211

I have a big performance problem in R. I wrote a function that iterates over a data.frame object. It simply adds a new column to a data.frame and accumulates something. (simple operation). The data.frame has roughly 850K rows. My PC is still working (about 10h now) and I have no idea about the runtime.

dayloop2 <- function(temp){
    for (i in 1:nrow(temp)){    
        temp[i,10] <- i
        if (i > 1) {             
            if ((temp[i,6] == temp[i-1,6]) & (temp[i,3] == temp[i-1,3])) { 
                temp[i,10] <- temp[i,9] + temp[i-1,10]                    
            } else {
                temp[i,10] <- temp[i,9]                                    
            }
        } else {
            temp[i,10] <- temp[i,9]
        }
    }
    names(temp)[names(temp) == "V10"] <- "Kumm."
    return(temp)
}

Any ideas how to speed up this operation?

1
  • Consider adding something like if(i%%1000) {print(i)}while testing your function to get an approximate idea on the runtime
    – David
    Sep 7, 2020 at 7:24

10 Answers 10

464

Biggest problem and root of ineffectiveness is indexing data.frame, I mean all this lines where you use temp[,].
Try to avoid this as much as possible. I took your function, change indexing and here version_A

dayloop2_A <- function(temp){
    res <- numeric(nrow(temp))
    for (i in 1:nrow(temp)){    
        res[i] <- i
        if (i > 1) {             
            if ((temp[i,6] == temp[i-1,6]) & (temp[i,3] == temp[i-1,3])) { 
                res[i] <- temp[i,9] + res[i-1]                   
            } else {
                res[i] <- temp[i,9]                                    
            }
        } else {
            res[i] <- temp[i,9]
        }
    }
    temp$`Kumm.` <- res
    return(temp)
}

As you can see I create vector res which gather results. At the end I add it to data.frame and I don't need to mess with names. So how better is it?

I run each function for data.frame with nrow from 1,000 to 10,000 by 1,000 and measure time with system.time

X <- as.data.frame(matrix(sample(1:10, n*9, TRUE), n, 9))
system.time(dayloop2(X))

Result is

performance

You can see that your version depends exponentially from nrow(X). Modified version has linear relation, and simple lm model predict that for 850,000 rows computation takes 6 minutes and 10 seconds.

Power of vectorization

As Shane and Calimo states in theirs answers vectorization is a key to better performance. From your code you could move outside of loop:

  • conditioning
  • initialization of the results (which are temp[i,9])

This leads to this code

dayloop2_B <- function(temp){
    cond <- c(FALSE, (temp[-nrow(temp),6] == temp[-1,6]) & (temp[-nrow(temp),3] == temp[-1,3]))
    res <- temp[,9]
    for (i in 1:nrow(temp)) {
        if (cond[i]) res[i] <- temp[i,9] + res[i-1]
    }
    temp$`Kumm.` <- res
    return(temp)
}

Compare result for this functions, this time for nrow from 10,000 to 100,000 by 10,000.

performance

Tuning the tuned

Another tweak is to changing in a loop indexing temp[i,9] to res[i] (which are exact the same in i-th loop iteration). It's again difference between indexing a vector and indexing a data.frame.
Second thing: when you look on the loop you can see that there is no need to loop over all i, but only for the ones that fit condition.
So here we go

dayloop2_D <- function(temp){
    cond <- c(FALSE, (temp[-nrow(temp),6] == temp[-1,6]) & (temp[-nrow(temp),3] == temp[-1,3]))
    res <- temp[,9]
    for (i in (1:nrow(temp))[cond]) {
        res[i] <- res[i] + res[i-1]
    }
    temp$`Kumm.` <- res
    return(temp)
}

Performance which you gain highly depends on a data structure. Precisely - on percent of TRUE values in the condition. For my simulated data it takes computation time for 850,000 rows below the one second.

performance

I you want you can go further, I see at least two things which can be done:

  • write a C code to do conditional cumsum
  • if you know that in your data max sequence isn't large then you can change loop to vectorized while, something like

    while (any(cond)) {
        indx <- c(FALSE, cond[-1] & !cond[-n])
        res[indx] <- res[indx] + res[which(indx)-1]
        cond[indx] <- FALSE
    }
    

Code used for simulations and figures is available on GitHub.

