Parallel JS lands

20 March 2013

The first version of our work on ParallelJS has just been promoted to mozilla-central and thus will soon be appearing in a Nightly Firefox build near you. I find this pretty exciting. In honor of the occassion, I wanted to take a moment to step back and look both at what has landed now, what we expect to land soon, and the overall trajectory we are aiming for.

What is available now

Once Nightly builds are available, users will be able to run what is essentially a “first draft” of Parallel JS. The code that will be landing first is not really ready for general use yet. It supports a limited set of JavaScript and there is no good feedback mechanism to tell you whether you got parallel execution and, if not, why not. Moreover, it is not heavily optimized, and the performance can be uneven. Sometimes we see linear speedups and zero overhead, but in other cases the overhead can be substantial, meaning that it takes several cores to gain from parallelism. Nonetheless, it is pretty exciting to see multithreaded execution landing in a JavaScript engine. As far as I know, this is the first time that something like this has been available (WebWorkers, with their Share Nothing, Copy Everything architecture, do not count).

UPDATE: It has been pointed out to me that WebWorkers were recently extended to support moving typed arrays from place to place, though there is still no way for multiple workers to share a read-only view on a typed array.

We have already written several patches that we hope to land in the near future. These patches expand the set of JavaScript functions that can run in parallel. They also help to reduce compilation overheads and generally improve performance, as well as making the code less vulnerable to disruptions from garbage collection.

Where we are going in the medium term

Looking at the medium term, the main focus is on ensuring that there is a large, usable subset of JavaScript that can be reliably parallelized. Moreover, there should be a good feedback mechanism to tell you when you are not getting parallel execution and why not.

I think that we can achieve a state where if you write a pure function (meaning one that does not mutate shared state) in “plain vanilla” JS, it will basically work. “Plain vanilla” is of course a highly technical industry term meaning “no weird stuff”. Intuitively, I mean code that uses only JS objects (i.e., no DOM objects) and avoids some of the more advanced JS features like proxies. A more rigorous definition of what I mean by “plain vanilla” is a big piece of this medium-term work.

Supporting “plain vanilla” JS is mostly a matter of going through individual code paths in SpiderMonkey and refactoring them so that they can cleanly support parallel execution. It is difficult to do this and keep the code relatively DRY. We are currently exploring the best techniques for this. I think there is no magic bullet here, though; the code was written to assume single-threaded execution and is riddled with various bits of cleverness that unfortunately make it hard to parallelize.

The other part of the story is providing feedback that informs users when parallelization has failed and why. Once we support a large enough portion of JS, I think good feedback is probably even more important than expanding the subset we support.

Finally, there will always be ongoing work on lowering overhead and improving performance. Some of that can come from more advanced optimization techniques (like vectorized compilation or GPU support), but to some extent this also arises just from looking over the relevant code paths and tuning them repeatedly.

Where we are going in the long term

I am basically obsessed with the idea of making parallelism easy and omnipresent wherever I can. The code we are landing now is a very significant step in that direction, though there is a long road ahead.

I want to see a day where there are a variety of parallel APIs for a variety of situations. I want to see a day where you can write arbitrary JS and know that it will parallelize and run efficiently across all browsers.

I expect the final APIs with which we expose parallel execution will evolve over time. There will be debate, some of which is already visible on this blog. For example, should we just offer a ParallelArray type or instead attach methods to Array? How should we specify the semantics of parallel execution, precisely? I expect that once we have good prototypes available, this dialog will grow, paricularly as the JS community and ECMAScript committee gets involved (neither group is exactly known for a shortage of opinions, and rightly so).

I also want to add better support for task parallelism via something like the PJs API I have talked about before. Part of the goal with the current work has been to lay the foundations to make it possible to iterate on APIs and introduce new ones.