Commit Graph

55 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
dominic
c64b144f42
mitigate clang build warnings -Wconversion (#1763)
* mitigate clang build warnings -Wconversion

* ensure we have warnings set everywhere and fix some
2024-03-07 12:19:56 +00:00
Roman Lebedev
ef88520d6f
Revert "fix some warnings" (#1762)
This reverts commit 1576991177.
2024-03-06 12:40:31 +00:00
Dominic Hamon
1576991177 fix some warnings 2024-02-20 16:51:06 +00:00
Roman Lebedev
3d85343d65
Rewrite complexity_test to use (hardcoded) manual time (#1757)
* Rewrite complexity_test to use (hardcoded) manual time

This test is fundamentally flaky, because it tried to read tea leafs,
and is inherently misbehaving in CI environments,
since there are unmitigated sources of noise.

That being said, the computed Big-O also depends on the `--benchmark_min_time=`

Fixes https://github.com/google/benchmark/issues/272

* Correctly compute Big-O for manual timings. Fixes #1758.

* complexity_test: do more stuff in empty loop

* Make all empty loops be a bit longer empty

Looks like on windows, some of these tests still fail,
i guess clock precision is too small.
2024-02-19 15:22:35 +00:00
Roman Lebedev
b04cec1bf9
Deflake CI (#1751)
* `complexity_test`: deflake, same as https://github.com/google/benchmark/issues/272

As it can be seen in e.g. https://github.com/google/benchmark/actions/runs/7711328637/job/21016492361
We may get `65: BM_Complexity_O1_BigO                           0.00 N^2        0.00 N^2  `

* `user_counters_tabular_test`: deflake

We were still getting zero times there. Perhaps this is better?
2024-02-02 18:39:46 +03:00
Tiago Freire
a543fcd410
Fixed compiler warnings (#1697)
* fixed warnings
used proper math functions

* ran clang format

* used a more up-to-date clang-format

* space twedling

* reveretd CMakeLists.txt
2023-11-10 10:09:50 +00:00
dominic
9885aefb96
get rid of warnings in tests (#1562) 2023-03-06 14:47:54 +00:00
Dominic Hamon
920fa14898 fix some build warnings on type conversions 2022-06-08 10:32:20 +01:00
Dominic Hamon
8d86026c67
Enable -Wconversion (#1390)
Requires some casts here and there, but nothing unreasonable.

Fixes #1268
2022-05-01 19:56:30 +01:00
dominc8
ab867074da
clang-tidy: readability-redundant and performance (#1298)
* clang-tidy: readability-redundant-*

* clang-tidy: performance-*
2021-12-06 11:18:04 +00:00
Dominic Hamon
c07a498924
format tests with clang-format (#1282) 2021-11-10 16:22:31 +00:00
Roman Lebedev
12dc5eeafc
Statistics: add support for percentage unit in addition to time (#1219)
* Statistics: add support for percentage unit in addition to time

I think, `stddev` statistic is useful, but confusing.

What does it mean if `stddev` of `1ms` is reported?
Is that good or bad? If the `median` is `1s`,
then that means that the measurements are pretty noise-less.

And what about `stddev` of `100ms` is reported?
If the `median` is `1s` - awful, if the `median` is `10s` - good.

And hurray, there is just the statistic that we need:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficient_of_variation

But, naturally, that produces a value in percents,
but the statistics are currently hardcoded to produce time.

So this refactors thinkgs a bit, and allows a percentage unit for statistics.

I'm not sure whether or not `benchmark` would be okay
with adding this `RSD` statistic by default,
but regales, that is a separate patch.

Refs. https://github.com/google/benchmark/issues/1146

* Address review notes
2021-09-03 15:36:56 +01:00
Roman Lebedev
80a62618e8
Introduce per-family instance index (#1165)
Much like it makes sense to enumerate all the families,
it makes sense to enumerate stuff within families.
Alternatively, we could have a global instance index,
but i'm not sure why that would be better.

This will be useful when the benchmarks are run not in order,
for the tools to sort the results properly.
2021-06-02 23:45:41 +03:00
Roman Lebedev
4c2e32f1d0
Introduce "family index" field into JSON output (#1164)
It may be useful for those wishing to further post-process JSON results,
but it is mainly geared towards better support for run interleaving,
where results from the same family may not be close-by in the JSON.