8
  • 2
    As I can't find a way of asking Marek privatly, how were those graphs generated? Jul 25, 2013 at 11:11
  • @carbontwelve Are you asking about data or plots? Plots were made with lattice package. If I got time I put the code somewhere on the web and give you notice.
    – Marek
    Jul 25, 2013 at 13:50
  • @carbontwelve Ooops, I was wrong :) This are standard plots (from base R).
    – Marek
    Jul 25, 2013 at 14:15
  • @Gregor Unfortunately not. It is cumulative so you cannot vectorize it. Simple example: res = c(1,2,3,4) and cond is all TRUE, then final result should be: 1, 3 (cause 1+2), 6 (cause second is now 3, and third is 3 also), 10 (6+4). Doing simple summation you got 1, 3, 5, 7.
    – Marek
    May 25, 2016 at 22:59
  • Ah, I should have thought through it more carefully. Thanks for showing me the mistake. May 25, 2016 at 23:07
141

General strategies for speeding up R code

First, figure out where the slow part really is. There's no need to optimize code that isn't running slowly. For small amounts of code, simply thinking through it can work. If that fails, RProf and similar profiling tools can be helpful.

Once you figure out the bottleneck, think about more efficient algorithms for doing what you want. Calculations should be only run once if possible, so:

Using more efficient functions can produce moderate or large speed gains. For instance, paste0 produces a small efficiency gain but .colSums() and its relatives produce somewhat more pronounced gains. mean is particularly slow.

Then you can avoid some particularly common troubles:

  • cbind will slow you down really quickly.
  • Initialize your data structures, then fill them in, rather than expanding them each time.
  • Even with pre-allocation, you could switch to a pass-by-reference approach rather than a pass-by-value approach, but it may not be worth the hassle.
  • Take a look at the R Inferno for more pitfalls to avoid.

Try for better vectorization, which can often but not always help. In this regard, inherently vectorized commands like ifelse, diff, and the like will provide more improvement than the apply family of commands (which provide little to no speed boost over a well-written loop).

You can also try to provide more information to R functions. For instance, use vapply rather than sapply, and specify colClasses when reading in text-based data. Speed gains will be variable depending on how much guessing you eliminate.

Next, consider optimized packages: The data.table package can produce massive speed gains where its use is possible, in data manipulation and in reading large amounts of data (fread).

Next, try for speed gains through more efficient means of calling R:

  • Compile your R script. Or use the Ra and jit packages in concert for just-in-time compilation (Dirk has an example in this presentation).
  • Make sure you're using an optimized BLAS. These provide across-the-board speed gains. Honestly, it's a shame that R doesn't automatically use the most efficient library on install. Hopefully Revolution R will contribute the work that they've done here back to the overall community.
  • Radford Neal has done a bunch of optimizations, some of which were adopted into R Core, and many others which were forked off into pqR.

And lastly, if all of the above still doesn't get you quite as fast as you need, you may need to move to a faster language for the slow code snippet. The combination of Rcpp and inline here makes replacing only the slowest part of the algorithm with C++ code particularly easy. Here, for instance, is my first attempt at doing so, and it blows away even highly optimized R solutions.

If you're still left with troubles after all this, you just need more computing power. Look into parallelization (http://cran.r-project.org/web/views/HighPerformanceComputing.html) or even GPU-based solutions (gpu-tools).

Links to other guidance

39

If you are using for loops, you are most likely coding R as if it was C or Java or something else. R code that is properly vectorised is extremely fast.

