Clojure Speedup - Class Prefetching

In my previous article on Clojure start-up timings I outlined four optimisations. The focus for this article will be optimising start-up by employing what I’ll call class prefetching. The solution outlined can be applied more broadly to JVM based command-line tools. This article contains the following sections;

Problem description. Target solution. Naive solution. Results. Conclusion.

Problem Description

Class loading from JAR files in Java imposes latency that varies depending on the size, complexity, and dependencies of the class. This loading process first searches the classpath for the class, reads it from the classpath file as a stream, then translates the Java byte-code to platform specific code, which is then stored in the code cache. The process can impose as much as single to double digit millisecond latency the first time a class is seen. In a long running service this is rarely a concern as most classes will be loaded into the JVM’s code cache with very few requests/executions. Where it is a concern many sites will employ warm-up requests with realistic data to both load the classes and minimise the impact of the JIT swapping in code optimisations (incidentally JIT optimisation is a reason to keep method size a reasonable size). For command-line tools on the otherhand start-up performance is a more valuable attribute, particularly where a command is frequently executed by hand or machine. The main issue that contributes to the additional latency is the interleaving of “work” and class loading as illustrated below;

The implication in the above diagram is that the classes are only loaded when and where they’re needed which means the latency is experienced at that point in time. This in turn serialises class load latency with work. To further compound the situation the default JVM Classloader loads classes in serial to avoid loading issues (the joy of ciruclar dependencies!).

Target Solution

The optimal solution is to load the classes into the code cache before the work is executed to minimise the latency at the callsite. The most effective way to do this is to execute class loading in parallel to class execution otherwise it shuffles the above diagram with little to no impact on start-up latency.

The trick is to ensure the classes are available when required and compute time isn’t unnecessarily stolen from “work”. As a result the order in which classes are loaded is important so the working threads have the class in the code cache when needed. Failing to order the classes correctly risks increasing start-up latency. I don’t recall the genesis for this solution but it might’ve been in conversation with Dan Bodart.

This solution is similar to processor pipelining and HTTP/2’s multiplexing.

Naive Solution

The naive solution is to load all of the classes as early in the main process as possible. This is achieved by creating the following thread class;

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 package clojure ; public class PrefetchThread extends Thread { private volatile int length = 0 ; public void run () { final Class [] prefetch = { clojure . lang . Seqable . class , // etc... }; synchronized ( this ) { length = prefetch . length ; } } public volatile int getLength () { return length ; } }

Which requires the following addition as the first lines in clojure.main/main ;

1 2 PrefetchThread pt = new PrefetchThread (); pt . start ();

As I mentioned previously class ordering is important so I simply used the JRE’s -verbose:class flag which outputs the classes in order as they’re loaded by the class loader. Using a similar execution to my previous post looks as follows;

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 $ java -verbose :class -cp clojure.jar: ` cat maven-classpath ` \ clojure.main -e '(prn "hello")' [ Opened /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_144.jdk/Contents/Home/jre/lib/rt.jar] [ Loaded java.lang.Object from /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_144.jdk/Contents/Home/jre/lib/rt.jar] [ Loaded java.io.Serializable from /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_144.jdk/Contents/Home/jre/lib/rt.jar] [ Loaded java.lang.Comparable from /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_144.jdk/Contents/Home/jre/lib/rt.jar] [ Loaded java.lang.CharSequence from /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_144.jdk/Contents/Home/jre/lib/rt.jar] ... etc ...

Then it’s a matter of transforming each line to an array entry (e.g. java.lang.Object.class). Note that prefetch variable has a method level scope this is to prevent serialising the load of the classes when the PrefetchThread class is visible.

There are a few issues with this approach;

Private classes need to be pruned. There’s a circular dependency on the Clojure class being available at compile time. The benefit doesn’t scale to improve latency as more Clojure classes are added.

Results

To measure this and minimise bias I executed each Clojure jar (prefetch and standard) 202 times and extracted the results as measured by time. The executions were split into batches of 101 executions each. The first execution is a “warm-up”, the subsequent 100 exections are sorted from low to high which provides a poormans percentile ranking.

The data looks as follows;

Conclusion

So after all of this fanfare what impact does it have on Clojure start-up? Well it’s not earth shattering but the median speed-up is around 40ms (4%). This could be further improved by combining the existing run() method with a queue. This would allow for more dynamic behaviour in the prefetch thread. The 40ms isn’t huge but when combined with conditional loading of the server that’s a 9% improvement in start-up latency. Without dynamic fetching the improvement doesn’t scale as the users code base grows.

There’s a core tradeoff in this optimisation which is that the speculative execution and loading of classes where not immediately required could steal processor time where other work could be done. However in the context of Clojure’s current implementation and with it’s extensive use of static fields that issue already exists.

Thanks

Special thanks to Josh Graham for his valuable input to this article.

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tags: [ clojure ]