glibc/benchtests/Makefile

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# Copyright (C) 2013-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# This file is part of the GNU C Library.
# The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
# License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
# version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
# The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
# Lesser General Public License for more details.
# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
# License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
# <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# Makefile for benchmark tests. The only useful target here is `bench`.
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# Add benchmark functions in alphabetical order.
subdir := benchtests
Consistently include Makeconfig after defining subdir. In <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00196.html> I noted it was necessary to add includes of Makeconfig early in various subdirectory makefiles for the tests-special variable settings added by that patch to be conditional on configuration information. No-one commented on the general question there of whether Makeconfig should always be included immediately after the definition of subdir. This patch implements that early inclusion of Makeconfig in each directory (which is a lot easier than consistent placement of includes of Rules). Includes are added if needed, or moved up if already present. Subdirectory "all:" targets are removed, since Makeconfig provides one. There is potential for further cleanups I haven't done. Rules and Makerules have code such as ifneq "$(findstring env,$(origin headers))" "" headers := endif to override to empty any value of various variables that came from the environment. I think there is a case for Makeconfig setting all the subdirectory variables (other than subdir) to empty to ensure no outside value is going to take effect if a subdirectory fails to define a variable. (A list of such variables, possibly out of date and incomplete, is in manual/maint.texi.) Rules and Makerules would give errors if Makeconfig hadn't already been included, instead of including it themselves. The special code to override values coming from the environment would then be obsolete and could be removed. Tested x86_64, including that installed binaries are identical before and after the patch. * argp/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * assert/Makefile: Likewise. * benchtests/Makefile: Likewise. * catgets/Makefile: Likewise. * conform/Makefile: Likewise. * crypt/Makefile: Likewise. * csu/Makefile: Likewise. (all): Remove target. * ctype/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * debug/Makefile: Likewise. * dirent/Makefile: Likewise. * dlfcn/Makefile: Likewise. * gmon/Makefile: Likewise. * gnulib/Makefile: Likewise. * grp/Makefile: Likewise. * gshadow/Makefile: Likewise. * hesiod/Makefile: Likewise. * hurd/Makefile: Likewise. (all): Remove target. * iconvdata/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * inet/Makefile: Likewise. * intl/Makefile: Likewise. * io/Makefile: Likewise. * libio/Makefile: Likewise. (all): Remove target. * locale/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * login/Makefile: Likewise. * mach/Makefile: Likewise. (all): Remove target. * malloc/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. (all): Remove target. * manual/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * math/Makefile: Likewise. * misc/Makefile: Likewise. * nis/Makefile: Likewise. * nss/Makefile: Likewise. * po/Makefile: Likewise. (all): Remove target. * posix/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * pwd/Makefile: Likewise. * resolv/Makefile: Likewise. * resource/Makefile: Likewise. * rt/Makefile: Likewise. * setjmp/Makefile: Likewise. * shadow/Makefile: Likewise. * signal/Makefile: Likewise. * socket/Makefile: Likewise. * soft-fp/Makefile: Likewise. * stdio-common/Makefile: Likewise. * stdlib/Makefile: Likewise. * streams/Makefile: Likewise. * string/Makefile: Likewise. * sunrpc/Makefile: Likewise. (all): Remove target. * sysvipc/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * termios/Makefile: Likewise. * time/Makefile: Likewise. * timezone/Makefile: Likewise. (all): Remove target. * wcsmbs/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. * wctype/Makefile: Likewise. libidn/ChangeLog: * Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. localedata/ChangeLog: * Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. (all): Remove target. nptl/ChangeLog: * Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir. nptl_db/ChangeLog: * Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir.
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include ../Makeconfig
bench-math := acos acosh asin asinh atan atanh cos cosh exp exp2 log log2 \
modf pow rint sin sincos sinh sqrt tan tanh fmin fmax fminf \
fmaxf powf trunc truncf expf exp2f logf log2f sincosf sinf \
cosf
nptl: Invert the mmap/mprotect logic on allocated stacks (BZ#18988) Current allocate_stack logic for create stacks is to first mmap all the required memory with the desirable memory and then mprotect the guard area with PROT_NONE if required. Although it works as expected, it pessimizes the allocation because it requires the kernel to actually increase commit charge (it counts against the available physical/swap memory available for the system). The only issue is to actually check this change since side-effects are really Linux specific and to actually account them it would require a kernel specific tests to parse the system wide information. On the kernel I checked /proc/self/statm does not show any meaningful difference for vmm and/or rss before and after thread creation. I could only see really meaningful information checking on system wide /proc/meminfo between thread creation: MemFree, MemAvailable, and Committed_AS shows large difference without the patch. I think trying to use these kind of information on a testcase is fragile. The BZ#18988 reports shows that the commit pages are easily seen with mlockall (MCL_FUTURE) (with lock all pages that become mapped in the process) however a more straighfoward testcase shows that pthread_create could be faster using this patch: -- static const int inner_count = 256; static const int outer_count = 128; static void *thread1(void *arg) { return NULL; } static void *sleeper(void *arg) { pthread_t ts[inner_count]; for (int i = 0; i < inner_count; i++) pthread_create (&ts[i], &a, thread1, NULL); for (int i = 0; i < inner_count; i++) pthread_join (ts[i], NULL); return NULL; } int main(void) { pthread_attr_init(&a); pthread_attr_setguardsize(&a, 1<<20); pthread_attr_setstacksize(&a, 1134592); pthread_t ts[outer_count]; for (int i = 0; i < outer_count; i++) pthread_create(&ts[i], &a, sleeper, NULL); for (int i = 0; i < outer_count; i++) pthread_join(ts[i], NULL); assert(r == 0); } return 0; } -- On x86_64 (4.4.0-45-generic, gcc 5.4.0) running the small benchtests I see: $ time ./test real 0m3.647s user 0m0.080s sys 0m11.836s While with the patch I see: $ time ./test real 0m0.696s user 0m0.040s sys 0m1.152s So I added a pthread_create benchtest (thread_create) which check the thread creation latency. As for the simple benchtests, I saw improvements in thread creation on all architectures I tested the change. Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, aarch64-linux-gnu, arm-linux-gnueabihf, powerpc64le-linux-gnu, sparc64-linux-gnu, and sparcv9-linux-gnu. [BZ #18988] * benchtests/thread_create-inputs: New file. * benchtests/thread_create-source.c: Likewise. * support/xpthread_attr_setguardsize.c: Likewise. * support/Makefile (libsupport-routines): Add xpthread_attr_setguardsize object. * support/xthread.h: Add xpthread_attr_setguardsize prototype. * benchtests/Makefile (bench-pthread): Add thread_create. * nptl/allocatestack.c (allocate_stack): Call mmap with PROT_NONE and then mprotect the required area.