Take for example these two simple bits of code to generate a list of 10,000 integers in sequence:

The first code example is how one would code a loop using a traditional coding paradigm. It takes 28 seconds to complete

system.time({
    a <- NULL
    for(i in 1:1e5)a[i] <- i
})
   user  system elapsed 
  28.36    0.07   28.61 

You can get an almost 100-times improvement by the simple action of pre-allocating memory:

system.time({
    a <- rep(1, 1e5)
    for(i in 1:1e5)a[i] <- i
})

   user  system elapsed 
   0.30    0.00    0.29 

But using the base R vector operation using the colon operator : this operation is virtually instantaneous:

system.time(a <- 1:1e5)

   user  system elapsed 
      0       0       0 
3
  • +1 though I would regard your second example as unconvincing as a[i] does not change. But system.time({a <- NULL; for(i in 1:1e5){a[i] <- 2*i} }); system.time({a <- 1:1e5; for(i in 1:1e5){a[i] <- 2*i} }); system.time({a <- NULL; a <- 2*(1:1e5)}) has a similar result.
    – Henry
    Jun 28, 2011 at 7:06
  • @Henry, fair comment, but as you point out, the results are the same. I have modified the example to initialise a to rep(1, 1e5) - the timings are identical.
    – Andrie
    Jun 28, 2011 at 7:32
  • It's true that vectorization is the way to go whenever possible, but some loops simply can't be rearranged that way
    – David
    Sep 7, 2020 at 7:51
17

This could be made much faster by skipping the loops by using indexes or nested ifelse() statements.

idx <- 1:nrow(temp)
temp[,10] <- idx
idx1 <- c(FALSE, (temp[-nrow(temp),6] == temp[-1,6]) & (temp[-nrow(temp),3] == temp[-1,3]))
temp[idx1,10] <- temp[idx1,9] + temp[which(idx1)-1,10] 
temp[!idx1,10] <- temp[!idx1,9]    
temp[1,10] <- temp[1,9]
names(temp)[names(temp) == "V10"] <- "Kumm."
4
  • Thanks for the answer. I try to understand your statements. The line 4: "temp[idx1,10] <- temp[idx1,9] + temp[which(idx1)-1,10]" caused an error because the length of longer object is not a multiple of the length of the shorter object. "temp[idx1,9] = num [1:11496]" and "temp[which(idx1)-1,10] = int [1:11494]" so 2 rows are missing.
    – Kay
    May 26, 2010 at 2:12
  • If you provide a data sample (use dput() with a few rows) then I'll fix it for you. Because of the which()-1 bit, the indexes are unequal. But you should see how it works from here: there's no need for any looping or applying; just use vectorized functions.
    – Shane
    May 26, 2010 at 14:20
  • 2
    Wow! I've just changed an nested if..else function block and mapply, to a nested ifelse function and got a 200x speedup!
    – James
    May 26, 2010 at 16:16
  • Your general advice is aright, but in code you missed fact, that i-th value depends on i-1-th so they can't be set in way you do it (using which()-1).
    – Marek
    Jun 4, 2010 at 10:01
8

As Ari mentioned at the end of his answer, the Rcpp and inline packages make it incredibly easy to make things fast. As an example, try this inline code (warning: not tested):

body <- 'Rcpp::NumericMatrix nm(temp);
         int nrtemp = Rccp::as<int>(nrt);
         for (int i = 0; i < nrtemp; ++i) {
             temp(i, 9) = i
             if (i > 1) {
                 if ((temp(i, 5) == temp(i - 1, 5) && temp(i, 2) == temp(i - 1, 2) {
                     temp(i, 9) = temp(i, 8) + temp(i - 1, 9)
                 } else {
                     temp(i, 9) = temp(i, 8)
                 }
             } else {
                 temp(i, 9) = temp(i, 8)
             }
         return Rcpp::wrap(nm);
        '

settings <- getPlugin("Rcpp")
# settings$env$PKG_CXXFLAGS <- paste("-I", getwd(), sep="") if you want to inc files in wd
dayloop <- cxxfunction(signature(nrt="numeric", temp="numeric"), body-body,
    plugin="Rcpp", settings=settings, cppargs="-I/usr/include")

dayloop2 <- function(temp) {
    # extract a numeric matrix from temp, put it in tmp
    nc <- ncol(temp)
    nm <- dayloop(nc, temp)
    names(temp)[names(temp) == "V10"] <- "Kumm."
    return(temp)
}

There's a similar procedure for #includeing things, where you just pass a parameter

inc <- '#include <header.h>

to cxxfunction, as include=inc. What's really cool about this is that it does all of the linking and compilation for you, so prototyping is really fast.

