C++ has std::vector and Java has ArrayList, and many other languages have their own form of dynamically allocated array. When a dynamic array runs out of space, it gets reallocated into a larger area and the old values are copied into the new array. A question central to the performance of such an array is how fast the array grows in size. If you always only grow large enough to fit the current push, you'll end up reallocating every time. So it makes sense to double the array size, or multiply it by say 1.5x.
Is there an ideal growth factor? 2x? 1.5x? By ideal I mean mathematically justified, best balancing performance and wasted memory. I realize that theoretically, given that your application could have any potential distribution of pushes that this is somewhat application dependent. But I'm curious to know if there's a value that's "usually" best, or is considered best within some rigorous constraint.
I've heard there's a paper on this somewhere, but I've been unable to find it.
I remember reading many years ago why 1.5 is preferred over two, at least as applied to C++ (this probably doesn't apply to managed languages, where the runtime system can relocate objects at will).
The reasoning is this:
Say you start with a 16-byte allocation.
When you need more, you allocate 32 bytes, then free up 16 bytes. This leaves a 16-byte hole in memory.
When you need more, you allocate 64 bytes, freeing up the 32 bytes. This leaves a 48-byte hole (if the 16 and 32 were adjacent).
When you need more, you allocate 128 bytes, freeing up the 64 bytes. This leaves a 112-byte hole (assuming all previous allocations are adjacent).
And so and and so forth.
The idea is that, with a 2x expansion, there is no point in time that the resulting hole is ever going to be large enough to reuse for the next allocation. Using a 1.5x allocation, we have this instead:
Start with 16 bytes.
When you need more, allocate 24 bytes, then free up the 16, leaving a 16-byte hole.
When you need more, allocate 36 bytes, then free up the 24, leaving a 40-byte hole.
When you need more, allocate 54 bytes, then free up the 36, leaving a 76-byte hole.
When you need more, allocate 81 bytes, then free up the 54, leaving a 130-byte hole.
When you need more, use 122 bytes (rounding up) from the 130-byte hole.
In the limit as n → ∞, it would be the golden ratio: ϕ = 1.618...
For finite n, you want something close, like 1.5.
The reason is that you want to be able to reuse older memory blocks, to take advantage of caching and avoid constantly making the OS give you more memory pages. The equation you'd solve to ensure that a subsequent allocation can re-use all prior blocks reduces to xn − 1 − 1 = xn + 1 − xn, whose solution approaches x = ϕ for large n. In practice n is finite and you'll want to be able to reusing the last few blocks every few allocations, and so 1.5 is great for ensuring that.
(See the link for a more detailed explanation.)
It will entirely depend on the use case. Do you care more about the time wasted copying data around (and reallocating arrays) or the extra memory? How long is the array going to last? If it's not going to be around for long, using a bigger buffer may well be a good idea - the penalty is short-lived. If it's going to hang around (e.g. in Java, going into older and older generations) that's obviously more of a penalty.
There's no such thing as an "ideal growth factor." It's not just theoretically application dependent, it's definitely application dependent.
2 is a pretty common growth factor - I'm pretty sure that's what ArrayList and List<T> in .NET uses. ArrayList<T> in Java uses 1.5.
EDIT: As Erich points out, Dictionary<,> in .NET uses "double the size then increase to the next prime number" so that hash values can be distributed reasonably between buckets. (I'm sure I've recently seen documentation suggesting that primes aren't actually that great for distributing hash buckets, but that's an argument for another answer.)
One approach when answering questions like this is to just "cheat" and look at what popular libraries do, under the assumption that a widely used library is, at the very least, not doing something horrible.
So just checking very quickly, Ruby (1.9.1-p129) appears to use 1.5x when appending to an array, and Python (2.6.2) uses 1.125x plus a constant (in Objects/listobject.c):
/* This over-allocates proportional to the list size, making room
* for additional growth. The over-allocation is mild, but is
* enough to give linear-time amortized behavior over a long
* sequence of appends() in the presence of a poorly-performing
* system realloc().
* The growth pattern is: 0, 4, 8, 16, 25, 35, 46, 58, 72, 88, ...
*/
new_allocated = (newsize >> 3) + (newsize < 9 ? 3 : 6);
/* check for integer overflow */
if (new_allocated > PY_SIZE_MAX - newsize) {
PyErr_NoMemory();
return -1;
} else {
new_allocated += newsize;
}
newsize above is the number of elements in the array. Note well that newsize is added to new_allocated, so the expression with the bitshifts and ternary operator is really just calculating the over-allocation.
Let's say you grow the array size by x. So assume you start with size T. The next time you grow the array its size will be T*x. Then it will be T*x^2 and so on.
