GNU bug report logs - #38644
26.3; emacs uses 100% CPU with auto-revert-mode

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Package: emacs;

Reported by: Peter Ludemann <peter.ludemann <at> gmail.com>

Date: Tue, 17 Dec 2019 01:25:02 UTC

Severity: normal

Found in version 26.3

Fixed in version 27.1

Done: Michael Albinus <michael.albinus <at> gmx.de>

Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.

Full log


Message #26 received at 38644 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):

From: Peter Ludemann <peter.ludemann <at> gmail.com>
To: Michael Albinus <michael.albinus <at> gmx.de>
Cc: 38644 <at> debbugs.gnu.org
Subject: Re: bug#38644: 26.3; emacs uses 100% CPU with auto-revert-mode
Date: Sat, 4 Jan 2020 10:50:16 -0800
[Message part 1 (text/plain, inline)]
A few small comments/questions inline ...

On Sun, 29 Dec 2019 at 07:23, Michael Albinus <michael.albinus <at> gmx.de>
wrote:

> Peter Ludemann <peter.ludemann <at> gmail.com> writes:
>
> Hi Peter,
>
> >> In bug#33194, a patch for Emacs 27.0.50 is mentioned. Do you have a
> >> chance to run this for test?
> >
> > Emacs 27.0.50 somewhat fixes the problem with global-auto-revert-mode,
> > using the same desktop file (and same open files) that was causing
> > problems with Emacs 26.3. (Sorry I took so long to test this.)
>
> Thanks for the feedback, the fix in Emacs 27 seems to work.
>

Correction: Emacs 28.05, cloned from git://git.sv.gnu.org/emacs.git and
built using the instructions at
https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsSnapshotAndDebian#toc3


> > Emacs CPU utilization is now ~30-80% (according to top(1)) instead of
> > 100%; and responsiveness is good. Of course, it would be nicer if
> > emacs CPU utilization were less, so that I could fully utilize that
> > core (I only have 4 cores, so losing half a core is notable on large
> > tests).
>
> If I count correctly, your desktop file contains 489 buffers. Heavy load
> for global-auto-revert-mode.
>

This is the result of working on a project for several months (using
emacs-daemon). For example, 94 of those files are from Python and
SWI-Prolog standard libraries, because I needed to get implementation
details ("use the source, Luke"); and I'm using pieces from about 5
packages, whose source I also need to look at.

So, it's a little sloppy, but not unreasonable, I think.


>
> > Michael Albinus - you had a number of other questions ... do you still
> > want them (or some of them) answered?
>
> No, I don't believe so.
>
> > PS: Here's the desktop file, in case that can give some clue as to
> > what file or directory is causing problems. The "compilation"
> > processes both input from and output into /tmp/pykythe_test -- as you
> > can see, there are a couple of open files from that directory, but
> > they're not being continuously updated, only once or twice per test.
>
> auto-revert watches directories. Even if you watch only some few files
> in a directory (I count 29 buffers which are bound to "/tmp"), there
> will be lot of file notification events when other files in that
> directory are changed. Maybe it helps to set auto-revert-use-notify to
> nil for those files? You could do it via directory-local variales, as in
>

If I understand you correctly, Emacs doesn't watch individual files but
instead watches the directories that those files are in ... if a file
changes, then the directory will be changed with the file is
written/closed. Is this a correct understanding? (Presumably the reason for
this is that if files /path/to/dir/A, /path/to/dir/B, /path/to/dir/C are
open in buffers, it suffices to only watch for changes to /path/to/dir; and
if /path/to/dir/D is opened, no change to the watch list is needed.)


>
> (dir-locals-set-class-variables 'auto-revert-with-polling
>    '((nil . ((auto-revert-use-notify . nil)))))
>
> (dir-locals-set-directory-class
>    "/tmp/" 'auto-revert-with-polling)
>
> (This is untested.)
>

I haven't tested this because emacs 28.05 gives me adequate performance and
I can live with turning global-auto-revert on/off when I do a big test
(turning it off makes the test run a bit faster because there's another 0.5
CPU available for the test).

Thanks again!

- peter


> > best,
> > - peter
>
> Best regards, Michael.
>
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