[geos-devel] Update to 3.9?

Paul Ramsey pramsey at cleverelephant.ca
Sat Nov 28 13:11:40 PST 2020



> On Nov 28, 2020, at 1:05 PM, Joris Van den Bossche <jorisvandenbossche at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> On Sat, 28 Nov 2020 at 21:53, Paul Ramsey <pramsey at cleverelephant.ca> wrote:
> 
> 
> > On Nov 28, 2020, at 12:44 PM, Joris Van den Bossche <jorisvandenbossche at gmail.com> wrote:
> > 
> > Thanks for trying to reproduce it in C/C++. One obvious difference that I can spot is that we use an integer for the "item" that gets inserted, and not the geometry itself, but I wouldn't expect that to influence the result. 
> > Although, trying to update your test case to do that, the test fails. But that might also be an issue on my side due to my limited C++ experience (it already fails on the "geoms.size()" check):
> 
> Nope still not seeing it... one small mistake in your query
> 
> Also not if you try my original code *with* the mistake? 

Well, with the mistake the code is saying "here's a null pointer" (since that's what casting 0 to a void* will get you) index this. I'll see! It shouldn't really matter from an index point-of-view, it should still index it and return a null pointer out the back end.

> Because your version indeed passes for me as well, but I *think* the version I wrote resembles more closely the PyGEOS code (so it might be an issue in our C code on how we use the tree).
>  
> , trying to cast the int to a void, instead of passing in a the pointer to the address, here's one that works. Unfortunately that leaves us no closer to knowing why the SimpleSTRtree is unhappy in the python context. I fear I may just have to revert the CAPI to the old tree.
> 
> 
> // querying tree with box
> template<>
> template<>
> void object::test<9>
> ()
> {
>     GEOSSTRtree* tree = GEOSSTRtree_create(10);
> 
>     GEOSGeometry* g = GEOSGeomFromWKT("POINT (2 3)");
>     int payload = 876;
>     GEOSSTRtree_insert(tree, g, &payload);
> 
>     GEOSGeometry* q = GEOSGeomFromWKT("POLYGON ((0 0, 10 0, 10 10, 0 10, 0 0))");
> 
>     typedef std::vector<int*> IList;
>     IList items;
>     ensure_equals(items.size(), 0);
>     GEOSSTRtree_query(
>         tree,
>         q,
>         [](void* item, void* userdata) {
>             IList* items = (IList*)userdata;
>             items->push_back((int*)item);
>         },
>         &items);
> 
>     ensure_equals(items.size(), 1);
> 
>     ensure_equals(*(items[0]), payload);
> 
>     GEOSGeom_destroy(q);
>     GEOSGeom_destroy(g);
>     GEOSSTRtree_destroy(tree);
> }
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > 
> > --- a/tests/unit/capi/GEOSSTRtreeTest.cpp
> > +++ b/tests/unit/capi/GEOSSTRtreeTest.cpp
> > @@ -268,10 +268,11 @@ void object::test<8>
> >  {
> >      GEOSSTRtree* tree = GEOSSTRtree_create(10);
> >      GEOSGeometry* g = GEOSGeomFromWKT("POINT (2 3)");
> > -    GEOSSTRtree_insert(tree, g, g);
> > +    int idx = 0;
> > +    GEOSSTRtree_insert(tree, g, (void*)idx);
> >      GEOSGeometry* q = GEOSGeomFromWKT("POLYGON ((0 0, 10 0, 10 10, 0 10, 0 0))");
> >  
> > -    typedef std::vector<GEOSGeometry*> GList;
> > +    typedef std::vector<int> GList;
> >      GList geoms;
> >      ensure_equals(geoms.size(), 0);
> >      GEOSSTRtree_query(
> > @@ -279,23 +280,16 @@ void object::test<8>
> >          q,
> >          [](void* item, void* userdata) {
> >              GList* geoms = (GList*)userdata;
> > -            geoms->push_back((GEOSGeometry*)item);
> > +            geoms->push_back(*((int *)item));
> >          },
> >          &geoms);
> >  
> >      ensure_equals(geoms.size(), 1);
> > -    const GEOSCoordSequence* seq = GEOSGeom_getCoordSeq(geoms[0]);
> > -
> > -    double x = -1;
> > -    double y = -1;
> > -    GEOSCoordSeq_getXY(seq,  0, &x, &y);
> > -    ensure_equals(x, 2.0);
> > -    ensure_equals(y, 3.0);
> > +    ensure_equals(geoms.at(0), 0);
> >  
> > 
> > On Sat, 28 Nov 2020 at 20:55, Paul Ramsey <pramsey at cleverelephant.ca> wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > > On Nov 28, 2020, at 8:11 AM, Joris Van den Bossche <jorisvandenbossche at gmail.com> wrote:
> > > 
> > > Hi all,
> > > 
> > > On the CI of PyGEOS we have a build testing against GEOS master, and somewhere in the last 4 days, a lot of the STRtree tests started failing (see eg https://github.com/pygeos/pygeos/runs/1465460418#step:9:86). Looking at the commits of the last days, this might be related to the SimpleSTRtree work?
> > > 
> > > A small (python) example of a tree consisting of a single point, which no longer is returned when querying the tree with a big polygon that certainly contains the point:
> > > 
> > > Using released version of GEOS:
> > > 
> > > >>> import pygeos
> > > >>> pygeos.geos_version
> > > (3, 8, 1)
> > > >>> point = pygeos.Geometry("POINT (2 3)") 
