* Don't allocate breadrumbs pointer if under threshold
* Increase breadrumbs threshold
* Linear 16-byte bucketing until 128 bytes, malloc_size after
* Allow cap less than _SmallString.capacity (bridging non-ASCII)
This change decreases the amount of heap usage for moderate-length
strings (< 64 UTF-8 code units in length) and increases the amount of
spare code unit capacity available (less growth needed).
Average improvements for moderate-length strings:
* 64-bit: on average, 8 bytes saved and 4 bytes of extra capacity
* 32-bit: on average, 4 bytes saved and 6 bytes of extra capacity
Additionally, on 32-bit, large-length strings also gain an average of
6 bytes of extra spare capacity.
Details:
On 64-bit, half of moderate-length allocations will save 16 bytes
while the other half get an extra 8 bytes of spare capacity.
On 32-bit, a quarter of moderate-length allocations will save 16
bytes, and the rest get an extra 4 bytes of spare
capacity. Additionally, 32-bit string's storage class now claims its
full allocation, which is its birthright. Prior to this change, we'd
have on average 1.5 bytes of spare capacity, and now we have 7.5 bytes
of spare capacity.
Breadcrumbs threshold is increased from the super-conservative 32 to
the pretty-conservative 64. Some speed improvements are incorporated
in this change, but more are in flight. Even without those eventual
improvements, this is a worthwhile change (ASCII is still fast-pathed
and irrelevant to breadcrumbing).
For a complex real-world workload, this amounts to around a 5%
improvement to transient heap usage due to all strings and a 4%
improvement to peak heap usage due to all strings. For moderate-length
strings specifically, this gives around 11% improvement to both.
Fixes a general category (pun intended) of scalar-alignment bugs
surrounding exchanging non-scalar-aligned indices between views and
for slicing.
SE-0180 unifies the Index type of String and all its views and allows
non-scalar-aligned indices to be used across views. In order to
guarantee behavior, we often have to check and perform scalar
alignment. To speed up these checks, we allocate a bit denoting
known-to-be-aligned, so that the alignment check can skip the
load. The below shows what views need to check for alignment before
they can operate, and whether the indices they produce are aligned.
┌───────────────╥────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
│ View ║ Requires Alignment │ Produces Aligned Indices │
╞═══════════════╬════════════════════╪══════════════════════════╡
│ Native UTF8 ║ no │ no │
├───────────────╫────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Native UTF16 ║ yes │ no │
╞═══════════════╬════════════════════╪══════════════════════════╡
│ Foreign UTF8 ║ yes │ no │
├───────────────╫────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Foreign UTF16 ║ no │ no │
╞═══════════════╬════════════════════╪══════════════════════════╡
│ UnicodeScalar ║ yes │ yes │
├───────────────╫────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Character ║ yes │ yes │
└───────────────╨────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
The "requires alignment" applies to any operation taking a
String.Index that's not defined entirely in terms of other operations
taking a String.Index. These include:
* index(after:)
* index(before:)
* subscript
* distance(from:to:) (since `to` is compared against directly)
* UTF16View._nativeGetOffset(for:)