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src: avoid allocation in the Size method for BASE64URL and BASE64 #53550
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For people who care about history, Size has been expensive since the very beginning (we trace it back to the initial commit by @isaacs in 2013): case BASE64: {
String::AsciiValue value(str);
data_size = base64_decoded_size(*value, value.length());
break;
} |
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lgtm
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for the record, Size() wasn't just doing an unnecessary allocation, it was also returning the wrong size, causing us to allocate a much larger buffer than necessary. str->Length() % 4 <= 1 ? str->Length() / 4 * 3
: str->Length() / 4 * 3 + (str->Length() % 4) - 1) which is only an upper bound, as it doesn't look at the actual data, and so it assumes the worst case (all characters are data characters, i.e. no padding or whitespace). the math looks correct to me. bear in mind that while Size() is allowed to return an upper bound, it is expected to return an exact prediction most of the time. if this is not the case, we do another allocation + memcpy to a new backing store with the actual size. for base64url the prediction is usually correct as it rarely has padding, but for base64 it will miss 2/3 of the time (or always, if the input contains whitespace). |
As far as I can tell, Node never returned the exact size. Doing so requires scanning the entire input, checking for characters to discard. |
wasn't |
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PR is currently blocked from landing due to unreliable CI |
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@jasnell Indeed. |
@lemire can you rebase and force-push if you don't mind? |
@anonrig I synced. |
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@anonrig Looks like it is turning green... what did you do???? ❤️ |
@anonrig It still won't complete the tests though. |
@anonrig Stuck. |
It seems that all macOS machines are down/offline at the moment. nodejs/build#3887 |
@anonrig This will never go through, will it? |
This needs a rebase. |
This PR avoids calling simdutf on base64 encodings. It is not obsolete! |
@anonrig It is possible I missed something, if so, let me know. |
For large base64 strings, this PR multiplies the performance of
Buffer.from(..., "base64");
by making the Size function simpler and non-allocating.This will reduce the gap with Bun from being over 3x slower to being about only 40% slower for large inputs. For modest inputs, Node.js is still about 2x slower than Bun. Note that both Bun and Node.js use the same underlying library (simdutf) for base64 decoding so any difference is entirely due to the runtime (not to the base64 decoding per se).
Benchmark (from bun):
Node.js 22:
Node.js with this PR:
Bun canary (upcoming release)
To get the Bun results, you need the canary which you may get with
bun upgrade --canary
.