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    Custom workspace = slow HISE

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    • Christoph HartC
      Christoph Hart @d.healey
      last edited by

      @d-healey yup, looks font related (libfreetype seems to be the font library on Linux). Can you check the call stack for this call?

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      • d.healeyD
        d.healey
        last edited by

        3b5d6830-fbfb-4d89-8bf9-2342721dfb73-image.png

        86652310-2b74-4c85-814c-7101da7d830c-image.png

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        • d.healeyD
          d.healey
          last edited by d.healey

          This post is deleted!
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          • d.healeyD
            d.healey
            last edited by d.healey

            Ah I think I finally worked out how to see some useful data. Does this help?

            1a25435e-3bb3-435f-9f4b-bff469b0752e-image.png

            Digging further. It seems to be all these help. commands in CodeEditorApiBase.cpp

            88e064ac-f272-4264-8fae-00e83f29e63c-image.png

            Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Christoph HartC
              Christoph Hart @d.healey
              last edited by

              @d-healey it looks like it‘s not caching the fonts so it destroys them everytime…

              d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • d.healeyD
                d.healey @Christoph Hart
                last edited by

                @Christoph-Hart Could this be related? https://forum.juce.com/t/slow-startup-due-to-font-enumeration/6864

                Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Christoph HartC
                  Christoph Hart @d.healey
                  last edited by

                  @d-healey I've pushed a possible fix that might keep the fonts alive on Linux and avoid the reconstruction of the font every time it's used), but I can't test it and it might be possible that this doesn't affect anything, so please check if it helps.

                  d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • d.healeyD
                    d.healey @Christoph Hart
                    last edited by

                    @Christoph-Hart Thanks. I'll give it a try now

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                    • d.healeyD
                      d.healey
                      last edited by

                      @Christoph-Hart Doesn't appear to have helped unfortunately. Just to confirm that it isn't something unique to my system I also tested in a virtual machine and it's the same.

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                      • Christoph HartC
                        Christoph Hart @d.healey
                        last edited by

                        Can you add the destructor to the LinuxFontHandler::Instance() class, then set a breakpoint in its body (at the bogus line) and check when it's called? It should stay alive during the entire lifetime of the HISE application:

                        Link Preview Image
                        HISE/hi_tools/Macros.h at 65fbb2e8cdbb2e365bfbb38186be259b8735f2c9 · christophhart/HISE

                        The open source framework for sample based instruments - HISE/hi_tools/Macros.h at 65fbb2e8cdbb2e365bfbb38186be259b8735f2c9 · christophhart/HISE

                        favicon

                        GitHub (github.com)

                            ~Instance()
                            {
                                int x = 5;
                            }
                        
                        d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • d.healeyD
                          d.healey @Christoph Hart
                          last edited by

                          @Christoph-Hart I'll give it a go after lunch and report back.

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                          • d.healeyD
                            d.healey
                            last edited by

                            The destructor is triggered every time GLOBAL_BOLD_FONT() is called.

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                            • d.healeyD
                              d.healey
                              last edited by d.healey

                              I tried replacing the defines with this, to cut out the extra class stuff:

                              #define GLOBAL_FONT() (Font(Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::oxygen_bold_ttf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::oxygen_bold_ttfSize)).withHeight(13.0f))
                              #define GLOBAL_BOLD_FONT() (Font(Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::oxygen_regular_ttf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::oxygen_regular_ttfSize)).withHeight(14.0f))
                              #define GLOBAL_MONOSPACE_FONT() (Font(Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProRegular_otf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProRegular_otfSize)).withHeight(14.0f))
                              #define GLOBAL_BOLD_MONOSPACE_FONT() (Font(Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProBold_otf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProBold_otfSize)).withHeight(14.0f))
                              

                              And surprisingly it made a big improvement. I don't think it's as fast as on Windows/MacOS though. And all the fonts in the GUI have changed, so I probably broke something :p

                              Scriptnode also isn't lagging like crazy now, so I think that issue was related.

                              And HISE isn't crashing as much when switching between big projects! How I have waited for this day.

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                              • d.healeyD
                                d.healey
                                last edited by

                                @Christoph-Hart Any more suggestions for me to try?

                                Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Christoph HartC
                                  Christoph Hart @d.healey
                                  last edited by

                                  @d-healey try again with the latest build...

                                  d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • d.healeyD
                                    d.healey @Christoph Hart
                                    last edited by

                                    @Christoph-Hart No improvement unfortunately. But wouldn't you have to make some change in Macros.h too since the GLOBAL_FONT defines are still calling LinuxFontHandler::Instance()...?

                                    Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • Christoph HartC
                                      Christoph Hart @d.healey
                                      last edited by

                                      @d-healey Yeah my hope was that if you construct one instance that is alive during the entire lifetime of the app that it will keep alive the shared data object that holds the fonts. See here:

                                      Link Preview Image
                                      JUCE: SharedResourcePointer< SharedObjectType > Class Template Reference

                                      favicon

                                      (docs.juce.com)

                                      So the solution is definitely keeping this thing alive. On the other hand it's so long time ago that I've implemented the custom Linux solution that I forgot why it's there in the first place (a comment would be nice here). So maybe we have to think about an entirely different approach and the performance impact that it has on Linux should definitely be addressed. Maybe I need to dust off my linux distro and give it a shot as this requires some advanced debugging.

                                      d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                      • d.healeyD
                                        d.healey @Christoph Hart
                                        last edited by

                                        @Christoph-Hart You should join us in Proxmox land where every OS is at your fingertips.

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                                        • d.healeyD
                                          d.healey
                                          last edited by d.healey

                                          @Christoph-Hart Is this Linux font handler stuff needed?

                                          I just replaced the calls with this and it's now as fast as on Windows and MacOS

                                          static Typeface::Ptr oxygenBoldTypeFace = Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::LatoBold_ttf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::LatoBold_ttfSize);
                                          static Typeface::Ptr oxygenTypeFace = Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::LatoRegular_ttf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::LatoRegular_ttfSize);
                                          static Typeface::Ptr sourceCodeProTypeFace = Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProRegular_otf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProRegular_otfSize);
                                          static Typeface::Ptr sourceCodeProBoldTypeFace = Typeface::createSystemTypefaceFor(HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProBold_otf, HiBinaryData::FrontendBinaryData::SourceCodeProBold_otfSize);
                                          
                                          #define GLOBAL_FONT() (Font(oxygenTypeFace).withHeight(13.0f))
                                          #define GLOBAL_BOLD_FONT() (Font(oxygenBoldTypeFace).withHeight(14.0f))
                                          #define GLOBAL_MONOSPACE_FONT() (Font(sourceCodeProTypeFace).withHeight(14.0f))
                                          #define GLOBAL_BOLD_MONOSPACE_FONT() (Font(sourceCodeProBoldTypeFace).withHeight(14.0f))
                                          
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                                          • d.healeyD
                                            d.healey
                                            last edited by

                                            @Christoph-Hart I definitely think whatever I did in my last post fixed the problem. It's super fast on Linux now, I tested on my current system and a few year old Linux Mint release. I also tested a compiled project, no issues.

                                            Any reason I shouldn't make a pull request?

                                            Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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