Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ibraheem Ahmed 6f7b1c9bb3
[ty] Add environment variable to dump Salsa memory usage stats (#18928)
## Summary

Setting `TY_MEMORY_REPORT=full` will generate and print a memory usage
report to the CLI after a `ty check` run:

```
=======SALSA STRUCTS=======
`Definition`                                       metadata=7.24MB   fields=17.38MB  count=181062
`Expression`                                       metadata=4.45MB   fields=5.94MB   count=92804
`member_lookup_with_policy_::interned_arguments`   metadata=1.97MB   fields=2.25MB   count=35176
...
=======SALSA QUERIES=======
`File -> ty_python_semantic::semantic_index::SemanticIndex`
    metadata=11.46MB  fields=88.86MB  count=1638
`Definition -> ty_python_semantic::types::infer::TypeInference`
    metadata=24.52MB  fields=86.68MB  count=146018
`File -> ruff_db::parsed::ParsedModule`
    metadata=0.12MB   fields=69.06MB  count=1642
...
=======SALSA SUMMARY=======
TOTAL MEMORY USAGE: 577.61MB
    struct metadata = 29.00MB
    struct fields = 35.68MB
    memo metadata = 103.87MB
    memo fields = 409.06MB
```

Eventually, we should integrate these numbers into CI in some form. The
one limitation currently is that heap allocations in salsa structs (e.g.
interned values) are not tracked, but memoized values should have full
coverage. We may also want a peak memory usage counter (that accounts
for non-salsa memory), but that is relatively simple to profile manually
(e.g. `time -v ty check`) and would require a compile-time option to
avoid runtime overhead.
2025-06-26 21:27:51 +00:00
InSync fda8b1f884
[`ruff`] Unnecessary cast to `int` (`RUF046`) (#14697)
## Summary

Resolves #11412.

## Test Plan

`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2024-12-05 10:30:06 +01:00
Dylan 14ee5dbfde
[refurb] Count codepoints not bytes for `slice-to-remove-prefix-or-suffix (FURB188)` (#13631) 2024-10-07 16:13:28 +02:00
Charlie Marsh 35ba3c91ce
Use `u64` instead of `i64` in Int type (#11356)
## Summary

I believe the value here is always unsigned, since we represent `-42` as
a unary operator on `42`.
2024-05-10 13:35:15 +00:00
Charlie Marsh f45281345d
Include radix base prefix in large number representation (#7700)
## Summary

When lexing a number like `0x995DC9BBDF1939FA` that exceeds our small
number representation, we were only storing the portion after the base
(in this case, `995DC9BBDF1939FA`). When using that representation in
code generation, this could lead to invalid syntax, since
`995DC9BBDF1939FA)` on its own is not a valid integer.

This PR modifies the code to store the full span, including the radix
prefix.

See:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/7455#issuecomment-1739802958.

## Test Plan

`cargo test`
2023-09-28 20:38:06 +00:00
Charlie Marsh 93b5d8a0fb
Implement our own small-integer optimization (#7584)
## Summary

This is a follow-up to #7469 that attempts to achieve similar gains, but
without introducing malachite. Instead, this PR removes the `BigInt`
type altogether, instead opting for a simple enum that allows us to
store small integers directly and only allocate for values greater than
`i64`:

```rust
/// A Python integer literal. Represents both small (fits in an `i64`) and large integers.
#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
pub struct Int(Number);

#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
pub enum Number {
    /// A "small" number that can be represented as an `i64`.
    Small(i64),
    /// A "large" number that cannot be represented as an `i64`.
    Big(Box<str>),
}

impl std::fmt::Display for Number {
    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
        match self {
            Number::Small(value) => write!(f, "{value}"),
            Number::Big(value) => write!(f, "{value}"),
        }
    }
}
```

We typically don't care about numbers greater than `isize` -- our only
uses are comparisons against small constants (like `1`, `2`, `3`, etc.),
so there's no real loss of information, except in one or two rules where
we're now a little more conservative (with the worst-case being that we
don't flag, e.g., an `itertools.pairwise` that uses an extremely large
value for the slice start constant). For simplicity, a few diagnostics
now show a dedicated message when they see integers that are out of the
supported range (e.g., `outdated-version-block`).

An additional benefit here is that we get to remove a few dependencies,
especially `num-bigint`.

## Test Plan

`cargo test`
2023-09-25 15:13:21 +00:00