The D Language Foundation's quarterly meeting for October 2023 took place on Friday the 6th at 15:00 UTC. This was quite a short one as far as quarterlies go, clocking in at around 35 minutes.
The Attendees
The following people attended the meeting:
- Mathis Beer (Funkwerk)
- Walter Bright (DLF)
- Dennis Korpel (DLF)
- Mario Kröplin (Funkwerk)
- Mathias Lang (DLF/Symmetry)
- Átila Neves (DLF/Symmetry)
- Mike Parker (DLF)
- Igor Pikovets (Ahrefs)
- Carsten Rasmussen (Decard)
- Robert Schadek (DLF/Symmetry)
- Bastiaan Veelo (SARC)
The Summary
Bastiaan
Bastiaan reported that SARC had been testing their D codebase (transpiled from Pascal---see Bastiaan's DConf 2019 talk). They'd found the multithreaded performance worse than the Pascal version. He said that execution time increased with more threads and that it didn't matter how many threads you throw at it. It's the latter problem he was focused on at the moment.
At first, they'd suspected the GC, but it turned out to be contention resulting from heap allocation. In Pascal, they'd heavily used variable-length arrays. For those, the length is determined at run time, but it's fixed. Since they can't grow, they're put on the stack. This makes them quite fast and avoids the global lock of the heap.
One way to do that in D is to use alloca
, but that's an issue because the memory it allocates has to be used in the same function that calls the alloca
. So you can't, e.g., use alloca
to alloc memory in a constructor, and that prevents using it in a custom array implementation. He couldn't think of a way to translate it. He was able to work around it by using allocators in the array implementation with a thread-local free list. He found that promising. His current problem was that it took a lot of time to understand the experimental allocators package. Once he got this sorted, he would have to see if it helped solve the problem they were seeing with more threads resulting in worse performance.
There was also a problem with DMD underperforming Pascal. DMD's output was about five times slower than Pascal's. His tests with LDC showed it was two times faster than Pascal. Unfortunately, they are currently limited to 32-bit Windows, and it will be a few years before they can migrate to 64-bit. LDC unfortunately had an issue that caused stack corruption on 32-bit Windows. They'd hit it in one case and were able to work around it, but he couldn't be sure they wouldn't hit it somewhere else. He wasn't willing to risk unreliable computations.
He said that LDC could do the right thing, but his understanding from talking to Martin was that implementing it would have a large time cost. Since Win32 is going to eventually go away, he wasn't very keen on paying that cost. They'd spoken at DConf about the possibility of LDC raising compilation errors when stack corruption could occur so that they could then work around those cases, but he hadn't followed up with Martin about it.
They'd spent seven years getting the transcompilation complete, so this was a critical issue they needed to resolve. He was hopeful that the experimental allocator package would help solve it.
Robert asked if he'd looked into doing something like the small string optimization, where you set a default size that you use for static arrays and then only resort to heap allocation when you need something larger. Had they analyzed their code to determine the array sizes they were using? Bastiaan said yes, a consequence of this issue was that they were linking with a rather large stack size.
Walter suggested he just use alloca
. Just have the transcompiler emit calls to alloca
in the first lines of the function body for any VLAs and they should be okay. Bastiaan said they'd thought of allocating large chunks of memory up front and just picking off chunks of that for a custom allocator. That works very close to a free list, then he discovered the std allocator package has a free list. His experiments with that worked, but it had been challenging to implement it more generally. He said he would have to take another look at alloca
.
Walter said alloca
wasn't used very much in D, but it's there. If he were to implement C VLAs, that's what he'd use to do it. Robert stressed they should analyze their code to see what a magic maximum number of elements is and just use that for static arrays, allocating on the heap when they need more. Static arrays and alloca
were comparable to some degree. Maybe they could get away with that. It should result in cleaner code.
Robert also suggested that since this project has been going on for so long and was a good showcase for D in general, Bastiaan should come back and ask for help even on more than a quarterly basis. We then had a bit of discussion about what it would take to fix the LDC issue. Bastiaan said that having the compiler throw errors as he and Martin had discussed would be fine as long as it were a manageable number of errors.
Igor
Igor said Ahrefs had updated to the latest LDC and were trying it out, but had nothing to share with us this time.
I noted that at DConf, the Ahrefs team had given the DLF access to their platform. We hadn't started using it, but we plan to do so once when we overhaul the website. I thanked him for that.
Mathis Beer
Mathis said there was nothing much going on. They had decided to hold off on updating to the latest DMD because LDC had been lagging behind a bit, but that was somewhat normal. Everything was working fine.