If your goal is to be able to reuse the memory that has been created before, then you want to make sure the new memory you allocate is less than the sum of previous memory you deallocated. Therefore, we have this inequality:
T*x^n <= T + T*x + T*x^2 + ... + T*x^(n-2)
We can remove T from both sides. So we get this:
x^n <= 1 + x + x^2 + ... + x^(n-2)
Informally, what we say is that at nth allocation, we want our all previously deallocated memory to be greater than or equal to the memory need at the nth allocation so that we can reuse the previously deallocated memory.
For instance, if we want to be able to do this at the 3rd step (i.e., n=3), then we have
x^3 <= 1 + x
This equation is true for all x such that 0 < x <= 1.3 (roughly)
See what x we get for different n's below:
n maximum-x (roughly)
3 1.3
4 1.4
5 1.53
6 1.57
7 1.59
22 1.61
Note that the growing factor has to be less than 2 since x^n > x^(n-2) + ... + x^2 + x + 1 for all x>=2.
Another two cents
Most computers have virtual memory! In the physical memory you can have random pages everywhere which are displayed as a single contiguous space in your program's virtual memory. The resolving of the indirection is done by the hardware. Virtual memory exhaustion was a problem on 32 bit systems, but it is really not a problem anymore. So filling the hole is not a concern anymore (except special environments). Since Windows 7 even Microsoft supports 64 bit without extra effort. # 2011
O(1) is reached with any r > 1 factor. Same mathematical proof works not only for 2 as parameter.
r = 1.5 can be calculated with old*3/2 so there is no need for floating point operations. (I say /2 because compilers will replace it with bit shifting in the generated assembly code if they see fit.)
MSVC went for r = 1.5, so there is at least one major compiler that does not use 2 as ratio.
As mentioned by someone 2 feels better than 8. And also 2 feels better than 1.1.
My feeling is that 1.5 is a good default. Other than that it depends on the specific case.
The top-voted and the accepted answer are both good, but neither answer the part of the question asking for a "mathematically justified" "ideal growth rate", "best balancing performance and wasted memory". (The second-top-voted answer does try to answer this part of the question, but its reasoning is confused.)
The question perfectly identifies the 2 considerations that have to be balanced, performance and wasted memory. If you choose a growth rate too low, performance suffers because you'll run out of extra space too quickly and have to reallocate too frequently. If you choose a growth rate too high, like 2x, you'll waste memory because you'll never be able to reuse old memory blocks.
In particular, if you do the math1 you'll find that the upper limit on the growth rate is the golden ratio ϕ = 1.618… . Growth rate larger than ϕ (like 2x) mean that you'll never be able to reuse old memory blocks. Growth rates only slightly less than ϕ mean you won't be able to reuse old memory blocks until after many many reallocations, during which time you'll be wasting memory. So you want to be as far below ϕ as you can get without sacrificing too much performance.
Therefore I'd suggest these candidates for "mathematically justified" "ideal growth rate", "best balancing performance and wasted memory":
≈1.466x (the solution to x4=1+x+x2) allows memory reuse after just 3 reallocations, one sooner than 1.5x allows, while reallocating only slightly more frequently
≈1.534x (the solution to x5=1+x+x2+x3) allows memory reuse after 4 reallocations, same as 1.5x, while reallocating slightly less frequently for improved performance
≈1.570x (the solution to x6=1+x+x2+x3+x4) only allows memory reuse after 5 reallocations, but will reallocate even less infrequently for even further improved performance (barely)
Clearly there's some diminishing returns there, so I think the global optimum is probably among those. Also, note that 1.5x is a great approximation to whatever the global optimum actually is, and has the advantage being extremely simple.
1 Credits to #user541686 for this excellent source.
It really depends. Some people analyze common usage cases to find the optimal number.
I've seen 1.5x 2.0x phi x, and power of 2 used before.
If you have a distribution over array lengths, and you have a utility function that says how much you like wasting space vs. wasting time, then you can definitely choose an optimal resizing (and initial sizing) strategy.
The reason the simple constant multiple is used, is obviously so that each append has amortized constant time. But that doesn't mean you can't use a different (larger) ratio for small sizes.
In Scala, you can override loadFactor for the standard library hash tables with a function that looks at the current size. Oddly, the resizable arrays just double, which is what most people do in practice.
I don't know of any doubling (or 1.5*ing) arrays that actually catch out of memory errors and grow less in that case. It seems that if you had a huge single array, you'd want to do that.
I'd further add that if you're keeping the resizable arrays around long enough, and you favor space over time, it might make sense to dramatically overallocate (for most cases) initially and then reallocate to exactly the right size when you're done.
