diff options
author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-04 12:47:08 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-04 12:47:08 +0000 |
commit | 29b5ab554790bb57337a3b6ab9dcd963cf69d22e (patch) | |
tree | be1456d2bc6c1fb078695fad7bc8f6b212062d3c /tests/benchmarks/README.md | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | libgit2-upstream/1.7.2+ds.tar.xz libgit2-upstream/1.7.2+ds.zip |
Adding upstream version 1.7.2+ds.upstream/1.7.2+ds
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | tests/benchmarks/README.md | 121 |
1 files changed, 121 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tests/benchmarks/README.md b/tests/benchmarks/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f66b27a --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/benchmarks/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,121 @@ +# libgit2 benchmarks + +This folder contains the individual benchmark tests for libgit2, +meant for understanding the performance characteristics of libgit2, +comparing your development code to the existing libgit2 code, or +comparing libgit2 to the git reference implementation. + +## Running benchmark tests + +Benchmark tests can be run in several different ways: running all +benchmarks, running one (or more) suite of benchmarks, or running a +single individual benchmark. You can target either an individual +version of a CLI, or you can A/B test a baseline CLI against a test +CLI. + +### Specifying the command-line interface to test + +By default, the `git` in your path is benchmarked. Use the +`-c` (or `--cli`) option to specify the command-line interface +to test. + +Example: `libgit2_bench --cli git2_cli` will run the tests against +`git2_cli`. + +### Running tests to compare two different implementations + +You can compare a baseline command-line interface against a test +command-line interface using the `-b (or `--baseline-cli`) option. + +Example: `libgit2_bench --baseline-cli git --cli git2_cli` will +run the tests against both `git` and `git2_cli`. + +### Running individual benchmark tests + +Similar to how a test suite or individual test is specified in +[clar](https://github.com/clar-test/clar), the `-s` (or `--suite`) +option may be used to specify the suite or individual test to run. +Like clar, the suite and test name are separated by `::`, and like +clar, this is a prefix match. + +Examples: +* `libgit2_bench -shash_object` will run the tests in the + `hash_object` suite. +* `libgit2_bench -shash_object::random_1kb` will run the + `hash_object::random_1kb` test. +* `libgit2_bench -shash_object::random` will run all the tests that + begin with `hash_object::random`. + +## Writing benchmark tests + +Benchmark tests are meant to be easy to write. Each individual +benchmark is a shell script that allows it to do set up (eg, creating +or cloning a repository, creating temporary files, etc), then running +benchmarks, then teardown. + +The `benchmark_helpers.sh` script provides many helpful utility +functions to allow for cross-platform benchmarking, as well as a +wrapper for `hyperfine` that is suited to testing libgit2. +Note that the helper script must be included first, at the beginning +of the benchmark test. + +### Benchmark example + +This simplistic example compares the speed of running the `git help` +command in the baseline CLI to the test CLI. + +```bash +#!/bin/bash -e + +# include the benchmark library +. "$(dirname "$0")/benchmark_helpers.sh" + +# run the "help" command; this will benchmark `git2_cli help` +gitbench help +``` + +### Naming + +The filename of the benchmark itself is important. A benchmark's +filename should be the name of the benchmark suite, followed by two +underscores, followed by the name of the benchmark. For example, +`hash-object__random_1kb` is the `random_1kb` test in the `hash-object` +suite. + +### Options + +The `gitbench` function accepts several options. + +* `--sandbox <path>` + The name of a test resource (in the `tests/resources` directory). + This will be copied as-is to the sandbox location before test + execution. This is copied _before_ the `prepare` script is run. + This option may be specified multiple times. +* `--repository <path>` + The name of a test resource repository (in the `tests/resources` + directory). This repository will be copied into a sandbox location + before test execution, and your test will run in this directory. + This is copied _before_ the `prepare` script is run. +* `--prepare <script>` + A script to run before each invocation of the test is run. This can + set up data for the test that will _not_ be timed. This script is run + in bash on all platforms. + + Several helper functions are available within the context of a prepare + script: + + * `flush_disk_cache` + Calling this will flush the disk cache before each test run. + This should probably be run at the end of the `prepare` script. + * `create_random_file <path> [<size>]` + Calling this will populate a file at the given `path` with `size` + bytes of random data. + * `create_text_file <path> [<size>]` + Calling this will populate a file at the given `path` with `size` + bytes of predictable text, with the platform line endings. This + is preferred over random data as it's reproducible. + +* `--warmup <n>` + Specifies that the test should run `n` times before actually measuring + the timing; useful for "warming up" a cache. + |