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Dmitry Vyukov authored
Currently tracer uses global sequencer and it introduces significant slowdown on parallel machines (up to 10x). Replace the global sequencer with per-goroutine sequencer. If we assign per-goroutine sequence numbers to only 3 types of events (start, unblock and syscall exit), it is enough to restore consistent partial ordering of all events. Even these events don't need sequence numbers all the time (if goroutine starts on the same P where it was unblocked, then start does not need sequence number). The burden of restoring the order is put on trace parser. Details of the algorithm are described in the comments. On http benchmark with GOMAXPROCS=48: no tracing: 5026 ns/op tracing: 27803 ns/op (+453%) with this change: 6369 ns/op (+26%, mostly for traceback) Also trace size is reduced by ~22%. Average event size before: 4.63 bytes/event, after: 3.62 bytes/event. Besides running trace tests, I've also tested with manually broken cputicks (random skew for each event, per-P skew and episodic random skew). In all cases broken timestamps were detected and no test failures. Change-Id: I078bde421ccc386a66f6c2051ab207bcd5613efa Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/21512 Run-TryBot: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com> Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
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