Review Request: Enforce parse-jobs to be processed in order of their priorities

Milian Wolff mail at milianw.de
Sat Feb 25 14:37:09 UTC 2012


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some small changes required, otherwise I'm OK with this.


language/backgroundparser/parsejob.h
<http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/104019/#comment8818>

    this is missing an IgnoresSequentialProcessing flag or similar with value 0 that is then used as the default



language/backgroundparser/parsejob.h
<http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/104019/#comment8817>

    this must be moved to ParseJobPrivate



language/backgroundparser/parsejob.cpp
<http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/104019/#comment8819>

    see above, make the value another enum entry and move the value to the dptr


- Milian Wolff


On Feb. 22, 2012, 10:54 a.m., Sven Brauch wrote:
> 
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> This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit:
> http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/104019/
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> (Updated Feb. 22, 2012, 10:54 a.m.)
> 
> 
> Review request for KDevelop, Milian Wolff and David Nolden.
> 
> 
> Description
> -------
> 
> As recently discussed on the mailing list, it is currently unnecessarily difficult to handle the following scenario:
> File A does something like "import B"; you want A to be parsed with the top-context for B available.
> Various language plugins have various solutions for this problem, but none of them were considered optimal by their creators (as far as I understood).
> 
> This patch aims to adress that problem. It changes the parsejob creation algorithm by enforcing it to wait with creating a job with a worse priority as long as jobs with a better priority are still running. Example: Three documents A, B and C are scheduled for parsing, A and B with priority 0 and C with priority -1. Assuming two parse jobs are available, the old function would create two parsejobs for C and A or B (let's say A), then wait for one of them to finish, then create a third job for B. The new function will create a parsejob for C and wait until that one is finished, and then create two jobs for A and B (still simultaneously, because they have the same priority). In other words: It's guaranteed that all parse jobs running at any specific time have the same priority. (*)
> 
> Why is that useful? Because parsejob priorities can be used to adress the above problem now: Let priority(x) be the priority of the parse-job for document x. You can then parse A, and as soon as you encounter the "import B", you can schedule B with priority(A)-1 and schedule A (again) with priority(A). That's now guaranteed to first parse B and then re-parse A with the top-context for B being available.
> Oh, this patch also adds a function to get a parseJobs ownPriority(), that wasn't available before.
> 
> Please tell me what you think.
> 
> Greetings,
> Sven
> ________
> (*) I'm aware of the fact that this will decrease performance by a little bit. However, I'm pretty sure it's not relevant. If the general concept of this is accepted, I'll test it.
> 
> 
> Diffs
> -----
> 
>   language/backgroundparser/backgroundparser.h 954ee17 
>   language/backgroundparser/backgroundparser.cpp 7210254 
>   language/backgroundparser/parsejob.h 135319c 
>   language/backgroundparser/parsejob.cpp 552ef68 
> 
> Diff: http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/104019/diff/
> 
> 
> Testing
> -------
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Sven Brauch
> 
>

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