[Rd] ALTREP: Bug reports

介非王 @zwj|08 @end|ng |rom gm@||@com
Thu May 16 23:29:58 CEST 2019


Hello Luke and Gabriel,

Thank you very much for your quick responses. The explanation of STDVEC is
very helpful and I appreciate it! For the wrapper, I have a few new
questions.


1. Like Luke said a mutable object is not possible. However, I noticed that
there is one extra argument *deep* in the function duplicate. I've googled
all the available documentation for ALTREP but I did not find any
explanation of it. Could you please give some detail on it?


2.

> The first one correctly returns its internal data structure, but the second
> one returns the ALTREP object it wraps since the wrapper itself is an
> ALTREP. This behavior is unexpected.


I disagree. R_altrep_data1 returns whatever THAT altrep SEXP stores in its
> "data1" part. There is no recursion/descent going on, and there shouldn't
> be.


This is might be a bug since in R release 3.6 it will return the ALTREP
instead of the data of the ALTREP. I'm not sure if it has been fixed in
3.7. Here is a simple example:

SEXP C_peekSharedMemory(SEXP x) {
> while (ALTREP(x)) {
> Rprintf("getting data 1\n");
> x = R_altrep_data1(x);
> }
> return(x);
> }


If calling R_altrep_data1 return the internal data directly, we will only
see one message. following my last example

> .Internal(inspect(so1))
> @0x0000000005e7fbb0 14 REALSXP g0c0 [MARK,NAM(7)]  Share object of type
> double
> > .Internal(inspect(so2))
> @0x0000000005fc5ac0 14 REALSXP g0c0 [MARK,NAM(7)]  wrapper
> [srt=-2147483648,no_na=0]
>   @0x0000000005e7fbb0 14 REALSXP g0c0 [MARK,NAM(7)]  Share object of type
> double
> > sm1=peekSharedMemory(so1)
> getting data 1
> > sm2=peekSharedMemory(so2)
> getting data 1
> getting data 1


We see that so2 call R_altrep_data1 twice to get the internal data. This is
very unexpected.

Thank you very much for your help again!