I recently was fascinated by the experimental data I've got on the wasted memory aspect of things. The chart below is showing the "overhead factor" calculated as the amount of overhead space divided by the useful space, the x-axis shows a growth factor. I'm yet to find a good explanation/model of what it reveals.
Simulation snippet: https://gist.github.com/gubenkoved/7cd3f0cb36da56c219ff049e4518a4bd.
Neither shape nor the absolute values that simulation reveals are something I've expected.
Higher-resolution chart showing dependency on the max useful data size is here: https://i.stack.imgur.com/Ld2yJ.png.
UPDATE. After pondering this more, I've finally come up with the correct model to explain the simulation data, and hopefully, it matches experimental data nicely. The formula is quite easy to infer simply by looking at the size of the array that we would need to have for a given amount of elements we need to contain.
Referenced earlier GitHub gist was updated to include calculations using scipy.integrate for numerical integration that allows creating the plot below which verifies the experimental data pretty nicely.
UPDATE 2. One should however keep in mind that what we model/emulate there mostly has to do with the Virtual Memory, meaning the over-allocation overheads can be left entirely on the Virtual Memory territory as physical memory footprint is only incurred when we first access a page of Virtual Memory, so it's possible to malloc a big chunk of memory, but until we first access the pages all we do is reserving virtual address space. I've updated the GitHub gist with CPP program that has a very basic dynamic array implementation that allows changing the growth factor and the Python snippet that runs it multiple times to gather the "real" data. Please see the final graph below.
The conclusion there could be that for x64 environments where virtual address space is not a limiting factor there could be really little to no difference in terms of the Physical Memory footprint between different growth factors. Additionally, as far as Virtual Memory is concerned the model above seems to make pretty good predictions!
Simulation snippet was built with g++.exe simulator.cpp -o simulator.exe on Windows 10 (build 19043), g++ version is below.
g++.exe (x86_64-posix-seh-rev0, Built by MinGW-W64 project) 8.1.0
PS. Note that the end result is implementation-specific. Depending on implementation details dynamic array might or might not access the memory outside the "useful" boundaries. Some implementations would use memset to zero-initialize POD elements for whole capacity -- this will cause virtual memory page translated into physical. However, std::vector implementation on a referenced above compiler does not seem to do that and so behaves as per mock dynamic array in the snippet -- meaning overhead is incurred on the Virtual Memory side, and negligible on the Physical Memory.
I agree with Jon Skeet, even my theorycrafter friend insists that this can be proven to be O(1) when setting the factor to 2x.
The ratio between cpu time and memory is different on each machine, and so the factor will vary just as much. If you have a machine with gigabytes of ram, and a slow CPU, copying the elements to a new array is a lot more expensive than on a fast machine, which might in turn have less memory. It's a question that can be answered in theory, for a uniform computer, which in real scenarios doesnt help you at all.
I know it is an old question, but there are several things that everyone seems to be missing.
First, this is multiplication by 2: size << 1. This is multiplication by anything between 1 and 2: int(float(size) * x), where x is the number, the * is floating point math, and the processor has to run additional instructions for casting between float and int. In other words, at the machine level, doubling takes a single, very fast instruction to find the new size. Multiplying by something between 1 and 2 requires at least one instruction to cast size to a float, one instruction to multiply (which is float multiplication, so it probably takes at least twice as many cycles, if not 4 or even 8 times as many), and one instruction to cast back to int, and that assumes that your platform can perform float math on the general purpose registers, instead of requiring the use of special registers. In short, you should expect the math for each allocation to take at least 10 times as long as a simple left shift. If you are copying a lot of data during the reallocation though, this might not make much of a difference.
Second, and probably the big kicker: Everyone seems to assume that the memory that is being freed is both contiguous with itself, as well as contiguous with the newly allocated memory. Unless you are pre-allocating all of the memory yourself and then using it as a pool, this is almost certainly not the case. The OS might occasionally end up doing this, but most of the time, there is going to be enough free space fragmentation that any half decent memory management system will be able to find a small hole where your memory will just fit. Once you get to really bit chunks, you are more likely to end up with contiguous pieces, but by then, your allocations are big enough that you are not doing them frequently enough for it to matter anymore. In short, it is fun to imagine that using some ideal number will allow the most efficient use of free memory space, but in reality, it is not going to happen unless your program is running on bare metal (as in, there is no OS underneath it making all of the decisions).