While we won't be able to do much about that for outputs,
the tools can and perhaps should reorder the results to that
at least in their output they are in proper order, not run order.

Note that this only counts the families that were filtered-in,
so if e.g. there were three families, and we filtered-out
the second one, the two families (which were first and third)
will have family indexes 0 and 1.
2021-06-02 18:06:45 +03:00
Eric Backus
32a1e39720 Bugfix/wsl selftest fixes. Fixes #839 (#843)
* Update AUTHORS and CONTRIBUTORS

* Fix WSL self-test failures

Some of the benchmark self-tests expect and check for a particular
output format from the benchmark library. The numerical values must
not be infinity or not-a-number, or the test will report an error.
Some of the values are computed bytes-per-second or items-per-second
values, so these require that the measured CPU time for the test to be
non-zero. But the loop that is being measured was empty, so the
measured CPU time for the loop was extremely small. On systems like
Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) the timer doesn't have enough
resolution to measure this, so the measured CPU time was zero.

This fix just makes sure that these tests have something within the
timing loop, so that the benchmark library will not decide that the
loop takes zero CPU time. This makes these tests more robust, and in
particular makes them pass on WSL.
2019-07-27 19:02:31 +03:00
Roman Lebedev
f92903cc53
Iteration counts should be uint64_t globally. (#817)
This is a shameless rip-off of https://github.com/google/benchmark/pull/646
I did promise to look into why that proposed PR was producing
so much worse assembly, and so i finally did.

The reason is - that diff changes `size_t` (unsigned) to `int64_t` (signed).

There is this nice little `assert`:
7a1c370283/include/benchmark/benchmark.h (L744)
It ensures that we didn't magically decide to advance our iterator
when we should have finished benchmarking.

When `cached_` was unsigned, the `assert` was `cached_ UGT 0`.
But we only ever get to that `assert` if `cached_ NE 0`,
and naturally if `cached_` is not `0`, then it is bigger than `0`,
so the `assert` is tautological, and gets folded away.

But now that `cached_` became signed, the assert became `cached_ SGT 0`.
And we still only know that `cached_ NE 0`, so the assert can't be
optimized out, or at least it doesn't currently.

Regardless of whether or not that is a bug in itself,
that particular diff would have regressed the normal 64-bit systems,
by halving the maximal iteration space (since we go from unsigned counter
to signed one, of the same bit-width), which seems like a bug.
And just so it happens, fixing *this* bug, fixes the other bug.

This produces fully (bit-by-bit) identical state_assembly_test.s
The filecheck change is actually needed regardless of this patch,
else this test does not pass for me even without this diff.
2019-05-13 12:33:11 +03:00
BaaMeow
478eafa36b [JSON] add threads and repetitions to the json output (#748)
* [JSON] add threads and repetitions to the json output, for better ide…
[Tests] explicitly check for thread == 1
[Tests] specifically mark all repetition checks
[JSON] add repetition_index reporting, but only for non-aggregates (i…

* [Formatting] Be very, very explicit about pointer alignment so clang-format can not put pointers/references on the wrong side of arguments.
[Benchmark::Run] Make sure to use explanatory sentinel variable rather than a magic number.

* Do not pass redundant information
2019-03-26 09:53:07 +00:00
Daniel Harvey
f6e96861a3 BENCHMARK_CAPTURE() and Complexity() - naming problem (#761)
Created BenchmarkName class which holds the full benchmark
name and allows specifying and retrieving different components
of the name (e.g. ARGS, THREADS etc.)

Fixes #730.
2019-03-17 16:38:51 +03:00
Roman Lebedev
58588476ce
Track two more details about runs - the aggregate name, and run name. (#675)
This is related to @BaaMeow's work in https://github.com/google/benchmark/pull/616 but is not based on it.

Two new fields are tracked, and dumped into JSON:
* If the run is an aggregate, the aggregate's name is stored.
  It can be RMS, BigO, mean, median, stddev, or any custom stat name.
* The aggregate-name-less run name is additionally stored.
  I.e. not some name of the benchmark function, but the actual
  name, but without the 'aggregate name' suffix.

This way one can group/filter all the runs,
and filter by the particular aggregate type.

I *might* need this for further tooling improvement.
Or maybe not.
But this is certainly worthwhile for custom tooling.
2018-09-13 15:08:15 +03:00
Roman Lebedev
8688c5c4cf
Track 'type' of the run - is it an actual measurement, or an aggregate. (#658)
This is *only* exposed in the JSON. Not in CSV, which is deprecated.

