# Cargo Benchmarking This directory contains some benchmarks for cargo itself. This uses [Criterion] for running benchmarks. It is recommended to read the Criterion book to get familiar with how to use it. A basic usage would be: ```sh cd benches/benchsuite cargo bench ``` The tests involve downloading the index and benchmarking against some real-world and artificial workspaces located in the [`workspaces`](workspaces) directory. **Beware** that the initial download can take a fairly long amount of time (10 minutes minimum on an extremely fast network) and require significant disk space (around 4.5GB). The benchsuite will cache the index and downloaded crates in the `target/tmp/bench` directory, so subsequent runs should be faster. You can (and probably should) specify individual benchmarks to run to narrow it down to a more reasonable set, for example: ```sh cargo bench -- resolve_ws/rust ``` This will only download what's necessary for the rust-lang/rust workspace (which is about 330MB) and run the benchmarks against it (which should take about a minute). To get a list of all the benchmarks, run: ```sh cargo bench -- --list ``` ## Viewing reports The benchmarks display some basic information on the command-line while they run. A more complete HTML report can be found at `target/criterion/report/index.html` which contains links to all the benchmarks and summaries. Check out the Criterion book for more information on the extensive reporting capabilities. ## Comparing implementations Knowing the raw numbers can be useful, but what you're probably most interested in is checking if your changes help or hurt performance. To do that, you need to run the benchmarks multiple times. First, run the benchmarks from the master branch of cargo without any changes. To make it easier to compare, Criterion supports naming the baseline so that you can iterate on your code and compare against it multiple times. ```sh cargo bench -- --save-baseline master ``` Now you can switch to your branch with your changes. Re-run the benchmarks compared against the baseline: ```sh cargo bench -- --baseline master ``` You can repeat the last command as you make changes to re-compare against the master baseline. Without the baseline arguments, it will compare against the last run, which can be helpful for comparing incremental changes. ## Capturing workspaces The [`workspaces`](workspaces) directory contains several workspaces that provide a variety of different workspaces intended to provide good exercises for benchmarks. Some of these are shadow copies of real-world workspaces. This is done with the tool in the [`capture`](capture) directory. The tool will copy `Cargo.lock` and all of the `Cargo.toml` files of the workspace members. It also adds an empty `lib.rs` so Cargo won't error, and sanitizes the `Cargo.toml` to some degree, removing unwanted elements. Finally, it compresses everything into a `tgz`. To run it, do: ```sh cd benches/capture cargo run -- /path/to/workspace/foo ``` The resolver benchmarks also support the `CARGO_BENCH_WORKSPACES` environment variable, which you can point to a Cargo workspace if you want to try different workspaces. For example: ```sh CARGO_BENCH_WORKSPACES=/path/to/some/workspace cargo bench ``` ## TODO This is just a start for establishing a benchmarking suite for Cargo. There's a lot that can be added. Some ideas: * Fix the benchmarks so that the resolver setup doesn't run every iteration. * Benchmark [this section of code](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/blob/a821e2cb24d7b6013433f069ab3bad53d160e100/src/cargo/ops/cargo_compile.rs#L470-L549) which builds the unit graph. The performance there isn't great, and it would be good to keep an eye on it. Unfortunately that would mean doing a bit of work to make `generate_targets` publicly visible, and there is a bunch of setup code that may need to be duplicated. * Benchmark the fingerprinting code. * Benchmark running the `cargo` executable. Running something like `cargo build` or `cargo check` with everything "Fresh" would be a good end-to-end exercise to measure the overall overhead of Cargo. * Benchmark pathological resolver scenarios. There might be some cases where the resolver can spend a significant amount of time. It would be good to identify if these exist, and create benchmarks for them. This may require creating an artificial index, similar to the `resolver-tests`. This should also consider scenarios where the resolver ultimately fails. * Benchmark without `Cargo.lock`. I'm not sure if this is particularly valuable, since we are mostly concerned with incremental builds which will always have a lock file. * Benchmark just [`resolve::resolve`](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/blob/a821e2cb24d7b6013433f069ab3bad53d160e100/src/cargo/core/resolver/mod.rs#L122) without anything else. This can help focus on just the resolver. [Criterion]: https://bheisler.github.io/criterion.rs/book/