X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/4bce373585d517ccd8c5ead9b4fe38119f16c310..6790e1804b66fb6623406ff33050db12412337f7:/doc/users/mathdesc.mdwn?ds=inline
diff --git a/doc/users/mathdesc.mdwn b/doc/users/mathdesc.mdwn
index 9c558e357..acb2a0756 100644
--- a/doc/users/mathdesc.mdwn
+++ b/doc/users/mathdesc.mdwn
@@ -1 +1,190 @@
+mathdesc-at-scourge.biz
.
+## PROFILING slow render : Case buggy [[plugins/filecheck]] ?
+
+Saving an article from ikiwiki editor is long ?
+ikiwiki --setup wiki.setup --rebuild is long ?
+
+Of course it depends the size of the wiki but if it's tiny and still take
+more that two minutes, it's boring. But if it takes a **dozen of minutes**, it's plain buggy.
+
+Actually one can with a verbose rebuild narrow down which page "lags" :
+
+
+ private/admin.mdmn
+ tag/admin
+ tag/private
+
+
+It's also possible to measure render time on one of these pages like this:
+
+
+time ikiwiki --setup wiki.setup --render private/admin.mdwn
+
+
+Well indeed for such a simple page, something fishy is going on.
+
+Still for simple yet superficial but enough profiling test, it requires
+a sub-level perl profiler.
+
+## Using SmallProf
+
+[[tips/optimising_ikiwiki/#index10h2]] proposed [[!cpan Devel::NYTProf]].
+
+Try it hard to make it spits realistic numbers or even a trend to point
+the bottleneck in the code. Bref -- nothing valuable nor coherent, it's way to sophisticated to be handy
+in my situation (virtual machine, SMP system, long runs, clock drifts, etc...)
+
+[[!cpan Devel::SmallProf]] is simple and just works(c)
+
+
+export PERL5OPT=-d:SmallProf +time ikiwiki --setup wiki.setup --rebuild +sort -k 2nr,2 -k 3nr,3 smallprof.out | head -n 6 ++ + +### Results : 6 top slowpits + +Total rebuild time:
+[num] [walltime] [cputime] [line]: [code] +3055 114.17165 15.34000 149: $mimetype=<$file_h>; +1626527 69.39272 101.4700 93: read($fh, $line, $$ref[1]); # read max +3055 50.62106 34.78000 148: open(my $file_h, "-|", "file", "-bi", +1626527 14.86525 48.50000 92: seek($fh, $$ref[0], SEEK_SET); # seek +1626527 13.95613 44.78000 102: return undef unless $line =~ $$ref[3]; # +3055 5.75528 5.81000 76: for my $type (map @$_, @rules) { ++ +legend : +*num* is the number of times that the line was executed, *time* is the amount of "wall time" (time according the the clock on the wall vs. cpu time) +spent executing it, *ctime* is the amount of cpu time expended on it and *line* and *code* are the line number and the actual text of the executed line +(read from the file). + + +3 topmost issues are located in this file : + +/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.12.3/IkiWiki/Plugin/filecheck.pm +
+sub match_mimetype ($$;@) { + my $page=shift; + my $wanted=shift; + + my %params=@_; + my $file=exists $params{file} ? $params{file} : IkiWiki::srcfile($IkiWiki::pagesources{$page}); + if (! defined $file) { + return IkiWiki::ErrorReason->new("file does not exist"); + } + + # Get the mime type. + # + # First, try File::Mimeinfo. This is fast, but doesn't recognise + # all files. + eval q{use File::MimeInfo::Magic}; + my $mimeinfo_ok=! $@; + my $mimetype; + if ($mimeinfo_ok) { + my $mimetype=File::MimeInfo::Magic::magic($file); + } + + # Fall back to using file, which has a more complete + # magic database. + if (! defined $mimetype) { + open(my $file_h, "-|", "file", "-bi", $file); + $mimetype=<$file_h>; + chomp $mimetype; + close $file_h; + } + if (! defined $mimetype || $mimetype !~s /;.*//) { + # Fall back to default value. + $mimetype=File::MimeInfo::Magic::default($file) + if $mimeinfo_ok; + if (! defined $mimetype) { + $mimetype="unknown"; + } + } + + my $regexp=IkiWiki::glob2re($wanted); + if ($mimetype!~$regexp) { + return IkiWiki::FailReason->new("file MIME type is $mimetype, not $wanted"); + } + else { + return IkiWiki::SuccessReason->new("file MIME type is $mimetype"); + } +} ++ +Next 3 in this file : + +/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.12.3/File/MimeInfo/Magic.pm +
+sub _check_rule { + my ($ref, $fh, $lev) = @_; + my $line; + + # Read + if (ref $fh eq 'GLOB') { + seek($fh, $$ref[0], SEEK_SET); # seek offset + read($fh, $line, $$ref[1]); # read max length + } + else { # allowing for IO::Something + $fh->seek($$ref[0], SEEK_SET); # seek offset + $fh->read($line, $$ref[1]); # read max length + } + + # Match regex + $line = unpack 'b*', $line if $$ref[2]; # unpack to bits if using mask + return undef unless $line =~ $$ref[3]; # match regex + print STDERR '>', '>'x$lev, ' Value "', _escape_bytes($2), + '" at offset ', $$ref[1]+length($1), + " matches at $$ref[4]\n" + if $DEBUG; + return 1 unless $#$ref > 4; + + # Check nested rules and recurs + for (5..$#$ref) { + return 1 if _check_rule($$ref[$_], $fh, $lev+1); + } + print STDERR "> Failed nested rules\n" if $DEBUG && ! $lev; + return 0; +} ++ +*"It seems it's a unique cause, that snails it all"* + +## Conclusion + +This describes an issue in the attachment filechecker with mime type detection. +The smallprof out file reveals it always fall back to using file which is very time-consuming. + +So what the hell did I put as complex allowed file attachment ruining File::Mimeinfo fast yet sparse recon ? +Well, it was set in the config this way: + +allowed_attachments => 'mimetype(image/*) or maxsize(5000kb) or mimetype(text/plain) or mimetype(text/css) or mimetype(video/*)' + +Ok... maybe the wildcards induce ....hum whatever... let's try something , the simplest thing : + +allowed_attachments => 'mimetype(text/plain) or mimetype(text/css)' + +Same slowness : yek, File::Mimeinfo recons nothing ... not even simplest files. + +Disabling it is a temporary cure obviously but it only took **30 seconds** . + +disable_plugins => [qw{filecheck}] + +I tried also to upgrade [[!cpan File::MimeInfo]] to current 0.16, did not helped either. :/ + +I opened a bug [[bugs/Slow_Filecheck_attachments___34__snails_it_all__34__]] +