RFR: 8332522: SwitchBootstraps::mappedEnumLookup constructs unused array [v4]
Jan Lahoda
jlahoda at openjdk.org
Tue Jul 2 12:50:19 UTC 2024
On Thu, 27 Jun 2024 19:30:39 GMT, Jan Lahoda <jlahoda at openjdk.org> wrote:
>> For general pattern matching switches, the `SwitchBootstraps` class currently generates a cascade of `if`-like statements, computing the correct target case index for the given input.
>>
>> There is one special case which permits a relatively easy faster handling, and that is when all the case labels case enum constants (but the switch is still a "pattern matching" switch, as tranditional enum switches do not go through `SwitchBootstraps`). Like:
>>
>>
>> enum E {A, B, C}
>> E e = ...;
>> switch (e) {
>> case null -> {}
>> case A a -> {}
>> case C c -> {}
>> case B b -> {}
>> }
>>
>>
>> We can create an array mapping the runtime ordinal to the appropriate case number, which is somewhat similar to what javac is doing for ordinary switches over enums.
>>
>> The `SwitchBootstraps` class was trying to do so, when the restart index is zero, but failed to do so properly, so that code is not used (and does not actually work properly).
>>
>> This patch is trying to fix that - when all the case labels are enum constants, an array mapping the runtime enum ordinals to the case number will be created (lazily), for restart index == 0. And this map will then be used to quickly produce results for the given input. E.g. for the case above, the mapping will be `{0 -> 0, 1 -> 2, 2 -> 1}` (meaning `{A -> 0, B -> 2, C -> 1}`).
>>
>> When the restart index is != 0 (i.e. when there's a guard in the switch, and the guard returned `false`), the if cascade will be generated lazily and used, as in the general case. If it would turn out there are significant enum-only switches with guards/restart index != 0, we could improve there as well, by generating separate mappings for every (used) restart index.
>>
>> I believe the current tests cover the code functionally sufficiently - see `SwitchBootstrapsTest.testEnums`. It is only that the tests do not (and regression tests cannot easily, I think) differentiate whether the special-case or generic implementation is used.
>>
>> I've added a new microbenchmark attempting to demonstrate the difference. There are two benchmarks, both having only enum constants as case labels. One, `enumSwitchTraditional` is an "old" switch, desugared fully by javac, the other, `enumSwitchWithBootstrap` is an equivalent switch that uses the `SwitchBootstraps`. Before this patch, I was getting values like:
>>
>> Benchmark Mode Cnt Score Error Units
>> SwitchEnum.enumSwitchTraditional avgt 15 11.719 ± 0.333 ns/op
>> Swi...
>
> Jan Lahoda has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision:
>
> Clone the labels.
Any input on the current version of the patch?
-------------
PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/19906#issuecomment-2203073610
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