hsbencher
Version 1.5.3 revision 0 uploaded by RyanNewton.
Package meta
- Synopsis
- Flexible benchmark runner for Haskell and non-Haskell benchmarks.
- Description
Benchmark frameworks are usually very specific to the host language/environment. Hence they are usually about as reusable as compiler passes (that is, not).
Nevertheless, hsbencher is an attempt at a reusable benchmark framework. It knows fairly little about what the benchmarks do, and is mostly concerned with defining and iterating through configuration spaces (e.g. varying the number of threads), and managing the data that results.
Benchmark data is stored in simple text files, and optionally uploaded to Google Fusion Tables.
hsbencher attempts to stradle the divide between language-specific and language-agnostic by having an extensible set of BuildMethods. As shipped, hsbencher knows a little about cabal, ghc, and less about Make, but it can be taught more.
The general philosophy is to have benchmarks follow a simple protocol, for example printing out a line "SELFTIMED: 3.3s" if they wish to report their own timing. The focus is on benchmarks that run long enough to run in their own process. This is typical of parallelism benchmarks and different than the fine grained benchmarks that are well supported by Criterion.
hsbencher is used by creating a script or executable that imports HSBencher and provides a list of benchmarks, each of which is decorated with its parameter space. Below is a minimal example that creates a two-configuration parameter space:
import HSBencher main = defaultMainWithBechmarks . [ Benchmark "bench1/bench1.cabal" ["1000"] $ . Or [ Set NoMeaning (RuntimeParam "+RTS -qa -RTS") . , Set NoMeaning (RuntimeEnv "HELLO" "yes") ] ]
The output would appear as in this gist: https://gist.github.com/rrnewton/5667800
More examples can be found here: https://github.com/rrnewton/HSBencher/tree/master/example
ChangesLog:
(1.3.8) Added
--skipto
and--runid
arguments(1.3.4) Added ability to prune benchmarks with patterns on command line.
(1.4.2) Breaking changes, don't use Benchmark constructor directly. Use mkBenchmark.
(1.5) New columns in schema.
- Author
- Ryan Newton
- Bug reports
- n/a
- Category
- Development
- Copyright
- (c) Ryan Newton 2013
- Homepage
- n/a
- Maintainer
- rrnewton@gmail.com
- Package URL
- n/a
- Stability
- n/a