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2024-03-26py/makeqstrdata.py: Ensure that scope names get low qstr values.Jim Mussared
Originally implemented in a patch file provided by @ironss-iotec. Fixes issue #14093. Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
2024-03-07all: Remove the "STATIC" macro and just use "static" instead.Angus Gratton
The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it's simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it's doing. For example, newcomers don't have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less "loud" with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep '\.[ch]$' | \ xargs sed -Ei "s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/" 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) "git-grep STATIC docs/", manually fixed those cases. 4) "rg -t python STATIC", manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
2022-02-24py: Rework bytecode and .mpy file format to be mostly static data.Damien George
Background: .mpy files are precompiled .py files, built using mpy-cross, that contain compiled bytecode functions (and can also contain machine code). The benefit of using an .mpy file over a .py file is that they are faster to import and take less memory when importing. They are also smaller on disk. But the real benefit of .mpy files comes when they are frozen into the firmware. This is done by loading the .mpy file during compilation of the firmware and turning it into a set of big C data structures (the job of mpy-tool.py), which are then compiled and downloaded into the ROM of a device. These C data structures can be executed in-place, ie directly from ROM. This makes importing even faster because there is very little to do, and also means such frozen modules take up much less RAM (because their bytecode stays in ROM). The downside of frozen code is that it requires recompiling and reflashing the entire firmware. This can be a big barrier to entry, slows down development time, and makes it harder to do OTA updates of frozen code (because the whole firmware must be updated). This commit attempts to solve this problem by providing a solution that sits between loading .mpy files into RAM and freezing them into the firmware. The .mpy file format has been reworked so that it consists of data and bytecode which is mostly static and ready to run in-place. If these new .mpy files are located in flash/ROM which is memory addressable, the .mpy file can be executed (mostly) in-place. With this approach there is still a small amount of unpacking and linking of the .mpy file that needs to be done when it's imported, but it's still much better than loading an .mpy from disk into RAM (although not as good as freezing .mpy files into the firmware). The main trick to make static .mpy files is to adjust the bytecode so any qstrs that it references now go through a lookup table to convert from local qstr number in the module to global qstr number in the firmware. That means the bytecode does not need linking/rewriting of qstrs when it's loaded. Instead only a small qstr table needs to be built (and put in RAM) at import time. This means the bytecode itself is static/constant and can be used directly if it's in addressable memory. Also the qstr string data in the .mpy file, and some constant object data, can be used directly. Note that the qstr table is global to the module (ie not per function). In more detail, in the VM what used to be (schematically): qst = DECODE_QSTR_VALUE; is now (schematically): idx = DECODE_QSTR_INDEX; qst = qstr_table[idx]; That allows the bytecode to be fixed at compile time and not need relinking/rewriting of the qstr values. Only qstr_table needs to be linked when the .mpy is loaded. Incidentally, this helps to reduce the size of bytecode because what used to be 2-byte qstr values in the bytecode are now (mostly) 1-byte indices. If the module uses the same qstr more than two times then the bytecode is smaller than before. The following changes are measured for this commit compared to the previous (the baseline): - average 7%-9% reduction in size of .mpy files - frozen code size is reduced