Clock Quantization is proposed as a method to decrease the frequency of determining the exact time, while still being able to make time-dependent decisions.
Consider an interval defined as a time span for which we register a "start" ClockOffset
(not necessarily DateTimeOffset
) and keep an internal
serial position. The latter is incremented every time that we issue a new so-called time-serial position. Every time
that such time-serial position is created off said interval, it will assume two properties:
- A
ClockOffset
which is the copy of the interval'sClockOffset
- A
SerialPosition
which is a copy of the interval's internal serial position at the time of issuance.
An internal "metronome" ensures that a new interval is periodically started after MaxIntervalTimeSpan
has passed.
The result:
- The continuous clock is quantized into regular intervals with known maximum length, allowing system calls (e.g.
DateTimeOffset.UtcNow
) to be required less frequent and amortized across multiple operations. - The status of "events" that occur outside of the interval can be reasoned about with absolute certainty. E.g., taking
interval
as a reference frame:- A cache item that expires before
ClockOffsetToUtcDateTimeOffset(interval.ClockOffset)
will definitely have expired - A cache item that expires after
ClockOffsetToUtcDateTimeOffset(interval.ClockOffset) + MaxIntervalTimeSpan
will definitely expire in the future (i.e. it has not expired yet)
- A cache item that expires before
- The status of "events" that occur inside the interval is in doubt, but policies could define how to deal with that. E.g.,
with the same example of cache item expiration, one of the following policies could be applied:
- Precise → fall back to determining a precise
DateTimeOffset
, incurring a call onto the clock and applying the "normal" logic. - Optimistic → just consider the item not expired yet
- Pessimistic → just consider the item as already expired
- Precise → fall back to determining a precise
- The amount of uncertainty (i.e. in-doubt "events") becomes a function of
MaxIntervalTimeSpan
. The smallerMaxIntervalTimeSpan
, the smaller the amount of uncertainty (and number of times that we still need to regress to calling onto the clock to determine the exact time). - The time-serial positions within an interval can be ordered by their
SerialPosition
property, still allowing for e.g. strict LRU ordering. Alternatively, it also makes it possible to apply LRU ordering to a cluster of cache entries (all having equalLastAccessed.ClockOffset
- now also a time-serial position).
This repo stems from additional research after I posted a comment in PR dotnet/runtime#45842. In that comment, I did not take into
account the fact that CacheEntry.LastAccessed
is often updated with DateTimeOffset.UtcNow
in order to support:
- Sliding expiration
- LRU-based cache eviction during cache compaction
After some local experimentation with Lazy<T>
(as suggested in my initial comment) and
LazyInitializer.EnsureInitialized()
,
I did get some promising results, but realized that it resulted in some quite convoluted code. Hence, I decided to first create and
share an abstraction that reflects the idea behind a potential direction for further optimization.
Triggered by @filipnavara, the latest incarnation of Clock Quantization caters to a non-arbitrary clock-specific representation of time-serial positions, allowing reference clocks to:
- Define the unit scale of clock offset ticks (
ISystemClock.ClockOffsetUnitsPerMillisecond
) - Take full control of back-and-forth conversion between clock-specific time representation and
System.DateTimeOffset
ISystemClock.ClockOffsetToUtcDateTimeOffset()
ISystemClock.DateTimeOffsetToClockOffset()
.
Under #if NET5_0
we can now use Environment.TickCount64
to implement ISystemClock.UtcNowClockOffset
. This particular property is not available in
.NET Standard, where we can fall back to using (the less efficient) DateTimeOffset.UtcNow.UtcTicks
.
TargetFramework | UtcNowClockOffset |
ClockOffsetUnitsPerMillisecond |
Underlying offset definition |
---|---|---|---|
.NET 5 | Environment.TickCount64 |
1 | Number of milliseconds elapsed since the system started |
.NET Standard 2.0 | DateTimeOffset.UtcNow.UtcTicks |
TimeSpan.TicksPerMillisecond (10,000) |
Number of 100-nanosecond intervals that have elapsed since 1/1/0001 12:00AM |
Obviously, custom reference clocks (e.g. for testing and/or replay) could define their own offset reference and unit scale. It is up to clock implementers to ensure that
their time representation doesn't overflow in realistic scenarios (such as would e.g. be the case with Environment.TickCount
which wraps after 24.9 days and again every other approx. 49.8 days).
Local experimentation shows further advantage to using Environment.TickCount64
to speed up expiration check scenarios with a "Precise" policy being imposed on cache item expiration.
- The
ISystemClockTemporalContext
abstraction introduced as part of this concept might be useful in other scenarios where a synthetic clock and/or timer must be imposed onto a subject/system (e.g. event replay, unit tests). - The solution in this repo contains a test project. It serves two purposes:
- Ensure that I didn't leave too many gaps
- Document the idea behind
ISystemClockTemporalContext
, without actually writing documentation
- Implement
IDisposable
and/orIAsyncDisposable
onClockQuantizer
→ #6 - Integrate this proposal in a local fork of Microsoft.Extensions.Caching.Memory as a PoC