New submission from Oren Milman: ------------ the current state ------------ long_invert first checks whether v is a single-digit int. If it is, it simply does 'return PyLong_FromLong(-(MEDIUM_VALUE(v) + 1));'. Otherwise, long_invert does (edited for brevity) 'x = long_add(v, PyLong_FromLong(1));', and then negates x in-place.
In other words, long_invert assumes long_add hasn't returned a reference to an element of small_ints. However, if all of the following conditions are true: * NSMALLNEGINTS is maximized (i.e. NSMALLNEGINTS == 2 ** PyLong_SHIFT - 1). * long_add is changed in such a way that if someone does (in Python) '-2 ** PyLong_SHIFT + 1' while NSMALLNEGINTS is maximized, long_add would return a reference to an element of small_ints. (Actually, I have recently opened an issue that proposes such a change - http://bugs.python.org/issue27145.) * long_invert is called for (-2 ** PyLong_SHIFT). Then long_invert would negate in-place an element of small_ints. In addition, because long_invert first checks whether v is a single-digit int, calling maybe_small_long before returning would save up memory only in case both of the following conditions are true: * NSMALLPOSINTS is maximized (i.e. NSMALLPOSINTS == 2 ** PyLong_SHIFT). * long_invert is called for (-2 ** PyLong_SHIFT). So the call to maybe_small_long introduces a performance penalty for every case where v is a multiple-digit int (and long_invert doesn't fail), while the only case where it actually saves up memory is the aforementioned corner case. ------------ the proposed changes ------------ Both of the proposed changes are in Objects/longobject.c in long_invert: 1. Replace the in-place negation with a call to _PyLong_Negate, which safely negates an int. 2. Remove the call to maybe_small_long. maybe_small_long was added to long_invert in revision 48567, as part of an effort to wipe out different places in the code where small_ints could be used (and saved up memory), but was not. I am not sure why maybe_small_long was also added to long_invert back then, even though it mostly undermines performance. ------------ diff ------------ The patches diff is attached. ------------ tests ------------ I built the patched CPython for x86, and played with it a little. Everything seemed to work as usual. In addition, I ran 'python_d.exe -m test -j3' (on my 64-bit Windows 10) with and without the patches, and got quite the same output. the outputs of both runs are attached. ---------- components: Interpreter Core files: proposedPatches.diff keywords: patch messages: 267244 nosy: Oren Milman priority: normal severity: normal status: open title: a potential future bug and an optimization that mostly undermines performance in long_invert type: performance Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file43186/proposedPatches.diff _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <http://bugs.python.org/issue27214> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com