by about 5%-7% - importing .py files uses about 5% less RAM in total - importing .mpy files uses about 4% less RAM in total - importing .py and .mpy files takes about the same time as before The qstr indirection in the bytecode has only a small impact on VM performance. For stm32 on PYBv1.0 the performance change of this commit is: diff of scores (higher is better) N=100 M=100 baseline -> this-commit diff diff% (error%) bm_chaos.py 371.07 -> 357.39 : -13.68 = -3.687% (+/-0.02%) bm_fannkuch.py 78.72 -> 77.49 : -1.23 = -1.563% (+/-0.01%) bm_fft.py 2591.73 -> 2539.28 : -52.45 = -2.024% (+/-0.00%) bm_float.py 6034.93 -> 5908.30 : -126.63 = -2.098% (+/-0.01%) bm_hexiom.py 48.96 -> 47.93 : -1.03 = -2.104% (+/-0.00%) bm_nqueens.py 4510.63 -> 4459.94 : -50.69 = -1.124% (+/-0.00%) bm_pidigits.py 650.28 -> 644.96 : -5.32 = -0.818% (+/-0.23%) core_import_mpy_multi.py 564.77 -> 581.49 : +16.72 = +2.960% (+/-0.01%) core_import_mpy_single.py 68.67 -> 67.16 : -1.51 = -2.199% (+/-0.01%) core_qstr.py 64.16 -> 64.12 : -0.04 = -0.062% (+/-0.00%) core_yield_from.py 362.58 -> 354.50 : -8.08 = -2.228% (+/-0.00%) misc_aes.py 429.69 -> 405.59 : -24.10 = -5.609% (+/-0.01%) misc_mandel.py 3485.13 -> 3416.51 : -68.62 = -1.969% (+/-0.00%) misc_pystone.py 2496.53 -> 2405.56 : -90.97 = -3.644% (+/-0.01%) misc_raytrace.py 381.47 -> 374.01 : -7.46 = -1.956% (+/-0.01%) viper_call0.py 576.73 -> 572.49 : -4.24 = -0.735% (+/-0.04%) viper_call1a.py 550.37 -> 546.21 : -4.16 = -0.756% (+/-0.09%) viper_call1b.py 438.23 -> 435.68 : -2.55 = -0.582% (+/-0.06%) viper_call1c.py 442.84 -> 440.04 : -2.80 = -0.632% (+/-0.08%) viper_call2a.py 536.31 -> 532.35 : -3.96 = -0.738% (+/-0.06%) viper_call2b.py 382.34 -> 377.07 : -5.27 = -1.378% (+/-0.03%) And for unix on x64: diff of scores (higher is better) N=2000 M=2000 baseline -> this-commit diff diff% (error%) bm_chaos.py 13594.20 -> 13073.84 : -520.36 = -3.828% (+/-5.44%) bm_fannkuch.py 60.63 -> 59.58 : -1.05 = -1.732% (+/-3.01%) bm_fft.py 112009.15 -> 111603.32 : -405.83 = -0.362% (+/-4.03%) bm_float.py 246202.55 -> 247923.81 : +1721.26 = +0.699% (+/-2.79%) bm_hexiom.py 615.65 -> 617.21 : +1.56 = +0.253% (+/-1.64%) bm_nqueens.py 215807.95 -> 215600.96 : -206.99 = -0.096% (+/-3.52%) bm_pidigits.py 8246.74 -> 8422.82 : +176.08 = +2.135% (+/-3.64%) misc_aes.py 16133.00 -> 16452.74 : +319.74 = +1.982% (+/-1.50%) misc_mandel.py 128146.69 -> 130796.43 : +2649.74 = +2.068% (+/-3.18%) misc_pystone.py 83811.49 -> 83124.85 : -686.64 = -0.819% (+/-1.03%) misc_raytrace.py 21688.02 -> 21385.10 : -302.92 = -1.397% (+/-3.20%) The code size change is (firmware with a lot of frozen code benefits the most): bare-arm: +396 +0.697% minimal x86: +1595 +0.979% [incl +32(data)] unix x64: +2408 +0.470% [incl +800(data)] unix nanbox: +1396 +0.309% [incl -96(data)] stm32: -1256 -0.318% PYBV10 cc3200: +288 +0.157% esp8266: -260 -0.037% GENERIC esp32: -216 -0.014% GENERIC[incl -1072(data)] nrf: +116 +0.067% pca10040 rp2: -664 -0.135% PICO samd: +844 +0.607% ADAFRUIT_ITSYBITSY_M4_EXPRESS As part of this change the .mpy file format version is bumped to version 6. And mpy-tool.py has been improved to provide a good visualisation of the contents of .mpy files. In summary: this commit changes the bytecode to use qstr indirection, and reworks the .mpy file format to be simpler and allow .mpy files to be executed in-place. Performance is not impacted too much. Eventually it will be possible to store such .mpy files in a linear, read-only, memory- mappable filesystem so they can be executed from flash/ROM. This will essentially be able to replace frozen code for most applications. Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-10-22py/scope: Name and use id_kind_type_t.Emil Renner Berthing
The function scope_find_or_add_id used to take a scope_kind_t enum and save it in an uint8_t. Saving an enum in a uint8_t is fine, but everywhere this function is called it is not actually given a scope_kind_t but an anonymous enum instead. Let's give this enum a name and use that as the argument type. This doesn't change the generated code, but is a C type mismatch that unfortunately doesn't show up unless you enable -Wenum-conversion.
2020-04-13py/scope: Add assert to check that low numbered qstrs do fit in uint8_t.Romain Goyet
2020-02-28all: Reformat C and Python source code with tools/codeformat.py.Damien George
This is run with uncrustify 0.70.1, and black 19.10b0.
2018-10-28py/scope: Optimise scope_find_or_add_id to not need "added" arg.Damien George
Taking the address of a local variable is mildly expensive, in code size and stack usage. So optimise scope_find_or_add_id() to not need to take a pointer to the "added" variable, and instead take the kind to use for newly added identifiers.
2018-10-28py/compile: Fix case of eager implicit conversion of local to nonlocal.Damien George
This ensures that implicit variables are only converted to implicit closed-over variables (nonlocals) at the very end of the function scope. If variables are closed-over when first used (read from, as was done prior to this commit) then this can be incorrect because the variable may be assigned to later on in the function which means they are just a plain local, not closed over. Fixes issue #4272.
2017-07-31all: Use the name MicroPython consistently in commentsAlexander Steffen
There were several different spellings of MicroPython present in comments, when there should be only one.
2016-09-30py/scope: Factor common code to find locals and close over them.Damien George
Saves 50-100 bytes of code.
2016-09-30py/scope: Use lookup-table to determine a scope's simple name.Damien George
Generates slightly smaller and more efficient code.
2015-12-18py: Add MICROPY_ENABLE_COMPILER and MICROPY_PY_BUILTINS_EVAL_EXEC opts.Damien George
MICROPY_ENABLE_COMPILER can be used to enable/disable the entire compiler, which is useful when only loading of pre-compiled bytecode is supported. It is enabled by default. MICROPY_PY_BUILTINS_EVAL_EXEC controls support of eval and exec builtin functions. By default they are only included if MICROPY_ENABLE_COMPILER is enabled. Disabling both options saves about 40k of code size on 32-bit x86.
2015-08-17unix-cpy: Remove unix-cpy. It's no longer needed.Damien George
unix-cpy was originally written to get semantic equivalent with CPython without writing functional tests. When writing the initial implementation of uPy it was a long way between lexer and functional tests, so the half-way test was to make sure that the bytecode was correct. The idea was that if the uPy bytecode matched CPython 1-1 then uPy would be proper Python if the bytecodes acted correctly. And having matching bytecode meant that it was less likely to miss some deep subtlety in the Python semantics that would require an architectural change later on. But that is all history and it no longer makes sense to retain the ability to output CPython bytecode, because: 1. It outputs CPython 3.3 compatible bytecode. CPython's bytecode changes from version to version, and seems to have changed quite a bit in 3.5. There's no point in changing the bytecode output to match CPython anymore. 2. uPy and CPy do different optimisations to the bytecode which makes it harder to match. 3. The bytecode tests are not run. They were never part of Travis and are not run locally anymore. 4. The EMIT_CPYTHON option needs a lot of extra source code which adds heaps of noise, especially in compile.c. 5. Now that there is an extensive test suite (which tests functionality) there is no need to match the bytecode. Some very subtle behaviour is tested with the test suite and passing these tests is a much better way to stay Python-language compliant, rather than trying to match CPy bytecode.
2015-01-01py: Move to guarded includes, everywhere in py/ core.Damien George
Addresses issue #1022.
2014-12-21py: Move global/nonlocal decl code to compiler for proper SyntaxError.Damien George
This patch gives proper SyntaxError exceptions for bad global/nonlocal declarations. It also reduces code size: 304 bytes on unix x64, 132 bytes on stmhal.
2014-09-08py: Convert [u]int to mp_[u]int_t in emit.h and associated .c files.Damien George
Towards resolving issue #50.
2014-08-30py: Change uint to mp_uint_t in runtime.h, stackctrl.h, binary.h.Damien George
Part of code cleanup, working towards resolving issue #50.
2014-08-15py: Clean up and simplify functions in scope; add STATIC in compiler.Damien George
Some small code clean-ups that result in about 80 bytes ROM saving for stmhal.
2014-06-21py: Include mpconfig.h before all other includes.Paul Sokolovsky
It defines types used by all other headers. Fixes #691.