> > > >>> tree = pygeos.STRtree([point]) 
> > > >>> tree.query(pygeos.box(0, 0, 10, 10)) 
> > > array([0])
> > > 
> > > This is correctly returning the index of the single point. But when running with the latest GEOS master, the query doesn't find any point of the tree:
> > > 
> > > >>> import pygeos
> > > >>> pygeos.geos_version
> > > (3, 9, 0)
> > > >>> point = pygeos.Geometry("POINT (2 3)")
> > > >>> tree = pygeos.STRtree([point])
> > > >>> tree.query(pygeos.box(0, 0, 10, 10))
> > > array([], dtype=int64)
> > > 
> > > Are there changes expected in how the STRtree C API functions or required changes in user code? Or maybe we are using it in some incorrect/unexpected way? (code is at https://github.com/pygeos/pygeos/blob/master/src/strtree.c)
> > 
> > There are changes, I don't think you're mis-using anything. I swapped the CAPI to use the SimpleSTRtree, figuring it would be good to share the performance win with downstream. However, I can swap it back to the original STRtree if this remains a problem.
> > 
> > One thing I noticed when trying to construct GEOS envelopes directly was that annoyingly they were xmin xmax, ymin ymax, but I doubt that would be a problem in your pre-existing working test. 
> > 
> > I just reconstructed your test in the GEOS CAPI suite, and it works as one would expect. (Namely, it finds the one point.) So I'm not sure why your test is getting different results.
> > 
> > 
> > // querying tree with box
> > template<>
> > template<>
> > void object::test<8>
> > ()
> > {
> >     GEOSSTRtree* tree = GEOSSTRtree_create(10);
> >     GEOSGeometry* g = GEOSGeomFromWKT("POINT (2 3)");
> >     GEOSSTRtree_insert(tree, g, g);
> >     GEOSGeometry* q = GEOSGeomFromWKT("POLYGON ((0 0, 10 0, 10 10, 0 10, 0 0))");
> > 
> >     typedef std::vector<GEOSGeometry*> GList;
> >     GList geoms;
> >     ensure_equals(geoms.size(), 0);
> >     GEOSSTRtree_query(
> >         tree,
> >         q,
> >         [](void* item, void* userdata) {
> >             GList* geoms = (GList*)userdata;
> >             geoms->push_back((GEOSGeometry*)item);
> >         },
> >         &geoms);
> > 
> >     ensure_equals(geoms.size(), 1);
> >     const GEOSCoordSequence* seq = GEOSGeom_getCoordSeq(geoms[0]);
> > 
> >     double x = -1;
> >     double y = -1;
> >     GEOSCoordSeq_getXY(seq,  0, &x, &y);
> >     ensure_equals(x, 2.0);
> >     ensure_equals(y, 3.0);
> > 
> >     GEOSGeom_destroy(q);
> >     GEOSGeom_destroy(g);
> >     GEOSSTRtree_destroy(tree);
> > }
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > > 
> > > Best,
> > > Joris
> > > 
> > > 
> > > On Wed, 25 Nov 2020 at 00:44, Paul Ramsey <pramsey at cleverelephant.ca> wrote:
> > > Hey all, just truing up what's underway and nearly there...
> > > 
> > > - Am I right that Z coordinates are nearly done? What's the status there?
> > > 
> > > I've been trying to address some performance issues, with some success and some ... other things. 
> > > 
> > > The success is the SimpleSTRtree, which is just the current STRtree but without the inheritance structure and with the nodes stored all next to each other in contiguous memory for more locality. For at least one use case I've seen 20% speed-ups on overlays, using the SimpleSTRtree in place of the STRtree inside the MCIndexNoder. I have not seen any slow-downs. I have pushed the SimpleSTRtree into master.
> > > 
> > > While I have implemented the nearestNeighbor() functionality on the SimpleSTRtree, I haven't hooked it up to anything yet. It could go into the IndexedFacetDistance, if anyone is super enthusiastic about it. From there it would affect searching in PreparedGeometry of various sorts.
> > > 
> > > I also tried using a similar trick with the MonotoneChainBuilder that sits inside the MCIndexNoder, replacing individual heap allocations with slabs by putting objects onto a std::deque, and incidentally stripping out some book-keeping. While that seems to pick up about 3-5% speedwise, unfortunately something about my implementation is incorrect (and in a wonderfully subtle way) as it fails testing on some platforms (not mine). https://github.com/pramsey/geos/tree/monotone-chain-builder
> > > 
> > > I've put that work to the side for now.
> > > 
> > > All the performance talk is mostly because JTS still runs a lot faster than GEOS for some bulk processing. My current test is a big union of watershed boundaries, about 6MB of data, which takes about 20s under GEOS and about 25% of that under JTS.  It's a big gap, and in theory the two code bases are pretty aligned right now. Same overlayNG engine, etc. So I figure there has to be a big implementation ball of performance hiding under the covers somewhere. No luck thus far.
> > > 
> > > I think we're close, looking forward to release :)
> > > 
> > > P
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