Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Victor Rodriguez
0422ed1e84 benchtests: Enable BENCHSET to run subset of tests
This patch adds BENCHSET variable to benchtests/Makefile in order to
provide the capability to run a list of subsets of benchmark tests, ie;

    make bench BENCHSET="bench-pthread bench-math malloc-thread"

This helps users to benchmark specific glibc area

ChangeLog:

        * benchtests/Makefile:Add BENCHSET to allow subsets of
        benchmarks to be run.
        * benchtests/README: Add documentation for: Running subsets of
        benchmarks.

Signed-off-by: Victor Rodriguez <victor.rodriguez.bahena@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Icarus Sparry <icarus.w.sparry@intel.com>
Reviewed-By: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
2017-11-28 19:57:46 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
06b1de2378 benchtests: Use argparse to parse arguments
Make the script more usable by adding proper command line options
along with a way to query the options.  The script is capable of doing
a bunch of things right now like choosing a base for comparison,
choosing to generate graphs, etc. and they should be accessible via
command line switches.

	* benchtests/scripts/compare_strings.py: Use argparse.
	* benchtests/README: Document existence of compare_strings.py.
2017-09-16 11:47:32 +05:30
Wilco Dijkstra
beb52f502f Improve math benchmark infrastructure
Improve support for math function benchmarking.  This patch adds
a feature that allows accurate benchmarking of traces extracted
from real workloads.  This is done by iterating over all samples
rather than repeating each sample many times (which completely
ignores branch prediction and cache effects).  A trace can be
added to existing math function inputs via
"## name: workload-<name>", followed by the trace.

        * benchtests/README: Describe workload feature.
        * benchtests/bench-skeleton.c (main): Add support for
        benchmarking traces from workloads.
2017-06-20 16:26:26 +01:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
2d304f3c6f benchtests: Support for cross-building benchmarks
This patch adds full support for cross-building benchmarks.  Some
benchmarks like those that need locales to be generated cannot be
built and are hence skipped for cross builds.

Tested by cross building for aarch64 on x86_64 and then running the
generated benchmark on aarch64.

	* benchtests/Makefile (wcsmbs-benchset): Include only for
	native builds and runs.
	(LOCALES): Likewise.
	(bench-build): Build timing-type here instead of the bench
	target.  Generate locale only for native builds.
	* benchtests/README: Add note for cross-building.
2016-04-20 13:19:01 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
bfdda211c6 benchtests: Update README to include instructions for bench-build target 2016-04-20 10:58:20 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
15eaf6ffe3 benchtests: Add new directive for benchmark initialization hook
Add a new 'init' directive that specifies the name of the function to
call to do function-specific initialization.  This is useful for
benchmarks that need to do a one-time initialization before the
functions are executed.
2014-05-26 12:37:29 +05:30
Torvald Riegel
6a5d6ea128 benchtests: Add pthread_once common-case test.
We have a single thread that runs a no-op initialization once and then
repeatedly runs checks of the initialization (i.e., an acquire load and
conditional jump) in a tight loop.  This gives us, on average, the
best-case latency of pthread_once (the initialization is the
exactly-once slow path, and we're not looking at initialization-related
synchronization overheads in this case).
2014-04-10 21:22:28 +02:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
df26ea5359 Implement benchmarking script in python
Implemented the benchmark script in python since it is much cleaner
and simpler to maintain.
2014-03-21 17:32:50 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
9298ecba15 Accept output arguments to benchmark functions
This patch adds the ability to accept output arguments to functions
being benchmarked, by nesting the argument type in <> in the args
directive.  It includes the sincos implementation as an example, where
the function would have the following args directive:

  ## args: double:<double *>:<double *>

This simply adds a definition for a static variable whose pointer gets
passed into the function, so it's not yet possible to pass something
more complicated like a pre-allocated string or array.  That would be
a good feature to add if a function needs it.

The values in the input file will map only to the input arguments.  So
if I had a directive like this for a function foo:

  ## args: int:<int *>:int:<int *>

and I have a value list like this:

1, 2
3, 4
5, 6

then the function calls generated would be:

foo (1, &out1, 2, &out2);
foo (3, &out1, 4, &out2);
foo (5, &out1, 6, &out2);
2013-12-05 10:12:59 +05:30
Torvald Riegel
40fefba1b5 benchtests: Add include-sources directive.
This adds the "include-sources" directive to scripts/bench.pl.  This
allows for including source code (vs including headers, which might get
a different search path) after the inclusion of any headers.
2013-10-10 14:45:30 +03:00
Siddhesh Poyarekar
a357259bf8 Add more directives to benchmark input files
This patch adds some more directives to the benchmark inputs file,
moving functionality from the Makefile and making the code generation
script a bit cleaner.  The function argument and return types that
were earlier added as variables in the makefile and passed to the
script via command line arguments are now the 'args' and 'ret'
directive respectively.  'args' should be a colon separated list of
argument types (skipped if the function doesn't accept any arguments)
and 'ret' should be the return type.

Additionally, an 'includes' directive may have a comma separated list
of headers to include in the source.  For example, the pow input file
now looks like this:

42.0, 42.0
1.0000000000000020, 1.5

I did this to unclutter the benchtests Makefile a bit and eventually
eliminate dependency of the tests on the Makefile and have tests
depend on their respective include files only.
2013-10-07 11:51:25 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
c1f75dc386 Begin porting string performance tests to benchtests
This is the initial support for string function performance tests,
along with copying tests for memcpy and memcpy-ifunc as proof of
concept.  The string function benchmarks perform operations at
different alignments and for different sizes and compare performance
between plain operations and the optimized string operations.  Due to
this their output is incompatible with the function benchmarks where
we're interested in fastest time, throughput, etc.

In future, the correctness checks in the benchmark tests can be
removed.  Same goes for the performance measurements in the
string/test-*.
2013-06-11 15:08:13 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar
fef94eab0b Add a README for benchtests
Move instructions from the Makefile here and expand on them.
2013-05-21 14:59:50 +05:30