Date: Mon, 20 Mar 2006 13:06:28 -0600 From: Eric Schuele <e.schuele@computer.org> To: Peter Jeremy <peterjeremy@optushome.com.au> Cc: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Subject: Re: repeatedly opening the same .so(s) is slow? Message-ID: <441EFD34.6010709@computer.org> In-Reply-To: <20060320182415.GD747@turion.vk2pj.dyndns.org> References: <441EDD35.3080105@computer.org> <20060320182415.GD747@turion.vk2pj.dyndns.org>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Peter Jeremy wrote: > On Mon, 2006-Mar-20 10:49:57 -0600, Eric Schuele wrote: >> I have a port (gnucash) which takes 3-4 minutes to open on a 2.6GHz >> machine. It used to take 15-20 seconds till all of the libtool changes. > > It takes 15 minutes on a -current Athlon XP-1800 and about 2 minutes on > a 2.2GHz AMD64 running -stable. > >> I have no idea if the symptom is related to libtool or not. > > I initially thought it was libtool related but now I'm uncertain. I > didn't just upgrade libtool, I upgraded quite a few other ports at the > same time. On the not-libtool side, ade@ says that he hasn't seen this > behaviour with other libtool/libltdl ports and I've found that guile > include it's own libltdl code (based on libtool). I'm not sure if this > is gnucash specific or affects other guile applications. FWIW... I have removed my symlink to libguile-ltdl.so and recreated it to point at libltdl.so.1. So that guile is using my stock libltdl.so. I get the same results. And gnucash seems to run fine. > >> Using truss, I can see that gnucash/guile is trying to open a dozen or >> two files, repeatedly. It fails attempting to open it the first few >> times everytime it tries to access it, because it is traversing the >> LD_LIBRARY_PATH: > > Worse than that, it's expanding LD_LIBRARY_PATH using additional > paths embedded in the .la files that it's opening. > >> Now I said a dozen or two files repeatedly. It is 12-20 files maybe... >> but it is attempting to open them *hundreds of thousands of times*! It >> goes on and on and on... > > I took a complete ktrace of the startup and there are 24e6 NAMI events > with the top files tested 2,000,000 times. > >> I have >> thought of placing symlinks in the folder(s) where it first looks for >> any given file, to make sure it finds the file... but this does not seem >> quite right either. > > It's definitely a hack. I tried something like this and it didn't > help much. The code still wants to open libraries multiple times. > > I've been looking at adding caching to lt_dlopenext() and my first > attempt went much faster but blew up because I wasn't correctly > handling open/close/open sequences (libm is opened and then closed > 42,000 times). I think this is the way forward but need to find > the time to understand ltdl.[ch] (~4800 lines). > >> What I'm wondering is.... what is the lists opinion on how to best fix >> this type of a problem. Is this even the cause of my long startup? > > Any system calls involving opening pathnames are expensive, even with > the namei cache. Having 4 orders of magnitude too many is a destinct > problem. > >> I have spoken with one or two of the gnucash devs, they seem to think >> this is unique to FreeBSD, meaning they have not seen this problem on >> any other platform. They said it might have to do with how FreeBSD >> handles how files are opened up many times recursively!? > > Possibly Linux can more efficiently handle opening a non-existent file > but the underlying problem is that there are far too many system calls > being executed during the gnucash startup. It would be interesting to > get a truss of gnuash starting on another OS (unfortunately, I don't > have access to any Linux systems) and/or some other guile applications. > hmm... I have a Gentoo system somewhere. It was just an experiment. No idea what shape its in. But maybe I can try installing gnucash on it. >> If there is a more appropriate list, please let me know. > > -ports may be better. > -- Regards, Eric
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?441EFD34.6010709>