(projectSnapshot, fun projectSnapshot -> | ||
{ | ||
ProjectFileName = projectSnapshot.ProjectFileName | ||
ProjectId = projectSnapshot.ProjectId | ||
SourceFiles = projectSnapshot.SourceFiles |> Seq.map (fun x -> x.FileName) |> Seq.toArray | ||
OtherOptions = projectSnapshot.CommandLineOptions |> List.toArray | ||
ReferencedProjects = | ||
projectSnapshot.ReferencedProjects | ||
|> Seq.map (function | ||
| FSharpReference(name, opts) -> FSharpReferencedProject.FSharpReference(name, opts.ProjectSnapshot |> snapshotToOptions) | ||
| PEReference(getStamp, reader) -> FSharpReferencedProject.PEReference(getStamp, reader) | ||
| ILModuleReference(name, getStamp, getReader) -> FSharpReferencedProject.ILModuleReference(name, getStamp, getReader)) | ||
|> Seq.toArray | ||
IsIncompleteTypeCheckEnvironment = projectSnapshot.IsIncompleteTypeCheckEnvironment | ||
UseScriptResolutionRules = projectSnapshot.UseScriptResolutionRules | ||
LoadTime = projectSnapshot.LoadTime | ||
UnresolvedReferences = projectSnapshot.UnresolvedReferences | ||
OriginalLoadReferences = projectSnapshot.OriginalLoadReferences | ||
Stamp = projectSnapshot.Stamp | ||
} |
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This is the main fix around creating too many options
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This makes sense. Out of curiosity what are you using the resulting options for?
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There seems to be paths that still want a FSharpProjectOptions
. Following the current use of snapshotToOptions
should show them.
Specifically they show up in transparent compiler which get turned into longer lived objects here:
projectSnapshot.ToOptions(), |
projectSnapshot.ToOptions()) |
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Ah, I see, didn't notice these usages. Wonder what would be a good way to phase them out of there... But for now at least your fix improves it.
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Yeah that would the real fix. I did do before that but it was more invasive.
Yeah, that's good enough. Also, if possible, CPU consumption. |
@@ -258,45 +258,119 @@ module private TypeCheckingGraphProcessing = | |||
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return finalFileResults, state | |||
} | |||
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type internal CompilerCaches(sizeFactor: int) = | |||
type CacheSizes = { |
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So, how would the editor come up with these numbers? I wouldn't suggest to expose this to the user.
I think you should be able to say "use more memory" or "use less memory", potentially even "hold more/less stuff strongly/weakly" but does it really make sense to have such granular control in the editor? So that different editors would benefit from different configurations somehow?
And if there is some smart way to set these based the solutions the user is working here it would be nice to have that code here so everyone can use it.
static member Default = | ||
let sizeFactor = 100 | ||
CacheSizes.Create sizeFactor | ||
type internal CompilerCaches(sizeFactor: CacheSizes) = | ||
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let sf = sizeFactor |
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This should be renamed if we keep it like this.
<InternalsVisibleTo Include="FsAutoComplete.Core" /> | ||
<InternalsVisibleTo Include="FsAutoComplete" /> |
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I would also propose to add [Experimental] APIs for everything you need. Then at least we see everything that's needed when deciding on a stable API.
@@ -1363,8 +1440,8 @@ type internal TransparentCompiler | |||
node, | |||
(fun tcInfo -> | |||
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if tcInfo.stateContainsNodes |> Set.contains fileNode then | |||
failwith $"Oops!" | |||
// if tcInfo.stateContainsNodes |> Set.contains fileNode then |
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This seems like an unrelated fix. Not sure if it's been discussed elsewhere.
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Been discussed in slack before (probably beyond any history now 😢 ). Yeah this could be reverted but I've seen this popup crashing the TC hard.
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Yeah. It seems a bit fishy. I need to understand if this is something that should legitimately be happening, clearly previously I thought it shouldn't 😅
let internal snapshotTable = ConditionalWeakTable<ProjectSnapshot, FSharpProjectOptions>() | ||
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let rec internal snapshotToOptions (projectSnapshot: ProjectSnapshot) = | ||
snapshotTable.GetValue(projectSnapshot, fun projectSnapshot -> | ||
{ | ||
ProjectFileName = projectSnapshot.ProjectFileName | ||
ProjectId = projectSnapshot.ProjectId | ||
SourceFiles = projectSnapshot.SourceFiles |> Seq.map (fun x -> x.FileName) |> Seq.toArray | ||
OtherOptions = projectSnapshot.CommandLineOptions |> List.toArray | ||
ReferencedProjects = | ||
projectSnapshot.ReferencedProjects | ||
|> Seq.map (function | ||
| FSharpReference(name, opts) -> FSharpReferencedProject.FSharpReference(name, opts.ProjectSnapshot |> snapshotToOptions) | ||
| PEReference(getStamp, reader) -> FSharpReferencedProject.PEReference(getStamp, reader) | ||
| ILModuleReference(name, getStamp, getReader) -> FSharpReferencedProject.ILModuleReference(name, getStamp, getReader)) | ||
|> Seq.toArray | ||
IsIncompleteTypeCheckEnvironment = projectSnapshot.IsIncompleteTypeCheckEnvironment | ||
UseScriptResolutionRules = projectSnapshot.UseScriptResolutionRules | ||
LoadTime = projectSnapshot.LoadTime | ||
UnresolvedReferences = projectSnapshot.UnresolvedReferences | ||
OriginalLoadReferences = projectSnapshot.OriginalLoadReferences | ||
Stamp = projectSnapshot.Stamp | ||
} |
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This makes sense. Out of curiosity what are you using the resulting options for?
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I can't seem to run the ilverify.ps1 script
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It requires pwsh, not powershell (i.e. version 7, not 5). |
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The results look really good Jimmy!
I would want to get this in soon to start using it, could you please resolve the deleted "failwith $"Oops!"" code and changing the "sf" naming to reflect new reality?
Wow all of that because of the extra |
Description
This fixes #16979 with some additions that have been discussed in various chats/twitter threads. I've combined them for discussion purposes, we can split them up as desired.
The 3 parts are:
ConditionalWeakTable
rather than recreating possibly hundreds of options objects.❓ Outstanding questions ❓
Checklist
Test cases added
Performance benchmarks added in case of performance changes
Release notes entry updated: