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Improve performance on wide matches
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Nadrieril committed Dec 10, 2023
1 parent 61afc9c commit 41a1bf0
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144 changes: 115 additions & 29 deletions compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/usefulness.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -299,6 +299,74 @@
//!
//!
//!
//! # `Missing` and relevant constructors
//!
//! Take the following example:
//!
//! ```
//! enum Direction { North, South, East, West }
//! # let wind = (Direction::North, 0u8);
//! match wind {

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non-exhaustive patterns: `(Direction::South, 0_u8..=49_u8)`, `(Direction::East, 0_u8..=49_u8)` and `(Direction::West, 0_u8..=49_u8)` not covered
//! (Direction::North, _) => {} // arm 1
//! (_, 50..) => {} // arm 2
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! Remember that we represent the "everything else" cases with [`Constructor::Missing`]. When we
//! specialize with `Missing` in the first column, we have one arm left:
//!
//! ```ignore(partial code)
//! (50..) => {} // arm 2
//! ```
//!
//! We then conclude that arm 2 is useful, and that the match is non-exhaustive with witness
//! `(Missing, 0..50)` (which we would display to the user as `(_, 0..50)`).
//!
//! When we then specialize with `North`, we have two arms left:
//!
//! ```ignore(partial code)
//! (_) => {} // arm 1
//! (50..) => {} // arm 2
//! ```
//!
//! Because `Missing` only matches wildcard rows, specializing with `Missing` is guaranteed to
//! result in a subset of the rows obtained from specializing with anything else. This means that
//! any row with a wildcard found useful when specializing with anything else would also be found
//! useful in the `Missing` case. In our example, after specializing with `North` here we will not
//! gain new information regarding the usefulness of arm 2 or of the fake wildcard row used for
//! exhaustiveness. This allows us to skip cases.
//!
//! When specializing, if there is a `Missing` case we call the other constructors "irrelevant".
//! When there is no `Missing` case there are no irrelevant constructors.
//!
//! What happens then is: when we specialize a wildcard with an irrelevant constructor, we know we
//! won't get new info for this row; we consider that row "irrelevant". Whenever all the rows are
//! found irrelevant, we can safely skip the case entirely.
//!
//! In the example above, we will entirely skip the `(North, 50..)` case. This skipping was
//! developped as a solution to #118437. It doesn't look like much but it can save us from
//! exponential blowup.
//!
//! There's a subtlety regarding exhaustiveness: while this shortcutting doesn't affect correctness,
//! it can affect which witnesses are reported. For example, in the following:
//!
//! ```
//! # let foo = (true, true);
//! match foo {
//! (true, _, true) => {}

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mismatched types
//! (_, true, _) => {}

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mismatched types
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! In this example we will skip the `(true, true, _)` case entirely. Thus `(true, true, false)`
//! will not be reported as missing. In fact we go further than this: we deliberately do not report
//! any cases that are irrelevant for the fake wildcard row. For example, in `match ... { (true,
//! true) => {} }` we will not report `(true, false)` as missing. This was a deliberate choice made
//! early in the development of rust; it so happens that it is beneficial for performance reasons
//! too.
//!
//!
//!
//! # Or-patterns
//!
//! What we have described so far works well if there are no or-patterns. To handle them, if the
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -710,11 +778,15 @@ impl fmt::Display for ValidityConstraint {
struct PatStack<'p, 'tcx> {
// Rows of len 1 are very common, which is why `SmallVec[_; 2]` works well.
pats: SmallVec<[&'p DeconstructedPat<'p, 'tcx>; 2]>,
/// Sometimes we know that as far as this row is concerned, the current case is already handled
/// by a different, more general, case. When all rows are irrelevant this allows us to skip many
/// branches. This is purely an optimization. See at the top for details.
relevant: bool,
}

impl<'p, 'tcx> PatStack<'p, 'tcx> {
fn from_pattern(pat: &'p DeconstructedPat<'p, 'tcx>) -> Self {
PatStack { pats: smallvec![pat] }
PatStack { pats: smallvec![pat], relevant: true }
}

fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -749,12 +821,17 @@ impl<'p, 'tcx> PatStack<'p, 'tcx> {
&self,
pcx: &PatCtxt<'_, 'p, 'tcx>,
ctor: &Constructor<'tcx>,
ctor_is_relevant: bool,
) -> PatStack<'p, 'tcx> {
// We pop the head pattern and push the new fields extracted from the arguments of
// `self.head()`.
let mut new_pats = self.head().specialize(pcx, ctor);
new_pats.extend_from_slice(&self.pats[1..]);
PatStack { pats: new_pats }
// `ctor` is relevant for this row if it is the actual constructor of this row, or if the
// row has a wildcard and `ctor` is relevant for wildcards.
let ctor_is_relevant =
!matches!(self.head().ctor(), Constructor::Wildcard) || ctor_is_relevant;
PatStack { pats: new_pats, relevant: self.relevant && ctor_is_relevant }
}
}

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -820,10 +897,11 @@ impl<'p, 'tcx> MatrixRow<'p, 'tcx> {
&self,
pcx: &PatCtxt<'_, 'p, 'tcx>,
ctor: &Constructor<'tcx>,
ctor_is_relevant: bool,
parent_row: usize,
) -> MatrixRow<'p, 'tcx> {
MatrixRow {
pats: self.pats.pop_head_constructor(pcx, ctor),
pats: self.pats.pop_head_constructor(pcx, ctor, ctor_is_relevant),
parent_row,
is_under_guard: self.is_under_guard,
useful: false,
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -952,8 +1030,9 @@ impl<'p, 'tcx> Matrix<'p, 'tcx> {
&self,
pcx: &PatCtxt<'_, 'p, 'tcx>,
ctor: &Constructor<'tcx>,
ctor_is_relevant: bool,
) -> Matrix<'p, 'tcx> {
let wildcard_row = self.wildcard_row.pop_head_constructor(pcx, ctor);
let wildcard_row = self.wildcard_row.pop_head_constructor(pcx, ctor, ctor_is_relevant);
let new_validity = self.place_validity[0].specialize(pcx, ctor);
let new_place_validity = std::iter::repeat(new_validity)
.take(ctor.arity(pcx))
Expand All @@ -963,7 +1042,7 @@ impl<'p, 'tcx> Matrix<'p, 'tcx> {
Matrix { rows: Vec::new(), wildcard_row, place_validity: new_place_validity };
for (i, row) in self.rows().enumerate() {
if ctor.is_covered_by(pcx, row.head().ctor()) {
let new_row = row.pop_head_constructor(pcx, ctor, i);
let new_row = row.pop_head_constructor(pcx, ctor, ctor_is_relevant, i);
matrix.expand_and_push(new_row);
}
}
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1161,7 +1240,10 @@ impl<'tcx> WitnessMatrix<'tcx> {
if matches!(ctor, Constructor::Missing) {
// We got the special `Missing` constructor that stands for the constructors not present
// in the match.
if !report_individual_missing_ctors {
if missing_ctors.is_empty() {
// Nothing to report.
*self = Self::empty();
} else if !report_individual_missing_ctors {
// Report `_` as missing.
let pat = WitnessPat::wild_from_ctor(pcx, Constructor::Wildcard);
self.push_pattern(pat);
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1220,6 +1302,15 @@ fn compute_exhaustiveness_and_usefulness<'p, 'tcx>(
) -> WitnessMatrix<'tcx> {
debug_assert!(matrix.rows().all(|r| r.len() == matrix.column_count()));

if !matrix.wildcard_row.relevant && matrix.rows().all(|r| !r.pats.relevant) {
// Here we know that nothing will contribute further to exhaustiveness or usefulness. This
// is purely an optimization: skipping this check doesn't affect correctness. This check
// does change runtime behavior from exponential to quadratic on some matches found in the
// wild, so it's pretty important. It also affects which missing patterns will be reported.
// See the top of the file for details.
return WitnessMatrix::empty();
}

