Because of varying floating-point precision, the slow case is hard to
test with explicit values. Instead, we check that sine and cosine do
not return the same value (the regression was that the slow case of
cosine accidentally did sine instead of cosine).
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/126123
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2169 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
Code addresses are now written as an offset from the previous address for ticks, code move and delete events. Employed backreference and RLE compression for code move and delete events. This gives additional 30% log size reduction for benchmarks run w/o snapshot.
Overall compression results (compared with the revision of V8 having no compression):
- V8: 70% size reduction for benchmarks run w/o snapshot (for reference, gzip gives 87%)
- Chromium: 65% size reduction for public html version of benchmarks (v4) (for reference, gzip gives 90%)
The one obvious opportunity for improving compression results in Chromium is to compress URLs of scripts.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/125114
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2162 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
For each frame it is now possible to request information on the scope chain. Each scope in the chain can have one of the types local, global, with and closure. For scopes of type global and with the mirror for the actual global or with object is available. For scopes of type local and closure a plain JavaScript object with the materialized content of the scope is created and its mirror is returned. Depending on the level of possible optimization the content of the materialized local and closure scopes might only contain the names which are actually used.
To iterate the scope chain an iterator ScopeIterator have been added which can provide the type of each scope for each part of the chain. This iterator creates an artificial local scope whenever that is present as the context chain does not include the local scope.
To avoid caching the mirror objects for the materialized the local and closure scopes transient mirrors have been added. They have negative handles and cannot be retrieved by subsequent lookup calls. Their content is part of a single response.
For debugging purposes an additional runtime function DebugPrintScopes is been added.
Added commands 'scopes' and 'scope' to the developer shell and fixed the dir command.
BUG=none
TEST=test/mjsunit/debug-scopes.js
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/123021
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2149 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
Two techniques are involved:
- compress repeated line ends (common stack beginnings) by using back references;
- do RLE compression of repeated tick events.
This gives only 5% size reduction on benchmarks run, but this is because tick events are only comprise 10% of file size. Under Chromium winnings are bigger because long repeated samples of idleness are now compressed into a single line.
Tickprocessor will be updated in the next patch.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/123012
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2147 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
Scripts now have a compilation type which can be host, eval or JSON. Host scripts are compiled through the API, eval scripts are compiled through call to evan and JSON scripts are compiled as a result of calling JSON.parse.
For scripts scripts compiled through eval the JavaScript function in top of the stack and the pc offset into the code is stored in the script object. This makes it possible to calculate the source position of the eval call later when requested. This information can be obtained through the script mirror object and is part of the script mirror JSON serialization for the debugger protocol.
Moved the enumeration ScripType into class Script and remamed to Type. The new compilation type enumeration is also inside the class Script.
This information is now shown when using the scripts command in he developer shell debugger.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/119108
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2119 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
interceptors and dont-delete attributes.
Minor change to the behavior of eval: throw exception when calling
eval in a context for which the global has been detached. This
matches the behavior of both Firefox and Safari post navigation in the
browser.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/118374
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2118 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
submitted in revisions 2093, 2094, 2099, and 2106.
There's no evidence that supports that these changes
should be the cause of the unexplained performance
regressions on the intl2 and DHTML page cyclers.
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2109 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
The problem was I incorrectly treated NULL result as failure to fetch
a property with a getter. However, if getter returns zero, it is
manifested as NULL pointer (see added test case).
Good news: that gives another boost as before this CL if getter returned
0, I did another slow lookup.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/119172
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2106 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
My assumption that log initialization happens somewhere near the stack's bottom is true for V8's sample shell but isn't true for Chromium, causing many otherwise valid stack addresses to be thrown out. The solution proposed is to save stack pointer value for the outermost JS function in ThreadLocalTop similar to c_entry_fp.
Implemented only for IA-32. Currently I'm not dealing with profiling on ARM and x86-64 anyway.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/112082
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@2086 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00