Chapter 13 - Understanding Code Behavior

Have you ever dreamed of being a fly on the wall when PHP runs your code and see which functions are executed? Debuggers deliver this experience, but only on development machines. What about production? Blackfire provides a simple and low-overhead tool to understand code behavior at runtime in all environments, including production.

Like any developer, you have already experienced the frustration of trying to understand how a legacy project works. Even on your very own projects, complexity added over the years can make any change difficult. Sometimes you can't even tell if some parts of the code are still used anymore.

The performance optimizations we made on Finding Bigfoot and PHP Mess Detector were quick to find because we had the right tool. Remember that these are popular Open-Source projects and that people read this code and fix bugs all the time... but nobody ever spotted our simple improvements. Blackfire was key to our success.

Want more real-life examples?

Have you ever wondered why it takes so long for a "simple" composer update to complete? Is it because of the dependency resolution process? Or the package downloads? Does the cache make any difference? Those questions can be easily answered with Blackfire.

In an empty directory, create a Composer file with a dependency on Twig:

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{
    "require": {
        "twig/twig": "1.20.0"
    }
}

Before running Composer, this version of Twig was already cached by Composer and its metadata cache was fully warmed as Composer was just run on another project.

Let's profile the first Composer update:

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blackfire run composer up

Blackfire generates a profile with 4 HTTP requests.

Profile again and the second time, the profile only contains 3 HTTP requests.

The first time, the vendor/ directory was empty and Composer installed Twig. Looking at the parent node of the additional file_get_contents() call tells us that Composer notified Packagist of this installation, which generated a request to https://packagist.org/downloads/:

The second time, the call did not happen as Twig was already installed in the correct version in the vendor/ directory. This is how Packagist counts the number of package installations.

The profiles also reveal that more than half of the wall time is spent downloading files from Packagist, even when there is nothing to do. Take a closer look at these HTTP requests. Notice that the content of the https://packagist.org/packages.json URL is always retrieved? This gives Composer all the information it needs to potentially download other files:

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{
    "notify": "/downloads/%package%",
    "notify-batch": "/downloads/",
    "packages": [],
    "provider-includes": {
        "p/provider-2013$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "5eabcb75d94b428ce510270878b2b10a81e00b8afaaf4d5e9896b274ec0fbeaa"
        },
        "p/provider-2014$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "9a7a79cfdfd24dac773cf189faa0a6756b33f4352c39e7861ed55cb870e27b32"
        },
        "p/provider-2015-01$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "00340913136e82907716efe89d8980d7d3e47b390905f6d72f0ff56eebb9cb66"
        },
        "p/provider-2015-04$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "dc1d338b4e059389de2091992417eff634f94835ecb96498aa2259bfabffbc25"
        },
        "p/provider-2015-07$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "99a9efb2c3970745412fdef4b55438a77afae24b84e95fa552a2dfcca21495c1"
        },
        "p/provider-2015-10$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "113e6db06a47bbe901f6932307011daf9de612ca9de927cd2ff263a34b234263"
        },
        "p/provider-archived$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "21bb16829b6e507a79cf2a99773416f62462506f86d2f8a04167454724e08946"
        },
        "p/provider-latest$%hash%.json": {
            "sha256": "29734ba3922c24ce8eb0f9bdfe765b2a4ed346e8e399c9d59c8faf57af2afb03"
        }
    },
    "providers-url": "/p/%package%$%hash%.json",
    "search": "/search.json?q=%query%"
}

Take some time to analyze the call graph and the function calls, you will learn a lot about how Composer works.

Running Composer with the -vvv flag displays many logs about what Composer is doing. This is quite entertaining while waiting for the command to complete.

The Symfony full-stack framework provides an environment feature that lets developers tweak their project configuration for development, test, or production environments. In the "dev" environment for instance, logs are verbose, caches are disabled, and auto-reload of configuration and Twig templates is enabled. That adds some significant overhead. Can we watch the different code paths with Blackfire?

As an example, I have profiled the symfony.com website homepage in the development environment and in the production environment on my local machine.

To better understand the difference between the environments, compare the two profiles. The comparison makes it very clear that the Symfony production environment is much faster and consumes less memory than its development counterpart:

The comparison call graph reveals that some additional function calls are responsible for the slow-down in the "dev" environment:

  • The event dispatcher is wrapped by an instance of TraceableEventDispatcher, which records various metrics about triggered events:

    It works by wrapping all listeners:

  • The Twig engine is also wrapped by TwigTimedEngine again to gather information about rendered templates:

The function calls table also gives more hints about the differences:

  • The autoloader used in development, DebugClassLoader, is different from the one used in production, ApcClassLoader:

    The production autoloader is faster, as you can see by comparing the size of the blue bar versus the red one (open the node details to confirm with numbers).

Sort the function calls table by the number of calls, and again, learn more:

  • Monolog is way more verbose in development than it is in production:

In less than 5 minutes, we learned a lot about Symfony internals without having to look at its code. If you want to learn more about what these classes do, it is now a matter of reading the source code of the corresponding classes.

In an attempt to speed up the request routing process, Symfony 2.0 was released with an ApacheUrlMatcher class. The basic responsibility of this class was to generate a block of Apache configuration with a bunch of mod_rewrite rules. The goal was to make the URL matching process much faster by delegating the bulk of the work to Apache.

This class has been removed in Symfony 3.0 for several reasons: the first one is that some features added to the Symfony Routing components were not easy to convert to mod_rewrite rules, but more importantly, we realized that this class actually performed worse than the PHP implementation.

How is that possible? The PHP matcher works by dumping an optimized PHP file so that we never have to create the expensive route collection object at runtime. When using the ApacheUrlMatcher we still needed to create the route collection object for every request. So, even though the seemingly time-consuming matching process was already done by Apache, the process as a whole ended up taking much longer than expected.

The interesting part of this story is that it took us years to find this issue, and the process of debugging the root cause of the slow down was quite tricky. Blackfire could have shown us the problem right away.

Blackfire profiles can help understand which parts of your codebase are executed. Profile comparisons help understand code behavior differences. Try using Blackfire on your own projects, not to find performance bottlenecks, but just to get a new perspective on your code. You might discover behaviors you would not have expected.