Philipp Partosch 46a936d7de added all files to project | 2 years ago | |
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benchmarks | 2 years ago | |
.coveralls.yml | 2 years ago | |
.travis.yml | 2 years ago | |
LICENSE | 2 years ago | |
README.md | 2 years ago | |
package.json | 2 years ago | |
reusify.js | 2 years ago | |
test.js | 2 years ago |
Reuse your objects and functions for maximum speed. This technique will make any function run ~10% faster. You call your functions a lot, and it adds up quickly in hot code paths.
$ node benchmarks/createNoCodeFunction.js
Total time 53133
Total iterations 100000000
Iteration/s 1882069.5236482036
$ node benchmarks/reuseNoCodeFunction.js
Total time 50617
Total iterations 100000000
Iteration/s 1975620.838848608
The above benchmark uses fibonacci to simulate a real high-cpu load. The actual numbers might differ for your use case, but the difference should not.
The benchmark was taken using Node v6.10.0.
This library was extracted from fastparallel.
var reusify = require('reusify')
var fib = require('reusify/benchmarks/fib')
var instance = reusify(MyObject)
// get an object from the cache,
// or creates a new one when cache is empty
var obj = instance.get()
// set the state
obj.num = 100
obj.func()
// reset the state.
// if the state contains any external object
// do not use delete operator (it is slow)
// prefer set them to null
obj.num = 0
// store an object in the cache
instance.release(obj)
function MyObject () {
// you need to define this property
// so V8 can compile MyObject into an
// hidden class
this.next = null
this.num = 0
var that = this
// this function is never reallocated,
// so it can be optimized by V8
this.func = function () {
if (null) {
// do nothing
} else {
// calculates fibonacci
fib(that.num)
}
}
}
The above example was intended for synchronous code, let’s see async:
var reusify = require('reusify')
var instance = reusify(MyObject)
for (var i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
getData(i, console.log)
}
function getData (value, cb) {
var obj = instance.get()
obj.value = value
obj.cb = cb
obj.run()
}
function MyObject () {
this.next = null
this.value = null
var that = this
this.run = function () {
asyncOperation(that.value, that.handle)
}
this.handle = function (err, result) {
that.cb(err, result)
that.value = null
that.cb = null
instance.release(that)
}
}
Also note how in the above examples, the code, that consumes an istance of MyObject
,
reset the state to initial condition, just before storing it in the cache.
That’s needed so that every subsequent request for an instance from the cache,
could get a clean instance.
It is faster because V8 doesn’t have to collect all the functions you create. On a short-lived benchmark, it is as fast as creating the nested function, but on a longer time frame it creates less pressure on the garbage collector.
If you want to see some complex example, checkout middie and steed.
Thanks to Trevor Norris for getting me down the rabbit hole of performance, and thanks to Mathias Buss for suggesting me to share this trick.
MIT