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rails--rails/railties/lib/rails/backtrace_cleaner.rb

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require 'active_support/backtrace_cleaner'
module Rails
class BacktraceCleaner < ActiveSupport::BacktraceCleaner
APP_DIRS_PATTERN = /^\/?(app|config|lib|test)/
RENDER_TEMPLATE_PATTERN = /:in `_render_template_\w*'/
Move object allocation out of loop Right now BenchmarkCleaner allocates hundreds of strings on every request with an exception. This patch moves those strings to be generated at boot once and re-used. ## Bench Methods I took a modified form of CodeTriage https://github.com/schneems/codetriage-ko1-test-app/blob/master/perf.rake and ran given rake tasks with and without the patch to BacktraceCleaner. I made an endpoint results in exception ``` def index raise “foo" end ``` The gem `memory_profiler` was used to capture objects allocated for a single request. Then `benchmark/ips` was used to test the speed of the patch. You will see that we use less objects and the code becomes measurably faster with this patch. ## With patch: Memory for one request: ``` Total allocated 7441 Total retained 37 ``` Requests per second: ``` Calculating ------------------------------------- ips 4 i/100ms ------------------------------------------------- ips 43.0 (±4.7%) i/s - 216 in 5.037733s ``` ## Without patch: Memory used for one request: ``` Total allocated 11599 Total retained 35 ``` Requests per second: ``` Calculating ------------------------------------- ips 3 i/100ms ------------------------------------------------- ips 39.4 (±7.6%) i/s - 198 in 5.052783s ``` ## Analysis The patch is faster: ``` (43.0 - 39.4 ) / 39.4 * 100 # => 9 # % ~ speed bump ``` It also allocates less objects: ``` 11599 - 7441 # => 4158 ``` These strings are allocated on __EVERY SINGLE REQUEST__. This patch saves us 4158 objects __PER REQUEST__ with exception. Faster errors == Faster applications
2014-09-26 23:03:18 -04:00
EMPTY_STRING = ''.freeze
SLASH = '/'.freeze
DOT_SLASH = './'.freeze
def initialize
super
Move object allocation out of loop Right now BenchmarkCleaner allocates hundreds of strings on every request with an exception. This patch moves those strings to be generated at boot once and re-used. ## Bench Methods I took a modified form of CodeTriage https://github.com/schneems/codetriage-ko1-test-app/blob/master/perf.rake and ran given rake tasks with and without the patch to BacktraceCleaner. I made an endpoint results in exception ``` def index raise “foo" end ``` The gem `memory_profiler` was used to capture objects allocated for a single request. Then `benchmark/ips` was used to test the speed of the patch. You will see that we use less objects and the code becomes measurably faster with this patch. ## With patch: Memory for one request: ``` Total allocated 7441 Total retained 37 ``` Requests per second: ``` Calculating ------------------------------------- ips 4 i/100ms ------------------------------------------------- ips 43.0 (±4.7%) i/s - 216 in 5.037733s ``` ## Without patch: Memory used for one request: ``` Total allocated 11599 Total retained 35 ``` Requests per second: ``` Calculating ------------------------------------- ips 3 i/100ms ------------------------------------------------- ips 39.4 (±7.6%) i/s - 198 in 5.052783s ``` ## Analysis The patch is faster: ``` (43.0 - 39.4 ) / 39.4 * 100 # => 9 # % ~ speed bump ``` It also allocates less objects: ``` 11599 - 7441 # => 4158 ``` These strings are allocated on __EVERY SINGLE REQUEST__. This patch saves us 4158 objects __PER REQUEST__ with exception. Faster errors == Faster applications
2014-09-26 23:03:18 -04:00
@root = "#{Rails.root}/".freeze
add_filter { |line| line.sub(@root, EMPTY_STRING) }
add_filter { |line| line.sub(RENDER_TEMPLATE_PATTERN, EMPTY_STRING) }
add_filter { |line| line.sub(DOT_SLASH, SLASH) } # for tests
add_gem_filters
add_silencer { |line| line !~ APP_DIRS_PATTERN }
end
private
def add_gem_filters
gems_paths = (Gem.path | [Gem.default_dir]).map { |p| Regexp.escape(p) }
return if gems_paths.empty?
gems_regexp = %r{(#{gems_paths.join('|')})/gems/([^/]+)-([\w.]+)/(.*)}
Move object allocation out of loop Right now BenchmarkCleaner allocates hundreds of strings on every request with an exception. This patch moves those strings to be generated at boot once and re-used. ## Bench Methods I took a modified form of CodeTriage https://github.com/schneems/codetriage-ko1-test-app/blob/master/perf.rake and ran given rake tasks with and without the patch to BacktraceCleaner. I made an endpoint results in exception ``` def index raise “foo" end ``` The gem `memory_profiler` was used to capture objects allocated for a single request. Then `benchmark/ips` was used to test the speed of the patch. You will see that we use less objects and the code becomes measurably faster with this patch. ## With patch: Memory for one request: ``` Total allocated 7441 Total retained 37 ``` Requests per second: ``` Calculating ------------------------------------- ips 4 i/100ms ------------------------------------------------- ips 43.0 (±4.7%) i/s - 216 in 5.037733s ``` ## Without patch: Memory used for one request: ``` Total allocated 11599 Total retained 35 ``` Requests per second: ``` Calculating ------------------------------------- ips 3 i/100ms ------------------------------------------------- ips 39.4 (±7.6%) i/s - 198 in 5.052783s ``` ## Analysis The patch is faster: ``` (43.0 - 39.4 ) / 39.4 * 100 # => 9 # % ~ speed bump ``` It also allocates less objects: ``` 11599 - 7441 # => 4158 ``` These strings are allocated on __EVERY SINGLE REQUEST__. This patch saves us 4158 objects __PER REQUEST__ with exception. Faster errors == Faster applications
2014-09-26 23:03:18 -04:00
gems_result = '\2 (\3) \4'.freeze
add_filter { |line| line.sub(gems_regexp, gems_result) }
end
end
end