A microbenchmark support library
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Matt Clarkson d591edf513 Implemented git versioning
This patch automatically versions the shared libraries from any annotated `git`
tags:

```
git tag -a v1.0.0
```

It expects semver version tags such as `v1.0.0`. It would be trivial to support
`1.0.0` but looking around it seems that most C/C++ projects follow `vX.X.X`
rather that `X.X.X` like a lot of `Node.js` stuff.

This determines that the if the project has had a certain amount of commits
since the last tag and also if the project is _dirty_ (has modified files), but
does __nothing__ with that information. In the future a more robust release
could be implemented in the script.

This is pretty brittle and has little in the way of configuration. Ideally we
should use `find_program` to work out where `git` is so that users can configure
it. This implementation assumes that `git` will be available in `PATH`

Outputs the following on the command line:

```
-- git Version: v[MAJOR].[MINOR].[PATCH]-[COMMITS_SINCE_TAG]-[SHA1](-dirty)?
-- Version: [MAJOR].[MINOR].[PATCH]
```
2014-08-01 09:20:28 +01:00
include/benchmark fix examples to use SetBytesProcessed 2014-07-23 13:42:04 -04:00
src Allow shared libraries with BUILD_SHARED_LIBS 2014-07-30 18:08:54 +01:00
test fix linker error by reordering link libraries 2014-07-23 10:35:42 -04:00
third_party Add ExternalProject reference to Google Test 1.7.0. 2014-04-23 00:55:36 -07:00
.gitignore Allow shared libraries with BUILD_SHARED_LIBS 2014-07-30 18:08:54 +01:00
.ycm_extra_conf.py Better include path for YCM users 2014-01-16 09:12:59 -08:00
AUTHORS Added Matt Clarkson as a contributor 2014-07-30 18:06:52 +01:00
CMakeLists.txt Implemented git versioning 2014-08-01 09:20:28 +01:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Add information about CLAs. 2014-02-12 18:51:08 -05:00
CONTRIBUTORS Added Matt Clarkson as a contributor 2014-07-30 18:06:52 +01:00
LICENSE Add LICENSE and copyright headers 2014-01-09 08:01:34 -08:00
README.md fix examples to use SetBytesProcessed 2014-07-23 13:42:04 -04:00

benchmark

Build Status

A library to support the benchmarking of functions, similar to unit-tests.

Discussion group: https://groups.google.com/d/forum/benchmark-discuss

Example usage: Define a function that executes the code to be measured a specified number of times:

static void BM_StringCreation(benchmark::State& state) {
  while (state.KeepRunning())
    std::string empty_string;
}
// Register the function as a benchmark
BENCHMARK(BM_StringCreation);

// Define another benchmark
static void BM_StringCopy(benchmark::State& state) {
  std::string x = "hello";
  while (state.KeepRunning())
    std::string copy(x);
}
BENCHMARK(BM_StringCopy);

// Augment the main() program to invoke benchmarks if specified
// via the --benchmarks command line flag.  E.g.,
//       my_unittest --benchmark_filter=all
//       my_unittest --benchmark_filter=BM_StringCreation
//       my_unittest --benchmark_filter=String
//       my_unittest --benchmark_filter='Copy|Creation'
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
  benchmark::Initialize(&argc, argv);
  benchmark::RunSpecifiedBenchmarks();
  return 0;
}

Sometimes a family of microbenchmarks can be implemented with just one routine that takes an extra argument to specify which one of the family of benchmarks to run. For example, the following code defines a family of microbenchmarks for measuring the speed of memcpy() calls of different lengths:

static void BM_memcpy(benchmark::State& state) {
  char* src = new char[state.range_x()]; char* dst = new char[state.range_x()];
  memset(src, 'x', state.range_x());
  while (state.KeepRunning())
    memcpy(dst, src, state.range_x());
  state.SetBytesProcessed(int64_t(state.iterations) * int64_t(state.range_x()));
  delete[] src;
  delete[] dst;
}
BENCHMARK(BM_memcpy)->Arg(8)->Arg(64)->Arg(512)->Arg(1<<10)->Arg(8<<10);

The preceding code is quite repetitive, and can be replaced with the following short-hand. The following invocation will pick a few appropriate arguments in the specified range and will generate a microbenchmark for each such argument.

BENCHMARK(BM_memcpy)->Range(8, 8<<10);

You might have a microbenchmark that depends on two inputs. For example, the following code defines a family of microbenchmarks for measuring the speed of set insertion.

static void BM_SetInsert(benchmark::State& state) {
  while (state.KeepRunning()) {
    state.PauseTiming();
    std::set<int> data = ConstructRandomSet(state.range_x());
    state.ResumeTiming();
    for (int j = 0; j < state.rangeY; ++j)
      data.insert(RandomNumber());
  }
}
BENCHMARK(BM_SetInsert)
    ->ArgPair(1<<10, 1)
    ->ArgPair(1<<10, 8)
    ->ArgPair(1<<10, 64)
    ->ArgPair(1<<10, 512)
    ->ArgPair(8<<10, 1)
    ->ArgPair(8<<10, 8)
    ->ArgPair(8<<10, 64)
    ->ArgPair(8<<10, 512);

The preceding code is quite repetitive, and can be replaced with the following short-hand. The following macro will pick a few appropriate arguments in the product of the two specified ranges and will generate a microbenchmark for each such pair.

BENCHMARK(BM_SetInsert)->RangePair(1<<10, 8<<10, 1, 512);

For more complex patterns of inputs, passing a custom function to Apply allows programmatic specification of an arbitrary set of arguments to run the microbenchmark on. The following example enumerates a dense range on one parameter, and a sparse range on the second.

static benchmark::internal::Benchmark* CustomArguments(
    benchmark::internal::Benchmark* b) {
  for (int i = 0; i <= 10; ++i)
    for (int j = 32; j <= 1024*1024; j *= 8)
      b = b->ArgPair(i, j);
  return b;
}
BENCHMARK(BM_SetInsert)->Apply(CustomArguments);

Templated microbenchmarks work the same way: Produce then consume 'size' messages 'iters' times Measures throughput in the absence of multiprogramming.

template <class Q> int BM_Sequential(benchmark::State& state) {
  Q q;
  typename Q::value_type v;
  while (state.KeepRunning()) {
    for (int i = state.range_x(); i--; )
      q.push(v);
    for (int e = state.range_x(); e--; )
      q.Wait(&v);
  }
  // actually messages, not bytes:
  state.SetBytesProcessed(
      static_cast<int64_t>(state.iterations())*state.range_x());
}
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_Sequential, WaitQueue<int>)->Range(1<<0, 1<<10);

In a multithreaded test, it is guaranteed that none of the threads will start until all have called KeepRunning, and all will have finished before KeepRunning returns false. As such, any global setup or teardown you want to do can be wrapped in a check against the thread index:

static void BM_MultiThreaded(benchmark::State& state) {
  if (state.thread_index == 0) {
    // Setup code here.
  }
  while (state.KeepRunning()) {
    // Run the test as normal.
  }
  if (state.thread_index == 0) {
    // Teardown code here.
  }
}
BENCHMARK(BM_MultiThreaded)->Threads(2);