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* [vcpkg docs] Add benchmarking 🏎 to the docs! Also, minor changes to the testing docs. * add documentation for the layout of the project
196 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
196 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
# Benchmarking
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Benchmarking new code against old code is extremely important whenever making
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large changes to how something works. If you are attempting to make something
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faster, and you end up slowing it down, you'll never know if you don't
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benchmark! We have benchmarks in the `toolsrc/src/vcpkg-test` directory, just
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like the tests -- they're treated as a special kind of test.
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## Running Benchmarks
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Unlike normal tests, benchmarks are hidden behind a special define -- `CATCH_CONFIG_ENABLE_BENCHMARKING` -- so that you never try to run benchmarks
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unless you specifically want to. This is because benchmarks actually take quite
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a long time! However, if you want to run benchmarks (and I recommend running
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only specific benchmarks at a time), you can do so by passing the
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`VCPKG_ENABLE_BENCHMARKING` option at cmake configure time.
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```sh
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$ cmake -B toolsrc/out -S toolsrc -G Ninja \
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-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
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-DVCPKG_BUILD_BENCHMARKING=On
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-- The C compiler identification is MSVC 19.22.27905.0
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-- The CXX compiler identification is MSVC 19.22.27905.0
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-- Check for working C compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/VC/Tools/MSVC/14.22.27905/bin/Hostx64/x64/cl.exe
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-- Check for working C compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/VC/Tools/MSVC/14.22.27905/bin/Hostx64/x64/cl.exe -- works
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-- Detecting C compiler ABI info
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-- Detecting C compiler ABI info - done
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-- Detecting C compile features
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-- Detecting C compile features - done
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-- Check for working CXX compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/VC/Tools/MSVC/14.22.27905/bin/Hostx64/x64/cl.exe
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-- Check for working CXX compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/VC/Tools/MSVC/14.22.27905/bin/Hostx64/x64/cl.exe -- works
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-- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info
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-- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info - done
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-- Detecting CXX compile features
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-- Detecting CXX compile features - done
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-- Looking for pthread.h
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-- Looking for pthread.h - not found
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-- Found Threads: TRUE
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-- Configuring done
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-- Generating done
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-- Build files have been written to: C:/Users/t-nimaz/src/vcpkg/toolsrc/out
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$ cmake --build toolsrc/out
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[0/2] Re-checking globbed directories...
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[80/80] Linking CXX executable vcpkg-test.exe
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```
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You can then run benchmarks easily with the following command (which run the
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files benchmarks):
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```sh
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$ ./toolsrc/out/vcpkg-test [!benchmark][file]
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```
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You can switch out `[file]` for a different set -- `[hash]`, for example.
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## Writing Benchmarks
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First, before anything else, I recommend reading the
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[benchmarking documentation] at Catch2's repository.
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Now, after that, let's say that you wanted to benchmark, say, our ASCII
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case-insensitive string compare against your new implementation. We place
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benchmarks for code in the same file as their tests, so open
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`vcpkg-test/strings.cpp`, and add the following at the bottom:
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```cpp
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#if defined(CATCH_CONFIG_ENABLE_BENCHMARKING)
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TEST_CASE ("case insensitive ascii equals: benchmark", "[strings][!benchmark]")
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{
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BENCHMARK("qwertyuiop") {
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return vcpkg::Strings::case_insensitive_ascii_equals("qwertyuiop", "QWERTYUIOP");
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};
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}
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#endif
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```
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Remember the `;` at the end of the benchmark -- it's not required for
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`TEST_CASE`s, but is for `BENCHMARK`s.
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Now, let's rebuild and run:
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```sh
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$ cmake --build toolsrc/out
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[0/2] Re-checking globbed directories...
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[2/2] Linking CXX executable vcpkg-test.exe
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$ ./toolsrc/out/vcpkg-test [strings][!benchmark]
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Filters: [strings][!benchmark]
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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vcpkg-test.exe is a Catch v2.9.1 host application.
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Run with -? for options
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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case insensitive ascii equals: benchmark
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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C:\Users\t-nimaz\src\vcpkg\toolsrc\src\vcpkg-test\strings.cpp(36)
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...............................................................................
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benchmark name samples iterations estimated
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mean low mean high mean
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std dev low std dev high std dev
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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qwertyuiop 100 2088 3.9672 ms
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25 ns 24 ns 26 ns
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6 ns 5 ns 8 ns
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===============================================================================
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test cases: 1 | 1 passed
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assertions: - none -
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```
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You've now written your first benchmark!
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But wait. This seems kind of silly. Benchmarking the comparison of literal
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strings is great and all, but could we make it a little more realistic?
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This is where `BENCHMARK_ADVANCED` comes in. `BENCHMARK_ADVANCED` allows one to
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write a benchmark that has a little setup to it without screwing up the numbers.
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Let's try it now:
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```cpp
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TEST_CASE ("case insensitive ascii equals: benchmark", "[strings][!benchmark]")
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{
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BENCHMARK_ADVANCED("equal strings")(Catch::Benchmark::Chronometer meter)
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{
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std::vector<std::string> strings;
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strings.resize(meter.runs());
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std::mt19937_64 urbg;
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std::uniform_int_distribution<std::uint64_t> data_generator;
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std::generate(strings.begin(), strings.end(), [&] {
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std::string result;
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for (std::size_t i = 0; i < 1000; ++i)
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{
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result += vcpkg::Strings::b32_encode(data_generator(urbg));
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}
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return result;
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});
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meter.measure(
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[&](int run) { return vcpkg::Strings::case_insensitive_ascii_equals(strings[run], strings[run]); });
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};
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}
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```
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Then, run it again!
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```sh
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$ cmake --build toolsrc/out
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[0/2] Re-checking globbed directories...
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[2/2] Linking CXX executable vcpkg-test.exe
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$ toolsrc/out/vcpkg-test [strings][!benchmark]
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Filters: [strings][!benchmark]
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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vcpkg-test.exe is a Catch v2.9.1 host application.
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Run with -? for options
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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case insensitive ascii equals: benchmark
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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C:\Users\t-nimaz\src\vcpkg\toolsrc\src\vcpkg-test\strings.cpp(36)
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...............................................................................
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benchmark name samples iterations estimated
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mean low mean high mean
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std dev low std dev high std dev
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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equal strings 100 2 5.4806 ms
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22.098 us 21.569 us 23.295 us
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3.842 us 2.115 us 7.41 us
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===============================================================================
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test cases: 1 | 1 passed
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assertions: - none -
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```
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And now you have a working benchmark to test the speed of the existing code, and
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of new code!
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If you're writing a lot of benchmarks that follow the same sort of pattern, with
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some differences in constants, look into `vcpkg-test/files.cpp`'s benchmarks --
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there are a lot of things one can do to make writing new benchmarks really easy.
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If you wish to add a benchmark for a piece of code that has not yet been tested,
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please read the [testing documentation], and please write some unit tests.
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The speed of your code isn't very important if it doesn't work at all!
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[benchmarking documentation]: https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/blob/master/docs/benchmarks.md#top
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[testing documentation]: ./testing.md#adding-new-test-files
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