

Weaver is a mod that roughly doubles the performance of DSP. The mod does not alter gameplay, does not disable achievements and can be enabled/disabled anytime. In my tests of late game saves, Weaver improves the game's performance by roughly 2-2.5x. You'll experience the best performance while flying in outer space. You can read why in the How it works section.
Known compatible mods:
Known incompatible mods:
None. You can report bugs here.
The general idea is to avoid doing work that isn't necessary. The game spends a lot of time updating, for example, animation data on planets the player isn't on. The mod solves this issue by "optimizing" planets the player isn't currently on. Whenever a player flies to a planet, the planet's logic is restored to the game's default logic to ensure all animation and UI logic functions as expected. Anything being built, upgraded or destroyed on a planet will also, briefly, cause the planet's logic to revert to the game's slower logic. Whenever a research completes, the mod will reoptimize all planets one at a time to ensure the optimized planet includes any stat changes from the research.
struct that is shared by all assemblers using the same recipe and tier.struct that is shared by all sorters in that tier.Parallelizing spray coaters is relatively straightforward and provides a significant performance improvement in most saves. Same goes for the statistics optimizations this mod does.
The general implementation of DSP is quite well thought out. The use of structs of entities makes the code already quite optimized.
The biggest performance problem is that the structs are too large. Even if a sorter is on the other side of the star cluster, the sorter's animation-relevant data still has to be loaded in when the game updates the inserter.
A lot of the optimizations in this mod could be implemented by the DSP developers by making even more use of struct-of-arrays design. That's what this mod uses to reduce memory bandwidth requirements and improve cache hit rates.
Simply adding the attribute [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Auto)] to each of the game's large structs should improve performance and reduce memory usage.
Additionally, a lot of the information in each struct is duplicate constant values stored in each struct instance. For example, this includes recipe requirements and entity tier data. This can easily be moved to a separate array
of structs that can be referenced, just like how this mod does it for assembler recipe information.
This type of optimization can (so far from what I've seen) be applied to the following components: assemblers, inserters, labs, consumers, AnimData, PowerConsumerComponent, PowerGeneratorComponent and probably a lot more.
This would also reduce the game's memory usage.
Other optimizations are a bit more difficult. These would be the data access optimizations. These optimizations reduce the number of indirections necessary to get to the data an entity actually cares about.
It is quite easy to add an additional array that stores the network ID for each inserter so the network ID doesn't have to be fetched from EntityData with a random access memory request. But doing so means duplicating
information in multiple places. Updating this kind of information would require updating it in multiple places. It can quite quickly result in very complicated update logic. This mod deals with that by re-optimizing
a whole planet at a time as described in the How it works section.
The game multithreads its logic by splitting the simulation logic up into discrete steps. Each worker is delegated a static amount of work up front and all workers has to complete their work before all workers can start on the next step. This means all workers are always waiting for the slowest worker before they can start the next step. Not all CPU cores are equally fast and it is not possible to perfectly distribute the work beforehand. The end result is a mutithreading system that is not capable of 100% CPU utilization.
Weaver implements a work stealing work pool where workers compete against each other to complete work as fast as possible. Each step is split up into a number of work chunks depending on how much there is to do in that step. Steps are entirely omitted if there is no work to do. Each planet still executes the same steps in the same order as before i.e. power, facilities, belts etc. All work chunks in a planets step still have to complete before the planets next step can start but there is no synchroniation of step execution between planets. Workers will prioritize executing work for a specific planet, unless the planet has no work immediately available. In that case the worker will attempt to find available work in other planets. Only if it can't find any immediately available work in any planet, will the worker have to wait for other workers to complete their work. A worker will attempt to reserve work in the next step before it waits. If it can't reserve work then it will find another planet to try and reserve work in. This ensures 10 threads aren't waiting in a planet where the next step only consists of 2 work chunks. These improvements increases CPU utilization while also making the game scale better with CPU core count.
I hope most of these optimizations are eventually merged into the base game. Then I don't have to maintain them and more players would be able to enjoy them.
There are still quite a few optimizations I've yet to implement. I believe it is possible for the mod to improve the game's performance by 3-3.5x.
Frankly I don't know how to do that. I do believe I could make use of it in some cases, but I am quite sure it isn't possible in all cases due to the size of changes this mod must make to the existing code. I will probably get to it in the future, but right now I am having fun optimizing the game.