| // Support for registering benchmarks for functions. |
| |
| /* 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_t(state.iterations) * int64(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(); |
| 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(4); |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef BENCHMARK_BENCHMARK_API_H_ |
| #define BENCHMARK_BENCHMARK_API_H_ |
| |
| #include <assert.h> |
| #include <stddef.h> |
| #include <stdint.h> |
| |
| #include "macros.h" |
| |
| namespace benchmark { |
| class BenchmarkReporter; |
| |
| void Initialize(int* argc, const char** argv); |
| |
| // Otherwise, run all benchmarks specified by the --benchmark_filter flag, |
| // and exit after running the benchmarks. |
| void RunSpecifiedBenchmarks(); |
| void RunSpecifiedBenchmarks(BenchmarkReporter* reporter); |
| |
| // If this routine is called, peak memory allocation past this point in the |
| // benchmark is reported at the end of the benchmark report line. (It is |
| // computed by running the benchmark once with a single iteration and a memory |
| // tracer.) |
| // TODO(dominic) |
| // void MemoryUsage(); |
| |
| namespace internal { |
| class Benchmark; |
| class BenchmarkImp; |
| |
| template <class T> struct Voider { |
| typedef void type; |
| }; |
| |
| template <class T, class = void> |
| struct EnableIfString {}; |
| |
| template <class T> |
| struct EnableIfString<T, typename Voider<typename T::basic_string>::type> { |
| typedef int type; |
| }; |
| |
| } // end namespace internal |
| |
| // State is passed to a running Benchmark and contains state for the |
| // benchmark to use. |
| class State { |
| public: |
| State(size_t max_iters, bool has_x, int x, bool has_y, int y, int thread_i); |
| |
| // Returns true iff the benchmark should continue through another iteration. |
| // NOTE: A benchmark may not return from the test until KeepRunning() has |
| // returned false. |
| bool KeepRunning() { |
| if (BENCHMARK_BUILTIN_EXPECT(!started_, false)) { |
| ResumeTiming(); |
| started_ = true; |
| } |
| bool const res = total_iterations_++ < max_iterations; |
| if (BENCHMARK_BUILTIN_EXPECT(!res, false)) { |
| assert(started_); |
| PauseTiming(); |
| // Total iterations now is one greater than max iterations. Fix this. |
| total_iterations_ = max_iterations; |
| } |
| return res; |
| } |
| |
| // REQUIRES: timer is running |
| // Stop the benchmark timer. If not called, the timer will be |
| // automatically stopped after KeepRunning() returns false for the first time. |
| // |
| // For threaded benchmarks the PauseTiming() function acts |
| // like a barrier. I.e., the ith call by a particular thread to this |
| // function will block until all threads have made their ith call. |
| // The timer will stop when the last thread has called this function. |
| // |
| // NOTE: PauseTiming()/ResumeTiming() are relatively |
| // heavyweight, and so their use should generally be avoided |
| // within each benchmark iteration, if possible. |
| void PauseTiming(); |
| |
| // REQUIRES: timer is not running |
| // Start the benchmark timer. The timer is NOT running on entrance to the |
| // benchmark function. It begins running after the first call to KeepRunning() |
| // |
| // For threaded benchmarks the ResumeTiming() function acts |
| // like a barrier. I.e., the ith call by a particular thread to this |
| // function will block until all threads have made their ith call. |
| // The timer will start when the last thread has called this function. |
| // |
| // NOTE: PauseTiming()/ResumeTiming() are relatively |
| // heavyweight, and so their use should generally be avoided |
| // within each benchmark iteration, if possible. |
| void ResumeTiming(); |
| |
| // If a particular benchmark is I/O bound, or if for some reason CPU |
| // timings are not representative, call this method from within the |
| // benchmark routine. If called, the elapsed time will be used to |
| // control how many iterations are run, and in the printing of |
| // items/second or MB/seconds values. If not called, the cpu time |
| // used by the benchmark will be used. |
| void UseRealTime(); |
| |
| // Set the number of bytes processed by the current benchmark |
| // execution. This routine is typically called once at the end of a |
| // throughput oriented benchmark. If this routine is called with a |
| // value > 0, the report is printed in MB/sec instead of nanoseconds |
