<i18n dev> RFR: 8333396: Performance regression of DecimalFormat.format [v17]

Chen Liang liach at openjdk.org
Mon Jul 8 03:08:44 UTC 2024


On Mon, 8 Jul 2024 02:32:17 GMT, lingjun-cg <duke at openjdk.org> wrote:

>> ### Performance regression of DecimalFormat.format
>> From the output of perf, we can see the hottest regions contain atomic instructions.  But when run with JDK 11, there is no such problem. The reason is the removed biased locking.  
>> The DecimalFormat uses StringBuffer everywhere, and StringBuffer itself contains many synchronized methods.
>> So I added support for some new methods that accept StringBuilder which is lock-free.
>> 
>> ### Benchmark testcase
>> 
>> @BenchmarkMode(Mode.AverageTime)
>> @Warmup(iterations = 5, time = 500, timeUnit = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)
>> @Measurement(iterations = 10, time = 500, timeUnit = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)
>> @State(Scope.Thread)
>> @OutputTimeUnit(TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS)
>> public class JmhDecimalFormat {
>> 
>>     private DecimalFormat format;
>> 
>>     @Setup(Level.Trial)
>>     public void setup() {
>>         format = new DecimalFormat("#0.00000");
>>     }
>> 
>>     @Benchmark
>>     public void testNewAndFormat() throws InterruptedException {
>>         new DecimalFormat("#0.00000").format(9524234.1236457);
>>     }
>> 
>>     @Benchmark
>>     public void testNewOnly() throws InterruptedException {
>>         new DecimalFormat("#0.00000");
>>     }
>> 
>>     @Benchmark
>>     public void testFormatOnly() throws InterruptedException {
>>         format.format(9524234.1236457);
>>     }
>> }
>> 
>> 
>> ### Test result
>> #### Current JDK before optimize
>> 
>>  Benchmark                             Mode  Cnt    Score   Error  Units
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testFormatOnly       avgt   50  642.099 ? 1.253  ns/op
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testNewAndFormat     avgt   50  989.307 ? 3.676  ns/op
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testNewOnly          avgt   50  303.381 ? 5.252  ns/op
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> #### Current JDK after optimize
>> 
>> Benchmark                          Mode  Cnt    Score   Error  Units
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testFormatOnly    avgt   50  351.499 ? 0.761  ns/op
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testNewAndFormat  avgt   50  615.145 ? 2.478  ns/op
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testNewOnly       avgt   50  209.874 ? 9.951  ns/op
>> 
>> 
>> ### JDK 11 
>> 
>> Benchmark                          Mode  Cnt    Score   Error  Units
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testFormatOnly    avgt   50  364.214 ? 1.191  ns/op
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testNewAndFormat  avgt   50  658.699 ? 2.311  ns/op
>> JmhDecimalFormat.testNewOnly       avgt   50  248.300 ? 5.158  ns/op
>
> lingjun-cg has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision:
> 
>   8333396: Performance regression of DecimalFormat.format

Quick question about the violation of the "This is equivalent to" spec: Does our new implementation lead to any observable side effects that make the returned results or thrown exceptions different from that of `format(obj, new StringBuffer(), new FieldPosition(0)).toString()`?

In the ClassFile API, there are similar "behave as if" notes such as https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/blob/3f37c5718d676b7001e6a084aed3ba645745a144/src/java.base/share/classes/java/lang/classfile/ClassFile.java#L433-L438, yet we don't restrict implementations as the API surface, including the return an exception result and side effects are the same.

-------------

PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/19513#issuecomment-2212893099


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