Disclaimer: I'm not totally sure that the class of tmp should be numeric and not numeric matrix or something else. But I'm mostly sure.

Edit: if you still need more speed after this, OpenMP is a parallelization facility good for C++. I haven't tried using it from inline, but it should work. The idea would be to, in the case of n cores, have loop iteration k be carried out by k % n. A suitable introduction is found in Matloff's The Art of R Programming, available here, in chapter 16, Resorting to C.

8

I dislike rewriting code... Also of course ifelse and lapply are better options but sometimes it is difficult to make that fit.

Frequently I use data.frames as one would use lists such as df$var[i]

Here is a made up example:

nrow=function(x){ ##required as I use nrow at times.
  if(class(x)=='list') {
    length(x[[names(x)[1]]])
  }else{
    base::nrow(x)
  }
}

system.time({
  d=data.frame(seq=1:10000,r=rnorm(10000))
  d$foo=d$r
  d$seq=1:5
  mark=NA
  for(i in 1:nrow(d)){
    if(d$seq[i]==1) mark=d$r[i]
    d$foo[i]=mark
  }
})

system.time({
  d=data.frame(seq=1:10000,r=rnorm(10000))
  d$foo=d$r
  d$seq=1:5
  d=as.list(d) #become a list
  mark=NA
  for(i in 1:nrow(d)){
    if(d$seq[i]==1) mark=d$r[i]
    d$foo[i]=mark
  }
  d=as.data.frame(d) #revert back to data.frame
})

data.frame version:

   user  system elapsed 
   0.53    0.00    0.53

list version:

   user  system elapsed 
   0.04    0.00    0.03 

17x times faster to use a list of vectors than a data.frame.

Any comments on why internally data.frames are so slow in this regard? One would think they operate like lists...

For even faster code do this class(d)='list' instead of d=as.list(d) and class(d)='data.frame'

system.time({
  d=data.frame(seq=1:10000,r=rnorm(10000))
  d$foo=d$r
  d$seq=1:5
  class(d)='list'
  mark=NA
  for(i in 1:nrow(d)){
    if(d$seq[i]==1) mark=d$r[i]
    d$foo[i]=mark
  }
  class(d)='data.frame'
})
head(d)
4
  • 1
    It is probably thanks to the overhead of [<-.data.frame, which is somehow called when you do d$foo[i] = mark and may end up making a new copy of the vector of possibly the whole data.frame on each <- modification. It would make an interesting question on SO.
    – Frank
    Aug 3, 2016 at 4:51
  • 2
    @Frank It (i) has to ensure that the modified object is still a valid data.frame and (ii) afaik makes at least one copy, possibly more than one. Dataframe subassignment is known to be slow and if you look at the long source code it's not really surprising.
    – Roland
    Aug 3, 2016 at 7:29
  • @Frank, @Roland: Does df$var[i] notation go through the same [<-.data.frame function? I noticed it is quite long indeed. If not, what function does it use?
    – Chris
    Aug 4, 2016 at 1:33
  • @Chris I believe d$foo[i]=mark gets roughly translated into d <- `$<-`(d, 'foo', `[<-`(d$foo, i, mark)), but with some use of temporary variables. Oct 22, 2016 at 9:10
6

The answers here are great. One minor aspect not covered is that the question states "My PC is still working (about 10h now) and I have no idea about the runtime". I always put in the following code into loops when developing to get a feel for how changes seem to affect the speed and also for monitoring how long it will take to complete.

