File r36/cslbase/fastgets.doc artifact a6497098c0 part of check-in ab67b20f90


                  FAST PROPERTY ACCESS IN CSL/CCL
                  ===============================

The "fast-get" facility in CSL arranges that for a number of user-specified
property names (used with both GET and FLAGP) the access has constant cost.
Normally access to a property involves searching a property list, and if one
symbol has many properties this can be tedious - with a worst case in the
fairly common circumstance that the property is not found.

To speed up CSL I allocate 6 bits in a symbol header that influence how that
symbol is treated when used as a property name.  One code is reserved to
mean "use a normal property list", leaving 63 codes for fast access. The
first of these is reserved for a property called 'NONCOM because the built-in
ORDERP function wants to use this for compatibility with REDUCE.

A tag must be marked as "fast" before any properties with that indicated are
set up.  If this constraint is not adhered to then properties can end up
stored in inconsistent or redundant forms.  The protocol is to select an
integer in the range 0 to 63 for each tag to be handled specially, and then
to make a call such as

    (symbol-make-fastget 'noncom           0)
    (symbol-make-fastget 'my_property_name 1)

    (flag '(a b c) 'noncom)
    (put 'x 'my_property_name 'y)
 or (setf (get 'x 'my_property_name) 'y)

The fast-get status of a symbol can be inspected using

    (symbol-fast-get 'x nil)

or reset to have no special treatment (please do not do this!)

    (symbol-fast-get 'x -1)

When a symbol is given a "fast" property a vector of length 63 is created
and a word in the symbol's header is made to point to it. The vector contains
either property values ir a marker that indicates that no property is
present.  A call (symbol-fastgets 'x) can retrieve the vector and can be
useful while debugging, maybe.

If you inspect the property list of an object (using the PLIST function) then
any fast properties are extracted from the vector and built onto the front
of the property list as returned. Of course this means that altering the
property list using RPLACx may not be useful!

The function GET retrieves a property. In Common Lisp mode the three-argument
version (GET a b c) allows c to be returned as a default value if the
property sought is not present. The two-argument version can not distinguish
between a property whose value is NIL and not having a property present
at all.  The function FLAGP returns T if a property is present (whatever
value is associated, including the case where the stored value is NIL). The
function FLAG just sets properties, giving them the value T in a somewhat
arbitrary way.

Clearly use of fast gets consumes memory, but because many of the extra
vectors contain many NIL elements they compress well in image files, which
therefore do not grow too badly.  To decide which properties are most
critical you can run tests using the profiled version of the bytecode
interpreter (bytes.c rather than bytes1.c), and after a run call the
function (BYTECOUNTS).   You need to adjust your build sequence so that
the file bytes.c is compiled with RECORD_GET defined, e.g. by putting
                   -DRECORD_GET
among the flags passed to your C compiler.  Note that this option will slow
things down noticeably.  The output from BYTECOUNTS indicates which property
tags were used, and how many unsuccessful searches for each tag occurred. This
latter information is collected because unsuccessful searches are the worst
case for a traditional property list search.

Note that when a property is handled "fast" it is not stored on the regular
property list (the only information about it is in the vector). Thus if the
most commonly used properties have been handled this way the average length
of property lists will shrink and so access to all other properties is
slightly speeded up too.

By editing FASTGET_SIZE in the source file "tags.h" if would be possible to
make the symbol extension vectors smaller than 63 items long, so in
cases where a much smaller set of tags is important the system can
be configured to save some memory.



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