Best,
Jiefei



On Thu, May 16, 2019 at 3:47 PM Gabriel Becker <gabembecker using gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi Jiefei,
>
> Thanks for tryingout the ALTREP stuff and letting us know how it is going.
> That said I don't think either of these are bugs, per se, but rather a
> misunderstanding of the API. Details inline.
>
>
>
> On Thu, May 16, 2019 at 11:57 AM 介非王 <szwjf08 using gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have encountered two bugs when using ALTREP APIs.
>>
>> 1. STDVEC_DATAPTR
>>
>> From RInternal.h file it has a comment:
>>
>> /* ALTREP support */
>> > void *(STDVEC_DATAPTR)(SEXP x);
>>
>>
>> However, this comment might not be true, the easiest way to verify it is
>> to
>> define a C++ function:
>>
>>  void C_testFunc(SEXP a)
>> > {
>> > STDVEC_DATAPTR(a);
>> > }
>>
>>
>> and call it in R via
>>
>> > a=1:10
>> > > C_testFunc(a)
>> > Error in C_testFunc(a) : cannot get STDVEC_DATAPTR from ALTREP object
>>
>>
> The STDVEC here refers to the SEXP not being an ALTREP. Anything that
> starts with STDVEC should never receive an ALTREP, ie it should only be
> called after non-ALTREPness has been confirmed by the surrounding/preceding
> code. So this is expected behavior.
>
>
>
>
>>
>>  We can inspect the internal type and call ALTREP function to check if it
>> is an ALTREP:
>>
>> > .Internal(inspect(a))
>> > @0x000000001b5a3310 13 INTSXP g0c0 [NAM(7)]  1 : 10 (compact)
>> > > #This is a wrapper of ALTREP
>> > > is.altrep(a)
>> > [1] TRUE
>>
>>
>> I've also defined an ALTREP type and it did not work either. I guess this
>> might be a bug? Or did I miss something?
>>
>> 2. Wrapper objects in ALTREP
>>
>> If the duplicate function is defined to return the object itself:
>>
>> SEXP vector_dulplicate(SEXP x, Rboolean deep) {
>> return(x);
>> }
>>
>
> So this is a violation of of the contract. <youraltrep>_duplicate *must*
> do an actual duplication. Returning the object unduplicated when duplicate
> is called is going to have all sorts of unintended negative consequences.
> R's internals rely on the fact that a SEXP that has been passed to
> DUPLICATE has been duplciated and is safe to modify inplace.
>
>
>
>> In R an ALTREP object will behave like an environment (pass-by-reference).
>> However, if we do something like(pseudo code):
>>
>> n=100
>> > x=runif(n)
>> > alt1=createAltrep(x)
>> > alt2=alt1
>> > alt2[1]=10
>> > .Internal(inspect(alt1))
>> > .Internal(inspect(alt2))
>>
>>
>> The result would be:
>>
>> > .Internal(inspect(alt1))
>> > @0x00000000156f4d18 14 REALSXP g0c0 [NAM(7)]
>> > > .Internal(inspect(alt2 ))
>> > @0x00000000156a33e0 14 REALSXP g0c0 [NAM(7)]  wrapper
>> > [srt=-2147483648,no_na=0]
>> >   @0x00000000156f4d18 14 REALSXP g0c0 [NAM(7)]
>>
>>
>> It seems like the object alt2 automatically gets wrapped by R. Although at
>> the R level it seems fine because there are no differences between alt1
>> and
>> alt2, if we define a C function as:
>>
>
> So I'm not sure what is happening here, because it depends on what your
> createAltrep function does. R automatically creates wrappers in some cases
> but not nearly all (or even very many currently) cases.
>
>>
>> SEXP C_peekSharedMemory(SEXP x) {
>> > return(R_altrep_data1(x));
>>
>> }
>>
>>
>> and call it in R to get the internal data structure of an ALTREP object.
>>
>> C_peekSharedMemory(alt1)
>> > C_peekSharedMemory(alt2)
>>
>>
>> The first one correctly returns its internal data structure, but the
>> second
>> one returns the ALTREP object it wraps since the wrapper itself is an
>> ALTREP. This behavior is unexpected.
>
>
> I disagree. R_altrep_data1 returns whatever THAT altrep SEXP stores in its
> "data1" part. There is no recursion/descent going on, and there shouldn't
> be.
>
>
>> Since the dulplicate function returns
>> the object itself, I will expect alt1 and alt2 should be the same object.
>>
>
> Again, this is a violation of the core assumptions of ALTREP that is not
> allowed, so I'd argue that any behavior this causes is largely irrelevant
> (and a smart part of the much larger set of problems not duplicating when R
> told you to duplicate will cause).
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>> Even if they are essentially not the same, calling the same function
>> should
>> at least return the same result. Other than that, It seems like R does not
>> always wrap an ALTREP object. If we change n from 100 to 10 and check the
>> internal again, alt2 will not get wrapped.
>
>
> Right, so this is a misunderstanding (which may be the fault of sparse
> documentation on our part);  wrapper is one particular ALTREP class, its
> not a fundamental aspect of ALTREPs themselves. Most ALTREP objects do not
> have wrappers. See, e.g.,
>
> > .Internal(inspect(1:4))
>
> @7fb727d6be50 13 INTSXP g0c0 [NAM(3)]  1 : 4 (compact)
>
>
> That's an ALTREP with no wrapper (a compact sequence). The wrapper ALTREP
> class is for attaching metadata (known sortedness, known lack of NAs) to R
> vectors. Its primary use currently is on the return value of sort().
>
>
>> This makes the problem even more
>> difficult since we cannot predict when would the wrapper appear.
>>
>
> As currently factored, its not intended that you would be or need to
> predict when a wrapper would appear. Using the C API or any R functions
> will transparently treat wrapped and non-wrapped objects the same, and any
> code you write should hit these API entrypoints so that any code you write
> does the same.
>
> Does that help?
>
> Best,
> ~G
>
>>
>> Here is the source code for the wrapper:
>> https://github.com/wch/r-source/blob/trunk/src/main/altclasses.c#L1399
>>
>> Here is a working example if one can build the sharedObject package from
>> https://github.com/Jiefei-Wang/sharedObject
>>
>> n=100
>> > x=runif(n)
>> > so1=sharedObject(x,copyOnWrite = FALSE)
>> > so2=so1
>> > so2[1]=10
>> > .Internal(inspect(so1))
>> > .Internal(inspect(so2))
>>
>>
>> Here is my session info:
>>
>> R version 3.6.0 alpha (2019-04-08 r76348)
>> > Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit)
>> > Running under: Windows >= 8 x64 (build 9200)
>> > Matrix products: default
>> > locale:
>> > [1] LC_COLLATE=English_United States.1252  LC_CTYPE=English_United
>> > States.1252
>> > [3] LC_MONETARY=English_United States.1252 LC_NUMERIC=C
>> >
>> > [5] LC_TIME=English_United States.1252
>> > attached base packages:
>> > [1] stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets  methods   base
>> > other attached packages:
>> > [1] sharedObject_0.0.99
>> > loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
>> > [1] compiler_3.6.0 tools_3.6.0    Rcpp_1.0.1
>>
>>
>> Best,
>> Jiefei
>>
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>>
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>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>>
>

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