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gotomic

Non blocking data structures for Go.

Algorithms

The List type is implemented using A Pragmatic Implementation of Non-Blocking Linked-Lists by Timothy L. Harris.

The Hash type is implemented using Split-Ordered Lists: Lock-Free Extensible Hash Tables by Ori Shalev and Nir Shavit with the List type used as backend.

The Transaction type is implemented using OSTM from Concurrent Programming Without Locks by Keir Fraser and Tim Harris with a few tweaks described in https://github.com/zond/gotomic/blob/master/stm.go.

The Treap type uses Transaction to be non blocking and thread safe, and is based (like all other treaps, I guess) on Randomized Search Trees by Cecilia Aragon and Raimund Seidel, but mostly I just used https://github.com/stathat/treap/blob/master/treap.go for reference.

Performance

On my laptop I created benchmarks for a) regular Go map types, b) Go map types protected by sync.RWMutex, c) the gotomic.Hash, d) the gotomic.Treap type and e) the github.com/stathat/treap.Tree type.

The benchmarks for a) and b) can be found at https://github.com/zond/tools/blob/master/tools_test.go#L83, the benchmark for c) at https://github.com/zond/gotomic/blob/master/hash_test.go#L116 and the benchmark for d) and e) at https://github.com/zond/gotomic/blob/master/hash_test.go#L262.

The TL;DR of it all is that the benchmark sets runtime.GOMAXPROCS to be runtime.NumCPU(), and starts that number of goroutines that just mutates and reads the tested mapping.

Last time I ran these tests I got the following results:

a)

BenchmarkNativeMap	 5000000	       567 ns/op

b)

BenchmarkMyMapConc	  200000	     10694 ns/op
BenchmarkMyMap	 1000000	      1427 ns/op

c)

BenchmarkHash      500000	      5146 ns/op
BenchmarkHashConc	  500000	     10599 ns/op

d)

BenchmarkTreap	   50000	     71250 ns/op
BenchmarkTreapConc	   10000	    110843 ns/op

e)

BenchmarkStatHatTreap	 1000000	      4373 ns/op

Also, there are some third party benchmarks available at https://github.com/zond/gotomic/wiki/Benchmarks.

Conclusion: As expected a) is by far the fastest mapping, and it seems that the naive RWMutex wrapped native map b) is much faster at single thread operation, and on a weak laptop about as efficient in multi thread operation, compared to c).

However, on more multicored systems (and also a few smaller ones, strangely enough) c) is more efficient than b).

When it comes to the treap class, I am afraid my implementation of STM is really REALLY inefficient. Maybe because I tried to be clever, or because I just botched it someplace. It seems to work, but I reckon that an RWMutex-wrapped stathat treap would be preferable in most circumstances.

Usage

See https://github.com/zond/gotomic/blob/master/examples/example.go or https://github.com/zond/gotomic/blob/master/examples/profile.go

Also, see the tests.

Documentation

http://go.pkgdoc.org/github.com/zond/gotomic

Bugs

Hash and List have no known bugs and seem to work well.

The Transaction, Handle and Treap types are alpha. They seem to work, but are too slow and untrustworthy :/

I have not tried it on more than my personal laptop however, so if you want to try and force it to misbehave on a heftier machine than a 4 cpu MacBook Air please do!

Improvements

It would be nice to have a Hash#DeleteIfPresent that atomically deletes matching key/value pairs, but since the implementation is slightly harder than trivial and I see no immediate use case I have been too lazy. Tell me if you need it and I might feel motivated :)