| // per iteration. |
| // |
| // REQUIRES: a benchmark has exited its KeepRunning loop. |
| BENCHMARK_ALWAYS_INLINE |
| void SetBytesProcessed(size_t bytes) { |
| bytes_processed_ = bytes; |
| } |
| |
| BENCHMARK_ALWAYS_INLINE |
| size_t bytes_processed() const { |
| return bytes_processed_; |
| } |
| |
| // If this routine is called with items > 0, then an items/s |
| // label is printed on the benchmark report line for the currently |
| // executing benchmark. It is typically called at the end of a processing |
| // benchmark where a processing items/second output is desired. |
| // |
| // REQUIRES: a benchmark has exited its KeepRunning loop. |
| BENCHMARK_ALWAYS_INLINE |
| void SetItemsProcessed(size_t items) { |
| items_processed_ = items; |
| } |
| |
| BENCHMARK_ALWAYS_INLINE |
| size_t items_processed() const { |
| return items_processed_; |
| } |
| |
| // If this routine is called, the specified label is printed at the |
| // end of the benchmark report line for the currently executing |
| // benchmark. Example: |
| // static void BM_Compress(int iters) { |
| // ... |
| // double compress = input_size / output_size; |
| // benchmark::SetLabel(StringPrintf("compress:%.1f%%", 100.0*compression)); |
| // } |
| // Produces output that looks like: |
| // BM_Compress 50 50 14115038 compress:27.3% |
| // |
| // REQUIRES: a benchmark has exited its KeepRunning loop. |
| void SetLabel(const char* label); |
| |
| // Allow the use of std::string without actually including <string>. |
| // This function does not participate in overload resolution unless StringType |
| // has the nested typename `basic_string`. This typename should be provided |
| // as an injected class name in the case of std::string. |
| template <class StringType> |
| void SetLabel(StringType const & str, |
| typename internal::EnableIfString<StringType>::type = 1) { |
| this->SetLabel(str.c_str()); |
| } |
| |
| // Range arguments for this run. CHECKs if the argument has been set. |
| BENCHMARK_ALWAYS_INLINE |
| int range_x() const { |
| assert(has_range_x_); |
| ((void)has_range_x_); // Prevent unused warning. |
| return range_x_; |
| } |
| |
| BENCHMARK_ALWAYS_INLINE |
| int range_y() const { |
| assert(has_range_y_); |
| ((void)has_range_y_); // Prevent unused warning. |
| return range_y_; |
| } |
| |
| BENCHMARK_ALWAYS_INLINE |
| size_t iterations() const { return total_iterations_; } |
| |
| private: |
| bool started_; |
| size_t total_iterations_; |
| |
| bool has_range_x_; |
| int range_x_; |
| |
| bool has_range_y_; |
| int range_y_; |
| |
| size_t bytes_processed_; |
| size_t items_processed_; |
| |
| public: |
| const int thread_index; |
| const size_t max_iterations; |
| |
| private: |
| BENCHMARK_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(State); |
| }; |
| |
| namespace internal { |
| |
| typedef void(Function)(State&); |
| |
| // ------------------------------------------------------ |
| // Benchmark registration object. The BENCHMARK() macro expands |
| // into an internal::Benchmark* object. Various methods can |
| // be called on this object to change the properties of the benchmark. |
| // Each method returns "this" so that multiple method calls can |
| // chained into one expression. |
| class Benchmark { |
| public: |
| Benchmark(const char* name, Function* f); |
| |
| ~Benchmark(); |
| |
| // Note: the following methods all return "this" so that multiple |
| // method calls can be chained together in one expression. |
| |
| // Run this benchmark once with "x" as the extra argument passed |
| // to the function. |
| // REQUIRES: The function passed to the constructor must accept an arg1. |
| Benchmark* Arg(int x); |
| |
| // Run this benchmark once for a number of values picked from the |
| // range [start..limit]. (start and limit are always picked.) |
| // REQUIRES: The function passed to the constructor must accept an arg1. |
| Benchmark* Range(int start, int limit); |
| |
| // Run this benchmark once for every value in the range [start..limit] |
| // REQUIRES: The function passed to the constructor must accept an arg1. |
| Benchmark* DenseRange(int start, int limit); |
| |
| // Run this benchmark once with "x,y" as the extra arguments passed |
| // to the function. |
| // REQUIRES: The function passed to the constructor must accept arg1,arg2. |
| Benchmark* ArgPair(int x, int y); |
| |
