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Speed up operations that use the Coord.cells method for time coordinates #4969

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merged 4 commits into from
Sep 29, 2022

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bouweandela
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@bouweandela bouweandela commented Sep 16, 2022

🚀 Pull Request

Description

This speeds up functions that make use of the Coord.cells method to generate many cells describing a time coordinate. This affects for example Cube.extract, Cube.subset, and Coord.intersection.

Here is a script that demonstrates this:

import cf_units
import iris.cube
import iris.coords
import iris.time
import numpy as np

time_units = cf_units.Unit('days since 1850-01-01', calendar='standard')
time = iris.coords.DimCoord(np.arange(10000, dtype=np.float64), standard_name='time', units=time_units)
cube = iris.cube.Cube(np.arange(10000, dtype=np.float32))
cube.add_dim_coord(time, 0)
pdt1 = iris.time.PartialDateTime(year=1852)
pdt2 = iris.time.PartialDateTime(year=1854)
constraint = iris.Constraint(time=lambda cell: pdt1 <= cell.point < pdt2)

%timeit cube.extract(constraint)

Before:

1.4 s ± 15 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)

After:

36.7 ms ± 1.23 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)

Note that the changes in this pull request do slow down the case where only a few cells are actually generated:

Before:

%timeit time.cells()
1.24 µs ± 20.6 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1,000,000 loops each)
%timeit next(time.cells())
140 µs ± 1.07 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10,000 loops each)

After:

%timeit time.cells()
216 ns ± 7.68 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1,000,000 loops each)
%timeit next(time.cells())
16.8 ms ± 395 µs per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)

but you can still use Coord.cell if you need just a few cells.

Closes #4957.


Consult Iris pull request check list

@bouweandela bouweandela marked this pull request as ready for review September 16, 2022 13:03
@bouweandela
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I ran a few more experiments, and this implementation is faster if you generate more than roughly 100 cells.

@trexfeathers trexfeathers self-assigned this Sep 21, 2022
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Thanks @bouweandela, looks like you've found some useful shortcuts here ❤

The minor slowdowns for the smaller cases are IMO acceptable, since these are known times for known sizes. Meanwhile the benefits of speed-up at scale get larger as the scale increases.

  • I can replicate all the timing differences you report.
  • I can confirm that the worse memory efficiency of a Generator is of little consequence - even 10000-length Coords produce Generators/Iterators <100B.
  • Functional test coverage provides assurance that this hasn't broken anything. No direct tests for Coord.cells() (probably should be), but both _CoordConstraint.extract() and Coord.intersect() use Coord.cells() and these have plenty of coverage.
  • Our rudimentary benchmark suite means further coverage that will catch unexpected slowdowns for a variety of user cases (this runs nightly on any changes to main from the previous day).

Please can you add a What's New entry? Then I will merge.

@bouweandela
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Thanks! I added a what's new entry.

Co-authored-by: Martin Yeo <40734014+trexfeathers@users.noreply.github.com>
@trexfeathers trexfeathers merged commit 2742211 into SciTools:main Sep 29, 2022
@bouweandela bouweandela deleted the faster-time-cells branch September 29, 2022 17:18
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I've just been manually re-running some benchmarks, congratulations!

       before           after         ratio
     [f69b93f2]       [27422111]
-        42.2±7ms       34.7±0.9ms     0.82  load.TimeConstraint.time_time_constraint(20, 'NetCDF')

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Extracting a time range from a cube is slow
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