dayloop2 <- function(temp){
  for (i in 1:nrow(temp)){
    cat(round(i/nrow(temp)*100,2),"%    \r") # prints the percentage complete in realtime.
    # do stuff
  }
  return(blah)
}

Works with lapply as well.

dayloop2 <- function(temp){
  temp <- lapply(1:nrow(temp), function(i) {
    cat(round(i/nrow(temp)*100,2),"%    \r")
    #do stuff
  })
  return(temp)
}

If the function within the loop is quite fast but the number of loops is large then consider just printing every so often as printing to the console itself has an overhead. e.g.

dayloop2 <- function(temp){
  for (i in 1:nrow(temp)){
    if(i %% 100 == 0) cat(round(i/nrow(temp)*100,2),"%    \r") # prints every 100 times through the loop
    # do stuff
  }
  return(temp)
}
1
  • A similar option, print the fraction i/n. I always have something like cat(sprintf("\nNow running... %40s, %s/%s \n", nm[i], i, n)) since I'm usually looping over named things (with names in nm).
    – Frank
    May 25, 2018 at 14:21
2

In R, you can often speed-up loop processing by using the apply family functions (in your case, it would probably be replicate). Have a look at the plyr package that provides progress bars.

Another option is to avoid loops altogether and replace them with vectorized arithmetics. I'm not sure exactly what you are doing, but you can probably apply your function to all rows at once:

temp[1:nrow(temp), 10] <- temp[1:nrow(temp), 9] + temp[0:(nrow(temp)-1), 10]

This will be much much faster, and then you can filter the rows with your condition:

cond.i <- (temp[i, 6] == temp[i-1, 6]) & (temp[i, 3] == temp[i-1, 3])
temp[cond.i, 10] <- temp[cond.i, 9]

Vectorized arithmetics requires more time and thinking about the problem, but then you can sometimes save several orders of magnitude in execution time.

1
  • 14
    you're spot on that vector functions will be faster than loops or apply() but it's not true that apply() is faster than loops. In many cases apply() is simply abstracting the loop away from the user but still looping. See this previous question: stackoverflow.com/questions/2275896/…
    – JD Long
    May 26, 2010 at 16:03
2

Take a look at the accumulate() function from {purrr} :

dayloop_accumulate <- function(temp) {
  temp %>%
    as_tibble() %>%
     mutate(cond = c(FALSE, (V6 == lag(V6) & V3 == lag(V3))[-1])) %>%
    mutate(V10 = V9 %>% 
             purrr::accumulate2(.y = cond[-1], .f = function(.i_1, .i, .y) {
               if(.y) {
                 .i_1 + .i
               } else {
                 .i
               }
             }) %>% unlist()) %>%
    select(-cond)
}
1

Processing with data.table is a viable option:

n <- 1000000
df <- as.data.frame(matrix(sample(1:10, n*9, TRUE), n, 9))
colnames(df) <- paste("col", 1:9, sep = "")

library(data.table)

dayloop2.dt <- function(df) {
  dt <- data.table(df)
  dt[, Kumm. := {
    res <- .I;
    ifelse (res > 1,             
      ifelse ((col6 == shift(col6, fill = 0)) & (col3 == shift(col3, fill = 0)) , 
        res <- col9 + shift(res)                   
      , # else
        res <- col9                                 
      )
     , # else
      res <- col9
    )
  }
  ,]
  res <- data.frame(dt)
  return (res)
}

res <- dayloop2.dt(df)

m <- microbenchmark(dayloop2.dt(df), times = 100)
#Unit: milliseconds
#       expr      min        lq     mean   median       uq      max neval
#dayloop2.dt(df) 436.4467 441.02076 578.7126 503.9874 575.9534 966.1042    10

If you ignore the possible gains from conditions filtering, it is very fast. Obviously, if you can do the calculation on the subset of data, it helps.

1
  • 2
    Why are you repeating the suggestion to to use data.table? It has already been made multiple times in the earlier answers.
    – IRTFM
    Jul 9, 2016 at 0:33

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