| // Pick a set of values A from the range [lo1..hi1] and a set |
| // of values B from the range [lo2..hi2]. Run the benchmark for |
| // every pair of values in the cartesian product of A and B |
| // (i.e., for all combinations of the values in A and B). |
| // REQUIRES: The function passed to the constructor must accept arg1,arg2. |
| Benchmark* RangePair(int lo1, int hi1, int lo2, int hi2); |
| |
| // Pass this benchmark object to *func, which can customize |
| // the benchmark by calling various methods like Arg, ArgPair, |
| // Threads, etc. |
| Benchmark* Apply(void (*func)(Benchmark* benchmark)); |
| |
| // Support for running multiple copies of the same benchmark concurrently |
| // in multiple threads. This may be useful when measuring the scaling |
| // of some piece of code. |
| |
| // Run one instance of this benchmark concurrently in t threads. |
| Benchmark* Threads(int t); |
| |
| // Pick a set of values T from [min_threads,max_threads]. |
| // min_threads and max_threads are always included in T. Run this |
| // benchmark once for each value in T. The benchmark run for a |
| // particular value t consists of t threads running the benchmark |
| // function concurrently. For example, consider: |
| // BENCHMARK(Foo)->ThreadRange(1,16); |
| // This will run the following benchmarks: |
| // Foo in 1 thread |
| // Foo in 2 threads |
| // Foo in 4 threads |
| // Foo in 8 threads |
| // Foo in 16 threads |
| Benchmark* ThreadRange(int min_threads, int max_threads); |
| |
| // Equivalent to ThreadRange(NumCPUs(), NumCPUs()) |
| Benchmark* ThreadPerCpu(); |
| |
| // Used inside the benchmark implementation |
| struct Instance; |
| |
| private: |
| BenchmarkImp* imp_; |
| BENCHMARK_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Benchmark); |
| }; |
| |
| } // end namespace internal |
| } // end namespace benchmark |
| |
| |
| // ------------------------------------------------------ |
| // Macro to register benchmarks |
| |
| // Helpers for generating unique variable names |
| #define BENCHMARK_CONCAT(a, b, c) BENCHMARK_CONCAT2(a, b, c) |
| #define BENCHMARK_CONCAT2(a, b, c) a##b##c |
| |
| #define BENCHMARK(n) \ |
| static ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark* BENCHMARK_CONCAT( \ |
| _benchmark_, n, __LINE__) BENCHMARK_UNUSED = \ |
| (new ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark(#n, n)) |
| |
| // Old-style macros |
| #define BENCHMARK_WITH_ARG(n, a) BENCHMARK(n)->Arg((a)) |
| #define BENCHMARK_WITH_ARG2(n, a1, a2) BENCHMARK(n)->ArgPair((a1), (a2)) |
| #define BENCHMARK_RANGE(n, lo, hi) BENCHMARK(n)->Range((lo), (hi)) |
| #define BENCHMARK_RANGE2(n, l1, h1, l2, h2) \ |
| BENCHMARK(n)->RangePair((l1), (h1), (l2), (h2)) |
| |
| // This will register a benchmark for a templatized function. For example: |
| // |
| // template<int arg> |
| // void BM_Foo(int iters); |
| // |
| // BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_Foo, 1); |
| // |
| // will register BM_Foo<1> as a benchmark. |
| #define BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE1(n, a) \ |
| static ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark* BENCHMARK_CONCAT( \ |
| _benchmark_, n, __LINE__) BENCHMARK_UNUSED = \ |
| (new ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark(#n "<" #a ">", n<a>)) |
| |
| #define BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE2(n, a, b) \ |
| static ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark* BENCHMARK_CONCAT( \ |
| _benchmark_, n, __LINE__) BENCHMARK_UNUSED = \ |
| (new ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark(#n "<" #a "," #b ">", n<a, b>)) |
| |
| #if __cplusplus >= 201103L |
| #define BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(n, ...) \ |
| static ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark* BENCHMARK_CONCAT( \ |
| _benchmark_, n, __LINE__) BENCHMARK_UNUSED = \ |
| (new ::benchmark::internal::Benchmark( \ |
| #n "<" #__VA_ARGS__ ">", n<__VA_ARGS__>)) |
| #else |
| #define BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(n, a) BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE1(n, a) |
| #endif |
| |
| // Helper macro to create a main routine in a test that runs the benchmarks |
| #define BENCHMARK_MAIN() \ |
| int main(int argc, const char** argv) { \ |
| ::benchmark::Initialize(&argc, argv); \ |
| ::benchmark::RunSpecifiedBenchmarks(); \ |
| } |
| |
| #endif // BENCHMARK_BENCHMARK_API_H_ |