This *only* supposed to track these two states.
An additional field could later track which aggregate this is,
specifically (statistic name, rms, bigo, ...)

The motivation is that we already have ReportAggregatesOnly,
but it affects the entire reports, both the display,
and the reporters (json files), which isn't ideal.

It would be very useful to have a 'display aggregates only' option,
both in the library's console reporter, and the python tooling,
This will be especially needed for the 'store separate iterations'.
2018-08-28 18:11:36 +03:00
Federico Ficarelli
0c21bc369a Fix build with Intel compiler (#631)
* Set -Wno-deprecated-declarations for Intel

Intel compiler silently ignores -Wno-deprecated-declarations
so warning no. 1786 must be explicitly suppressed.

* Make std::int64_t → double casts explicit

While std::int64_t → double is a perfectly conformant
implicit conversion, Intel compiler warns about it.
Make them explicit via static_cast<double>.

* Make std::int64_t → int casts explicit

Intel compiler warns about emplacing an std::int64_t
into an int container. Just make the conversion explicit
via static_cast<int>.

* Cleanup Intel -Wno-deprecated-declarations workaround logic
2018-07-09 11:45:10 +01:00
Marat Dukhan
7fb3c564e5 Fix compilation on Android with GNU STL (#596)
* Fix compilation on Android with GNU STL

GNU STL in Android NDK lacks string conversion functions from C++11, including std::stoul, std::stoi, and std::stod.
This patch reimplements these functions in benchmark:: namespace using C-style equivalents from C++03.

* Avoid use of log2 which doesn't exist in Android GNU STL

GNU STL in Android NDK lacks log2 function from C99/C++11.
This patch replaces their use in the code with double log(double) function.
2018-06-05 11:36:26 +01:00
Dominic Hamon
64e5a13fa0
Ensure 64-bit truncation doesn't happen for complexity_n (#569)
* Ensure 64-bit truncation doesn't happen for complexity results

* One more complexity_n 64-bit fix

* Missed another vector of int

* Piping through the int64_t
2018-04-12 15:40:24 +01:00
Dominic Hamon
9913418d32
Allow AddRange to work with int64_t. (#548)
* Allow AddRange to work with int64_t.

Fixes #516

Also, tweak how we manage per-test build needs, and create a standard
_gtest suffix for googletest to differentiate from non-googletest tests.

I also ran clang-format on the files that I changed (but not the
benchmark include or main src as they have too many clang-format
issues).

* Add benchmark_gtest to cmake

* Set(Items|Bytes)Processed now take int64_t
2018-04-03 23:12:47 +01:00
Eric
25acf220a4 Refactor most usages of KeepRunning to use the perfered ranged-for. (#459)
Recently the library added a new ranged-for variant of the KeepRunning
loop that is much faster. For this reason it should be preferred in all
new code.

Because a library, its documentation, and its tests should all embody
the best practices of using the library, this patch changes all but a
few usages of KeepRunning() into for (auto _ : state).

The remaining usages in the tests and documentation persist only
to document and test behavior that is different between the two formulations.

Also note that because the range-for loop requires C++11, the KeepRunning
variant has not been deprecated at this time.
2017-10-17 12:17:02 -06:00
Roman Lebedev
b9be142d1e Json reporter: don't cast floating-point to int; adjust tooling (#426)
* Json reporter: passthrough fp, don't cast it to int; adjust tooling

Json output format is generally meant for further processing
using some automated tools. Thus, it makes sense not to
intentionally limit the precision of the values contained
in the report.

As it can be seen, FormatKV() for doubles, used %.2f format,
which was meant to preserve at least some of the precision.
However, before that function is ever called, the doubles
were already cast to the integer via RoundDouble()...

This is also the case for console reporter, where it makes
sense because the screen space is limited, and this reporter,
however the CSV reporter does output some( decimal digits.

Thus i can only conclude that the loss of the precision
was not really considered, so i have decided to adjust the
code of the json reporter to output the full fp precision.

There can be several reasons why that is the right thing
to do, the bigger the time_unit used, the greater the
precision loss, so i'd say any sort of further processing
(like e.g. tools/compare_bench.py does) is best done
on the values with most precision.

