GNU bug report logs -
#73046
29.4; Emacs 100% CPU usage for several seconds when opening dired buffer over TRAMP
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Reported by: "Suhail Singh" <suhailsingh247 <at> gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 5 Sep 2024 14:56:01 UTC
Severity: normal
Found in version 29.4
Fixed in version 31.1
Done: Michael Albinus <michael.albinus <at> gmx.de>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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Message #11 received at 73046 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org> writes:
>> From: "Suhail Singh" <suhailsingh247 <at> gmail.com>
>> Date: Thu, 05 Sep 2024 10:24:54 -0400
>>
>>
>> I observe 100% CPU usage for several seconds when invoking dired for a
>> directory on one of the remote machines I connect to. This doesn't seem
>> to happen for another host. The connection to the affected host is
>> slower, and on that host the issue is worse when the directory has
>> several symlinks.
>>
>> To reproduce via =emacs -Q=:
>> - Invoke `find-file' and connect to problematic host over ssh.
>> - Once connection is established, open dired pointing to a directory on
>> the affected host.
>> - Observe bug: it takes _several_ seconds for the dired buffer to show.
>> During that time, Emacs CPU usage is 100%.
>> - Once dired buffer is open, invoke `revert-buffer' and observe issue
>> again.
>>
>> Disabling global-font-lock-mode, makes the situation better.
>>
>> Given that rudimentary font-locking should be possible via, simply, the
>> output of `ls --dired', it is unclear why enabling font-locking makes
>> things so much worse. If there are some aspects of font-locking that
>> perform much worse over a slower connection, it would help if there were
>> a user configuration to disable them.
>>
>> It would also help if being over a slow connection didn't result in
>> Emacs consuming 100% of the CPU via functions such as
>> `tramp-wait-for-regexp' (based on profiler-report). Could some of this
>> be done asynchronously?
>
> You could probably tell which parts take the time by profiling Emacs
> while it collects the Dired data, using profiler.el. This could give
> clues about the expensive parts. My guess would be that retrieving
> the attributes of the files Dired needs are the reason, but I could be
> wrong.
Based on =profiler-report=, the following function "chains" consume most of the
CPU:
- `font-lock-fontify-keywords-region'
- tramp-sh-file-name-handler
- tramp-sh-handle-file-truename
- `tramp-wait-for-regexp'
- tramp-sh-handle-file-exists-p
- `tramp-wait-for-regexp'
- tramp-sh-handle-file-directory-p
- `tramp-wait-for-regexp'
- tramp-sh-handle-file-attributes
- `tramp-wait-for-regexp'
As noted previously, disabling global-font-lock-mode helps.
In related news, one thing I've observed on the affected host is that
the version of `ls' doesn't seem to yield expected output for
`ls --dired'. Specifically, the output of `ls --dired' is the same as
the output of `ls' (i.e., `--dired' gets treated as a no-op). The version
of `ls' on this host is:
#+begin_quote
ls (GNU coreutils) 8.32
Copyright (C) 2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
Written by Richard M. Stallman and David MacKenzie.
#+end_quote
--
Suhail
This bug report was last modified 294 days ago.
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