let Some(ty) = matrix.head_ty() else {
// The base case: there are no columns in the matrix. We are morally pattern-matching on ().
// A row is useful iff it has no (unguarded) rows above it.
Expand All @@ -1232,8 +1323,14 @@ fn compute_exhaustiveness_and_usefulness<'p, 'tcx>(
return WitnessMatrix::empty();
}
}
// No (unguarded) rows, so the match is not exhaustive. We return a new witness.
return WitnessMatrix::unit_witness();
// No (unguarded) rows, so the match is not exhaustive. We return a new witness unless
// irrelevant.
return if matrix.wildcard_row.relevant {
WitnessMatrix::unit_witness()
} else {
// We can omit the witness without affecting correctness, so we do.
WitnessMatrix::empty()
};
};

debug!("ty: {ty:?}");
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1274,32 +1371,21 @@ fn compute_exhaustiveness_and_usefulness<'p, 'tcx>(

let mut ret = WitnessMatrix::empty();
for ctor in split_ctors {
debug!("specialize({:?})", ctor);
// Dig into rows that match `ctor`.
let mut spec_matrix = matrix.specialize_constructor(pcx, &ctor);
debug!("specialize({:?})", ctor);
// `ctor` is *irrelevant* if there's another constructor in `split_ctors` that matches
// strictly fewer rows. In that case we can sometimes skip it. See the top of the file for
// details.
let ctor_is_relevant = matches!(ctor, Constructor::Missing) || missing_ctors.is_empty();
let mut spec_matrix = matrix.specialize_constructor(pcx, &ctor, ctor_is_relevant);
let mut witnesses = ensure_sufficient_stack(|| {
compute_exhaustiveness_and_usefulness(cx, &mut spec_matrix, false)
});

let counts_for_exhaustiveness = match ctor {
Constructor::Missing => !missing_ctors.is_empty(),
// If there are missing constructors we'll report those instead. Since `Missing` matches
// only the wildcard rows, it matches fewer rows than this constructor, and is therefore
// guaranteed to result in the same or more witnesses. So skipping this does not
// jeopardize correctness.
_ => missing_ctors.is_empty(),
};
if counts_for_exhaustiveness {
// Transform witnesses for `spec_matrix` into witnesses for `matrix`.
witnesses.apply_constructor(
pcx,
&missing_ctors,
&ctor,
report_individual_missing_ctors,
);
// Accumulate the found witnesses.
ret.extend(witnesses);
}
// Transform witnesses for `spec_matrix` into witnesses for `matrix`.
witnesses.apply_constructor(pcx, &missing_ctors, &ctor, report_individual_missing_ctors);
// Accumulate the found witnesses.
ret.extend(witnesses);

// A parent row is useful if any of its children is.
for child_row in spec_matrix.rows() {
Expand Down
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,72 @@
// check-pass
struct BaseCommand {
field01: bool,
field02: bool,
field03: bool,
field04: bool,
field05: bool,
field06: bool,
field07: bool,
field08: bool,
field09: bool,
field10: bool,
field11: bool,
field12: bool,
field13: bool,
field14: bool,
field15: bool,
field16: bool,
field17: bool,
field18: bool,
field19: bool,
field20: bool,
field21: bool,
field22: bool,
field23: bool,
field24: bool,
field25: bool,
field26: bool,
field27: bool,
field28: bool,
field29: bool,
field30: bool,
}

fn request_key(command: BaseCommand) {
match command {
BaseCommand { field01: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field02: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field03: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field04: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field05: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field06: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field07: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field08: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field09: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field10: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field11: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field12: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field13: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field14: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field15: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field16: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field17: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field18: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field19: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field20: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field21: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field22: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field23: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field24: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field25: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field26: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field27: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field28: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field29: true, .. } => {}
BaseCommand { field30: true, .. } => {}

_ => {}
}
}

fn main() {}

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