However, he'd been playing around with 2.104 on his own and had encountered some weird crashes, but hadn't yet reduced anything for a bug report. He asked if anyone else had seen the same and the response was negative. He said he'd put some time into Dustmite and file an issue.
He brought up the COVID outbreak at DConf. Everyone who attended from Funkwerk had gotten it. We discussed what could be done to reduce that risk next year. I reported that this had come up in post-DConf meetings I'd had with Symmetry and our event planners. There's no way we're going to be able to force people to take tests or wear masks. But we definitely need a policy in place. In 2022, we asked people to stay in their hotel rooms and watch via the live stream if they had symptoms during the conference. We didn't do that this year, but it's one step we've already decided to take next year. We'll work out other ideas before then. Robert suggested we include masks and COVID tests in the swag bag.
Mathias Lang
Mathias said he'd been mentoring a SAOC student working on C++ interop: namely, making C++ STL containers more accessible. They'd started by copying the existing code from core.std.cpp
into its own repository. This needs to be taken out of DRuntime because DRuntime is distributed pre-compiled, and that ties it to a specific compiler API, which isn't good. Instead, we should distribute it as a package. It's something he'd brought up before.
Now, they were looking into adding tests and fixing the bugs they'd found. They'd also extracted a CI from DRuntime. The project was ongoing and making progress.
(NOTE: You can search the General Forum for "SAOC 2023 C++ STL INTEROP" to see Emmanuel Nyarko's weekly updates during the SAOC event, which continues until January 15.)
Robert
Robert had nothing for us this time.
Carsten
Carsten reported that Decard were trying to get their release out in three months. They were happy with the system they were working on.
Dennis
I told everyone that normally, I wouldn't go to any of the DLF-only people in a quarterly these days since we've split out our monthlies. However, since we had so few attendees this time and things were running quickly, I said I'd give Dennis and Walter each a turn.
Dennis said he had nothing for us this time, but he had some things to bring up at the monthly the following week.
Walter
Walter said he'd been taking steps aimed at facilitating work on DMD-as-a-library. He'd been trying to disentangle different parts of the compiler from each other, in particular making the ASTs more tractable for users without becoming completely "englommed" by the compiler. He was awaiting feedback on whether Razvan was happy with his approach. Either way, the end goal was to get rid of the two parallel "same-only-different" ASTs we currently have. He'd made some progress on it.
He had also been working on some ImportC fixes.
He apologized to me for not looking into three DIPs I'd asked him to look at. He'd emailed me about one of them before the meeting. He asked if I could hang around after to discuss the other two.
I let everyone know that Walter was talking about three grammar-related DIPs that Graham D'Amour had submitted last year. I'd been wondering if we needed DIPs for those or not. I'd asked Walter to look at them a while ago to decide, but I'd never followed up. Graham had pinged me about them a week before the meeting.
(UPDATE_:I did hang around after the meeting and we did discuss the DIPs. The outcome is posted in the comment thread of PR #234. You can see the other DIPs in PR #233 and in PR #235. The TL;DR is that these correct issues in the grammar and we absolutely should implement them, but because of potential breakage they should be done in an edition.)
Me
I told everyone I'd had a preliminary discussion about DConf '24 with Symmetry's CTO. I'd answered his questions about how things had gone over the past three editions Symmetry had sponsored and about what we needed. I was expecting that we could start planning in earnest before the end of this year. I was looking at the possibility of doing it either in May or in September so that we could get out of peak travel season. That depends entirely on the availability of the venue and what they charge us. They've given us a significant discount for the past two editions because peak travel season is also off-peak conference season. We wouldn't be able to get the same deal for May or September.
I then mentioned DConf Online. I'd scheduled it in December last year just so we could do it in 2022. I should have delayed it until February or March. Holding it four months after DConf was a real PITA. So I decided I'd push the next edition into 2024. Whether it happens early or late in the year depends on the final DConf dates.
(UPDATE: DConf '24 planning has since begun. The event planner is on the case and the gears are moving inside Symmetry. Stay tuned.)
I closed by mistakenly telling everyone that our next quarterly would be in December (it's January). I invited everyone to reach out if they had any issues before then.
The Next Meetings
We had our October monthly meeting one week after this meeting. The next quarterly should happen on January 5, 2024. We had no regular planning sessions in October, but two workgroup meetings took place regarding DMD-as-a-library. The monthly meeting summary is coming next, then I'll publish an update about the workgroup meetings.