My answer to the question? Nope, there is no ideal number. It is so application specific that no one really even tries. If your goal is ideal memory usage, you are pretty much out of luck. For performance, less frequent allocations are better, but if we went just with that, we could multiply by 4 or even 8! Of course, when Firefox jumps from using 1GB to 8GB in one shot, people are going to complain, so that does not even make sense. Here are some rules of thumb I would go by though:
If you cannot optimize memory usage, at least don't waste processor cycles. Multiplying by 2 is at least an order of magnitude faster than doing floating point math. It might not make a huge difference, but it will make some difference at least (especially early on, during the more frequent and smaller allocations).
Don't overthink it. If you just spent 4 hours trying to figure out how to do something that has already been done, you just wasted your time. Totally honestly, if there was a better option than *2, it would have been done in the C++ vector class (and many other places) decades ago.
Lastly, if you really want to optimize, don't sweat the small stuff. Now days, no one cares about 4KB of memory being wasted, unless they are working on embedded systems. When you get to 1GB of objects that are between 1MB and 10MB each, doubling is probably way too much (I mean, that is between 100 and 1,000 objects). If you can estimate expected expansion rate, you can level it out to a linear growth rate at a certain point. If you expect around 10 objects per minute, then growing at 5 to 10 object sizes per step (once every 30 seconds to a minute) is probably fine.
What it all comes down to is, don't over think it, optimize what you can, and customize to your application (and platform) if you must.
I'm working on a largish project, and we are having some memory issues now. Vectors have been used for all arrays, and a quick search there seems to be about 2000 member vectors.
Going through the code it seems nobody has ever used a reserve or a swap (were not on C++11 yet for this project).
Are there any tools or techniques I can do to find out how much memory is being lost in these vectors?
use valgrind for debugging memory issues.
http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/ms-manual.html
One fast but dirty trick to see the effect of capacity on memory would be to modify
std::vector (or typedef std::vector to your custom vector type).
Idea is to modify vector to ensure that this custom new vector increases capacity exactly by what is needed instead of doubling it (yes, it will be super slow), and see how memory usage of the application changes when you run it with this custom vector.
While not useful in actually optimizing the code, it at least quickly gives you an idea of how much you can gain by optimizing vectors.
Just add some periodic logging lines that print the vector size, capacity and
sizeof(v) + sizeof(element_type) * v.capacity();
for each of your vectors v (this last will be the exact size of the vector in memory). You could register all your vectors somewhere central to keep this tidy.
Then you can do some analysis by searching through your logfiles - to see which ones are using significant amounts of memory and how the usage varies over time. If it is only peak usage that is high, then you may be able to 'resize' your vectors to get rid of the spare capacity.
Written a program that calculates the integral of a simple function. When testing it I found that if I used an array of size greater than 10 million elements it produced the wrong answer. I found that the error seemed to be occurring when once the array had been manipulated in a CUDA kernel. 10 millions elements and below worked fine and produced the correct result.
Is there a size limit on the amount of elements that can be transferred across to the GPU or calculated upon the GPU?
P.S. using C style arrays containing floats.
There are many different kinds of memory that you can use with CUDA. In particular, you have
Linear Memory (cuMemAlloc)
Pinned Memory (cuMemHostAlloc)
Zero-Copy Memory (cuMemAllocHost)
Pitch Allocation (cuMemAllocPitch)
Textures Bound to Linear Memory
Textures Bound to CUDA Arrays
Textures Bound to Pitch Memory
...and cube maps and surfaces, which I will not list here.
Each kind of memory is associated with its own hardware resource limits, many of which you can find by using cuDeviceGetAttribute. The function cuMemGetInfo returns the amount of free and total memory on the device, but because of alignment requirements, allocating 1,000,000 floats may result in more than 1,000,000 * sizeof(float) bytes being consumed. The maximum number of blocks that you can schedule at once is also a limitation: if you exceed it, the kernel will fail to launch (you can easily find this number using cuDeviceGetAttribute). You can find out the alignment requirements for different amounts of memory using the CUDA Driver API, but for a simple program, you can make a reasonable guess and check the value of allocation function to determine whether the allocation was successful.
There is no restriction on the amount of bytes that you can transfer; using asynchronous functions, you can overlap kernel execution with memory copying (providing that your card supports this). Exceeding the maximum number of blocks you can schedule, or consuming the available memory on your device means that you will have to split up your task so that you can use multiple kernels to handle it.
For compute capability>=3.0 the max grid dimensions are 2147483647x65535x65535,
so for a that should cover any 1-D array of sizes up to 2147483647x1024 = 2.1990233e+12.
1 billion element arrays are definitely fine.
1,000,000,000/1024=976562.5, and round up to 976563 blocks. Just make sure that if threadIdx.x+blockIdx.x*blockDim.x>= number of elements you return from kernel without processing.