RFR: 8265237: String.join and StringJoiner can be improved further [v2]
Tagir F.Valeev
tvaleev at openjdk.java.net
Sat Apr 17 09:10:36 UTC 2021
On Thu, 15 Apr 2021 19:26:48 GMT, Peter Levart <plevart at openjdk.org> wrote:
>> While JDK-8148937 improved StringJoiner class by replacing internal use of getChars that copies out characters from String elements into a char[] array with StringBuilder which is somehow more optimal, the improvement was marginal in speed (0% ... 10%) and mainly for smaller strings, while GC was reduced by about 50% in average per operation.
>> Initial attempt to tackle that issue was more involved, but was later discarded because it was apparently using too much internal String details in code that lives outside String and outside java.lang package.
>> But there is another way to package such "intimate" code - we can put it into String itself and just call it from StringJoiner.
>> This PR is an attempt at doing just that. It introduces new package-private method in `java.lang.String` which is then used from both pubic static `String.join` methods as well as from `java.util.StringJoiner` (via SharedSecrets). The improvements can be seen by running the following JMH benchmark:
>>
>> https://gist.github.com/plevart/86ac7fc6d4541dbc08256cde544019ce
>>
>> The comparative results are here:
>>
>> https://jmh.morethan.io/?gist=7eb421cf7982456a2962269137f71c15
>>
>> The jmh-result.json files are here:
>>
>> https://gist.github.com/plevart/7eb421cf7982456a2962269137f71c15
>>
>> Improvement in speed ranges from 8% (for small strings) to 200% (for long strings), while creation of garbage has been further reduced to an almost garbage-free operation.
>>
>> So WDYT?
>
> Peter Levart has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision:
>
> Add String.join benchmark method to StringJoinerBenchmark and adjust some parameters to cover bigger range
Great work, thanks! I tried to do something similar a couple of years ago but did not submit my patch. One thing that stopped me is that joining many one-character strings was slower with my patch, compared to the baseline. Something like this:
// setup
String[] strings = new String[100];
Arrays.fill(strings, "a");
// benchmark
return String.join(",", strings);
Could you add this case to your benchmark, for completeness?
-------------
PR: https://git.openjdk.java.net/jdk/pull/3501
More information about the core-libs-dev
mailing list