2014-05-21Tidy up some configuration options.Damien George
MP_ALLOC_* -> MICROPY_ALLOC_* MICROPY_PATH_MAX -> MICROPY_ALLOC_PATH_MAX MICROPY_ENABLE_REPL_HELPERS -> MICROPY_HELPER_REPL MICROPY_ENABLE_LEXER_UNIX -> MICROPY_HELPER_LEXER_UNIX MICROPY_EXTRA_* -> MICROPY_PORT_* See issue #35.
2014-05-05py: Turn down amount of RAM parser and compiler use.Damien George
There are 2 locations in parser, and 1 in compiler, where memory allocation is not precise. In the parser it's the rule stack and result stack, in the compiler it's the array for the identifiers in the current scope. All other mallocs are exact (ie they don't allocate more than is needed). This patch adds tuning options (MP_ALLOC_*) to mpconfig.h for these 3 inexact allocations. The inexact allocations in the parser should actually be close to logarithmic: you need an exponentially larger script (absent pathological cases) to use up more room on the rule and result stacks. As such, the default allocation policy for these is now to start with a modest sized stack, but grow only in small increments. For the identifier arrays in the compiler, these now start out quite small (4 entries, since most functions don't have that many ids), and grow incrementally by 6 (since if you have more ids than 4, you probably have quite a few more, but it wouldn't be exponentially more). Partially addresses issue #560.
2014-05-03Add license header to (almost) all files.Damien George
Blanket wide to all .c and .h files. Some files originating from ST are difficult to deal with (license wise) so it was left out of those. Also merged modpyb.h, modos.h, modstm.h and modtime.h in stmhal/.
2014-04-27py: Implement keyword-only args.Damien George
Implements 'def f(*, a)' and 'def f(*a, b)', but not default keyword-only args, eg 'def f(*, a=1)'. Partially addresses issue #524.
2014-04-13py: Remove unique_codes from emitglue.c. Replace with pointers.Damien George
Attempt to address issue #386. unique_code_id's have been removed and replaced with a pointer to the "raw code" information. This pointer is stored in the actual byte code (aligned, so the GC can trace it), so that raw code (ie byte code, native code and inline assembler) is kept only for as long as it is needed. In memory it's now like a tree: the outer module's byte code points directly to its children's raw code. So when the outer code gets freed, if there are no remaining functions that need the raw code, then the children's code gets freed as well. This is pretty much like CPython does it, except that CPython stores indexes in the byte code rather than machine pointers. These indices index the per-function constant table in order to find the relevant code.
2014-04-09py, compiler: Turn id_info_t.param into a set of flags.Damien George
So we can add more flags.
2014-04-09py, compiler: Clean up and compress scope/compile structures.Damien George
Convert int types to uint where sensible, and then to uint8_t or uint16_t where possible to reduce RAM usage.
2014-03-17py: Clean up includes.xbe
Remove unnecessary includes. Add includes that improve portability.
2014-02-15py: Pass all scope flags through to runtime.Damien George
2014-01-24Allow qstr's with non-ident chars, construct good identifier for them.Paul Sokolovsky
Also, add qstr's for string appearing in unix REPL loop, gross effect being less allocations for each command run.
2014-01-23mp_compile(): Properly free module_scope and all nested scopes.Paul Sokolovsky
2014-01-21Revamp qstrs: they now include length and hash.Damien George
Can now have null bytes in strings. Can define ROM qstrs per port using qstrdefsport.h
2014-01-19py: Add module/function/class name to exceptions.Damien George
Exceptions know source file, line and block name. Also tidy up some debug printing functions and provide a global flag to enable/disable them.
2013-12-30py: make closures work.Damien George
2013-12-29Change memory allocation API to require size for free and realloc.Damien
2013-12-21Change object representation from 1 big union to individual structs.Damien
A big change. Micro Python objects are allocated as individual structs with the first element being a pointer to the type information (which is itself an object). This scheme follows CPython. Much more flexible, not necessarily slower, uses same heap memory, and can allocate objects statically. Also change name prefix, from py_ to mp_ (mp for Micro Python).
2013-12-11py: work towards working closures.Damien
2013-10-20Add local_num skeleton framework to deref/closure emit calls.Damien
2013-10-12Separate out mpy core and unix version.Damien
2013-10-05Implement built-in decorators to select emit type.Damien
2013-10-05Further factorise PASS_1 out of specific emit code.Damien
2013-10-05Restructure emit so it goes through a method table.Damien
2013-10-04Initial commit.Damien