[Python-Dev] GIL musings (was Re: Thoughts fresh after EuroPython)

Ronald Oussoren ronaldoussoren at mac.com
Wed Jul 28 13:43:37 CEST 2010



On 28 Jul, 2010,at 12:56 PM, Michael Foord <fuzzyman at voidspace.org.uk> wrote:

On 28/07/2010 11:50, Nick Coghlan wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 12:33 AM, Ronald Oussoren
> <ronaldoussoren at mac.com> wrote:
> 
>> In my opinion the GIL is a weak point of CPython and it would be nice if it
>> could be fixed. That is however easier said than done, a number of people
>> have tried in the past and ran into implementation limitations like our
>> refcounting garbage collector that make hard to remove the GIL without
>> either rewriting lots of code, or running into a brick wall
>> performance-wise.
>>
>> The HotPy presentation at EuroPython shows that it is possible to remove the
>> GIL, although at the cost of replacing the garbage collector and most likely
>> breaking existing C extensions (although the HotPy author seemed to have a
>> possible workaround for that).
>> 
> This is the kind of approach that seems to hold the most promise of
> removing the GIL without incurring the single-threaded performance hit
> that has been the achilles heel of previous attempts at creating a
> free-threaded CPython implementation. With first IronClad and now PyPy
> blazing the trail in interfacing a garbage collected Python
> implementation with deterministic refcounting for C extension modules,
> it seems plausible that this kind of approach may eventually prove
> acceptable.
>
> Furthermore, the with statement now provides a superior alternative to
> application level tricks that previously relied on deterministic
> refcounting.
>
> While multi-threading does break down beyond a certain number of
> cores, it *is* possible to do safely (particularly using queues to
> pass references around) and can avoid plenty of serialisation overhead
> when dealing with sizable data structures.
> 

Breaking binary compatibility with C extensions would be "difficult" 
once PEP 384 (stable binary ABI) has gone into effect. As you intimate, 
Ironclad demonstrates that C extensions *can* be interfaced with a 
different garbage collection system whilst maintaining binary 
compatibility. It does impose constraints however (which is why the PyPy 
c-ext implementors chose source compatibility rather than binary 
compatibility).
 
The HotPy author mentioned that he has a scheme where refcounts could be used by C extensions while the system natively uses a copying collector, but I got the impression that this was not fully fleshed out yet.

Apple's Objective-C garbage collector has a simular feature: you can use CFRetain/CFRelease to manage refcounts and the GC will only collect objects where the CF reference count is 0.  This is a non-copying collector in a C environment though, which makes this scheme easier to implement than with a full generational copying collector.

It should therefore be possible to have an interpreter where the VM uses a real GC and while extensions using the stable ABI could work as is, but that probably requires that Py_INCREF and Py_DECREF expand into function calls in the stable ABI.

Implementing this would still be a significant amount of work.

Ronald



Michael



> Cheers,
> Nick.
>
> 


-- 
http://www.ironpythoninaction.com/
http://www.voidspace.org.uk/blog

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