Also, that cast skewed the data away from zero, which
i think may or may not result in false- positives/negatives
in the output of tools/compare_bench.py

* Json reporter: FormatKV(double): address review note

* tools/gbench/report.py: skip benchmarks with different time units

While it may be useful to teach it to operate on the
measurements with different time units, which is now
possible since floats are stored, and not the integers,
but for now at least doing such a sanity-checking
is better than providing misinformation.
2017-07-24 16:13:55 -07:00
Dmitry Trifonov
7a74b74856 fix for android NDK r10e (#375) 2017-04-20 20:07:52 -06:00
Eric Fiselier
36a251ab3e Fix #300. Emit RMS as a float not a percentage in JSON 2016-10-07 22:26:01 -06:00
Eric Fiselier
2555035f44 Use correct RE for floating point numbers in reporter_output_test.cc 2016-10-07 21:56:22 -06:00
Dominic Hamon
1100e91907 Simplify clang-format and apply to tests (#302) 2016-10-07 11:04:50 -07:00
Eric
0ed4456097 Refactor output test runner into standalone module. (#277)
* refactor

* Move default substitutions into library

* Move default substitutions to the *right* place in the library

* Fix init order issues that caused test failures

* improve diagnostics

* add missing include

* general cleanup

* Address review comments
2016-08-28 13:24:16 -06:00
Eric Fiselier
a7a7c56152 Workaround flaky complexity_test.cc test case.
See https://github.com/google/benchmark/issues/272
2016-08-09 14:14:15 -06:00
Eric Fiselier
ee54a3f03e Rework Appveyor config
Currently the Appveyor bot is a PIT. It never passes and it often hangs
or gives very poor output. This patch rewrites the configuration.

This patch also attempts to fix a flaky complexity test as a drive-by.
2016-08-08 02:04:59 -06:00
Marcin Kolny
dfe0260754 Support multiple ranges in the benchmark (#257)
* Support multiple ranges in the benchmark

google-benchmark library allows to provide up to two ranges to the
benchmark method (range_x and range_y). However, in many cases it's not
sufficient. The patch introduces multi-range features, so user can easily
define multiple ranges by passing a vector of integers, and access values
through the method range(i).

* Remove redundant API

Functions State::range_x() and State::range_y() have been removed. They should
be replaced by State::range(0) and State::range(1).
Functions Benchmark::ArgPair() and Benchmark::RangePair() have been removed.
They should be replaced by Benchmark::Args() and Benchmark::Ranges().
2016-08-04 12:30:14 -07:00
Eric Fiselier
44128d87d2 Add --benchmark_out=<filename> and --benchmark_out_format=<format> options.
These options allow you to write the output of a benchmark to the specified
file and with the specified format. The goal of this change is to help support
tooling.
2016-08-02 15:12:43 -06:00
Eric Fiselier
950c8b7440 Fix suprious failures in complexity_test.cc 2016-07-22 17:31:05 -06:00
Eric Fiselier
440df36e7a Improve failure mode in complexity_test.cc 2016-07-22 16:18:34 -06:00
Ismael
3fdd76bd14 fix issue 235 (#236) 2016-06-03 09:33:17 -07:00
Ismael
8ba94b4c18 changed global string to const char * 2016-06-02 22:40:21 +02:00
Ismael
240ba4e64e changed BigOFunc argument from size_t to int 2016-06-02 22:21:52 +02:00
Ismael
109f528a40 removed functional library not needed 2016-06-02 19:48:53 +02:00
Ismael
212cfe1c2e removed check on automatic fit, to avoid random convergence misfits breaking the build 2016-06-02 19:01:10 +02:00
Ismael
867f9145a0 added lambdas to complexity report 2016-06-01 23:08:01 +02:00
Ismael
290ac9ee0e updated complexity_test.cc to new interface for auto 2016-05-25 23:19:32 +02:00
Ismael
e246699f25 added auto as default value for complexity 2016-05-25 21:18:56 +02:00
Eric Fiselier
1080b17bf5 Fix build error with libc++ 2016-05-24 15:09:31 -06:00
Dominic Hamon
2440b752fd Formatting updates 2016-05-24 13:26:32 -07:00
Ismael
36a9ae197f added SetComplexityN 2016-05-24 19:56:49 +02:00
Ismael
43ef17441c refactor names 2016-05-23 20:50:35 +02:00
Ismael
ac05c04533 refactor MinimalLEastSq 2016-05-23 20:12:54 +02:00