Vincent Parrett 750 Posted February 15 13 hours ago, Anders Melander said: Looking at the Threading unit, it's rare to see professional code with this few comments. Is there some sort of rule within Embarcadero against commenting the code? I believe Embarcadero strip comments as part of their build process. 1 Share this post Link to post
Vincent Parrett 750 Posted February 15 13 hours ago, Dalija Prasnikar said: I have written tons of self explanatory code, for which now I don't know what was I smoking at the time. Haven't we all 🙋♂️ 😉 - I've been making a point lately to review code and just write comments when anything is unclear (once I figure out what I was thinking). 2 Share this post Link to post
Dalija Prasnikar 1396 Posted February 16 7 hours ago, Vincent Parrett said: I believe Embarcadero strip comments as part of their build process. If they do that, some comments miraculously survive that process and others don't. Share this post Link to post
Vincent Parrett 750 Posted February 19 On 2/16/2024 at 5:33 PM, Dalija Prasnikar said: If they do that, some comments miraculously survive that process and others don't. I was told this by an embarcadero (actuallly, it was probably borland at the time) employee when I queried what happened to the comments in some code I donated. In the DUnitX source they distribute, TODO comments are all stripped but not regular comments. Share this post Link to post
Anders Melander 1782 Posted February 19 16 hours ago, Vincent Parrett said: I was told this by an embarcadero (actuallly, it was probably borland at the time) employee when I queried what happened to the comments in some code I donated. I've heard this too, but it was many, many years ago. 16 hours ago, Vincent Parrett said: In the DUnitX source they distribute, TODO comments are all stripped but not regular comments. Well that explains the complete lack of comments. All their comments are like: // TODO : Document this, FFS! and // TODO : WFT is this shit? Share this post Link to post
Anders Melander 1782 Posted February 19 Just now, Anders Melander said: All their comments are like: Whoops. I just remembered who wrote that code 🙂 1 Share this post Link to post
mitch.terpak 5 Posted April 8 (edited) On 2/15/2024 at 1:06 PM, Kas Ob. said: assuming these cores doing near nothing except your stress test, right ? Threading.pas from 12.1 is still less performant then 11.3. Growing the WorkerThreads in TThreadPool.TThreadPoolMonitor.GrowThreadPoolIfStarved() via the last statement else if FThreadPool.UnlimitedWorkerThreadsWhenBlocked then for i := 1 to Min(FThreadPool.FQueuedRequestCount, FThreadPool.FMaxLimitWorkerThreadCount div 2 + 1) do FThreadPool.CreateWorkerThread; But its doing so erroneously. This seems to be in my case because the amount of work I do in a TParallel.For is large. So here: procedure TThreadPool.TThreadPoolMonitor.Execute; const MaxInactiveInterval = 30 * 1000; InactiveCountdown = MaxInactiveInterval div TThreadPool.MonitorThreadDelay; var I: Integer; CPUInfo: TThread.TSystemTimes; CpuUsageArray: array[0..TThreadPool.NumCPUUsageSamples - 1] of Cardinal; CurUsageSlot: Integer; ExitCountdown: Integer; AvgCPU: Cardinal; CurMonitorStatus: TThreadPool.TMonitorThreadStatus; Signaled: Boolean; begin NameThreadForDebugging(Format('Thread Pool Monitor Thread - %s ThreadPool - %p', [ClassName, Pointer(FThreadPool)])); {$IFDEF MSWINDOWS} if ThreadPoolMonitorHandles <> nil then begin TMonitor.Enter(ThreadPoolMonitorHandles); try ThreadPoolMonitorHandles.Add(FThreadPool, Handle); finally TMonitor.Exit(ThreadPoolMonitorHandles); end; end; try {$ENDIF MSWINDOWS} FThreadPool.FMonitorThreadWakeEvent.WaitFor(TThreadPool.MonitorThreadDelay); TThread.GetSystemTimes(CPUInfo); CurUsageSlot := 0; FillChar(CPUUsageArray, SizeOf(CPUUsageArray), 0); ExitCountdown := InactiveCountdown; while not Terminated do begin if not FThreadPool.FShutdown then begin Signaled := FThreadPool.FMonitorThreadWakeEvent.WaitFor(TThreadPool.MonitorThreadDelay) = TWaitResult.wrSignaled; FThreadPool.FCurrentCPUUsage := TThread.GetCPUUsage(CPUInfo); CPUUsageArray[CurUsageSlot] := FThreadPool.FCurrentCPUUsage; if CurUsageSlot = TThreadPool.NumCPUUsageSamples - 1 then CurUsageSlot := 0 else Inc(CurUsageSlot); AvgCPU := 0; for I := 0 to TThreadPool.NumCPUUsageSamples - 1 do Inc(AvgCPU, CPUUsageArray[I]); FThreadPool.FAverageCPUUsage := AvgCPU div TThreadPool.NumCPUUsageSamples; if FThreadPool.FCurrentCPUUsage < TThreadPool.CPUUsageLow then GrowThreadPoolIfStarved; CurMonitorStatus := FThreadPool.FMonitorThreadStatus; if Signaled then begin FThreadPool.FMonitorThreadWakeEvent.ResetEvent; Continue; end; if FThreadPool.FShutdown then ExitCountdown := -1 else if not (TThreadPool.TMonitorThreadStat.NoWorkers in CurMonitorStatus) then Dec(ExitCountdown) else ExitCountdown := InactiveCountdown; end else ExitCountdown := -1; if ExitCountdown <= 0 then begin if ExitCountdown < 0 then begin TInterlocked.Exchange(Integer(FThreadPool.FMonitorThreadStatus), 0); Exit; end else if TMonitorThreadStatus(TInterlocked.CompareExchange(Integer(FThreadPool.FMonitorThreadStatus), 0, Integer(CurMonitorStatus))) = CurMonitorStatus then Exit else ExitCountdown := InactiveCountdown; end; end; {$IFDEF MSWINDOWS} finally if ThreadPoolMonitorHandles <> nil then begin TMonitor.Enter(ThreadPoolMonitorHandles); try ThreadPoolMonitorHandles.Remove(FThreadPool); finally TMonitor.Exit(ThreadPoolMonitorHandles); end; end; end; {$ENDIF MSWINDOWS} end; The MonitorThreadDelay is 500ms, but that's not sufficient for our application. So lets say you do a TParallel for from 0-100, you have 20 threads and each task takes 10 seconds. Then it can occur that within a 500ms interval none of the threads have finished work, then this new logic thinks it's deadlocked. If they'd let us set these runtime it'd make a big difference already private const MaxThreadsPerCPU = 2; // Constants used for calculating CPU Usage CPUUsageHigh = 95; // Start retiring/removing threads when CPU usage gets this high CPUUsageLow = 80; // Add more threads if the CPU usage is below this CPUUsageLowest = 20; // Shrink the thread pool when CPU usage falls below this NumCPUUsageSamples = 10; // Keep a running list of CPU Usage samples over which the average is calculated MonitorThreadDelay = 2000; // Was 500 SuspendInterval = 5000 + MonitorThreadDelay; // Interval to use for suspending work in worker threads SuspendTime = MonitorThreadDelay + 100; // Time to spend in SuspendWork; RetirementDelay = 5000; // Delay interval for retiring threads Now I have to maintain my own Threading.pas still... Edited April 8 by mitch.terpak Share this post Link to post