2017-01-31 20:01:59 +00:00
bench-pthread := pthread_once thread_create
bench-string := ffs ffsll
ifeq (${BENCHSET},)
bench := $(bench-math) $(bench-pthread) $(bench-string)
else
bench := $(foreach B,$(filter bench-%,${BENCHSET}), ${${B}})
endif
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# String function benchmarks.
string-benchset := bcopy bzero memccpy memchr memcmp memcpy memmem memmove \
mempcpy memset rawmemchr stpcpy stpncpy strcasecmp strcasestr \
strcat strchr strchrnul strcmp strcpy strcspn strlen \
strncasecmp strncat strncmp strncpy strnlen strpbrk strrchr \
strspn strstr strcpy_chk stpcpy_chk memrchr strsep strtok \
strcoll memcpy-large memcpy-random memmove-large memset-large \
memcpy-walk memset-walk memmove-walk
# Build and run locale-dependent benchmarks only if we're building natively.
ifeq (no,$(cross-compiling))
wcsmbs-benchset := wcslen wcsnlen wcscpy wcpcpy wcsncpy wcpncpy wcscat wcsncat \
wcscmp wcsncmp wcschr wcschrnul wcsrchr wcsspn wcspbrk wcscspn \
wmemchr wmemset wmemcmp
else
wcsmbs-benchset :=
endif
string-benchset-all := $(string-benchset) ${wcsmbs-benchset}
ifeq (no,$(cross-compiling))
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# We have to generate locales
LOCALES := en_US.UTF-8 tr_TR.UTF-8 cs_CZ.UTF-8 fa_IR.UTF-8 fr_FR.UTF-8 \
ja_JP.UTF-8 si_LK.UTF-8 en_GB.UTF-8 vi_VN.UTF-8 ar_SA.UTF-8 \
da_DK.UTF-8 pl_PL.UTF-8 pt_PT.UTF-8 el_GR.UTF-8 ru_RU.UTF-8 \
he_IL.UTF-8 is_IS.UTF-8 es_ES.UTF-8 hi_IN.UTF-8 sv_SE.UTF-8 \
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hu_HU.UTF-8 it_IT.UTF-8 sr_RS.UTF-8 zh_CN.UTF-8
include ../gen-locales.mk
endif
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stdlib-benchset := strtod
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stdio-common-benchset := sprintf
math-benchset := math-inlines
ifeq (${BENCHSET},)
benchset := $(string-benchset-all) $(stdlib-benchset) $(stdio-common-benchset) \
$(math-benchset)
else
benchset := $(foreach B,$(filter %-benchset,${BENCHSET}), ${${B}})
endif
CFLAGS-bench-ffs.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-ffsll.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-sqrt.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-fmin.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-fminf.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-fmax.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-fmaxf.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-trunc.c += -fno-builtin
CFLAGS-bench-truncf.c += -fno-builtin
ifeq (${BENCHSET},)
bench-malloc := malloc-thread
else
bench-malloc := $(filter malloc-%,${BENCHSET})
endif
Use existing makefile variables for dependencies on glibc libraries. glibc's Makeconfig defines some variables such as $(libm) and $(libdl) for linking with libraries built by glibc, and nptl/Makeconfig (included by the toplevel Makeconfig) defines others such as $(shared-thread-library). In some places glibc's Makefiles use those variables when linking against the relevant libraries, but in other places they hardcode the location of the libraries in the build tree. This patch cleans up various places to use the variables that already exist (in the case of libm, replacing several duplicate definitions of a $(link-libm) variable in subdirectory Makefiles). (It's not necessarily exactly equivalent to what the existing code does - in particular, $(shared-thread-library) includes libpthread_nonshared, but is replacing places that just referred to libpthread.so. But I think that change is desirable on the general principle of linking things as close as possible to the way in which they would be linked with an installed library, unless there is a clear reason not to do so.) To support running tests with an installed copy of glibc without needing the full build tree from when that copy was built, I think it will be useful to use such variables more generally and systematically - every time the rules for building a test refer to some file from the build tree that's also installed by glibc, use a makefile variable so that the installed-testing case can point those variables to installed copies of the files. This patch just deals with straightforward cases where such variables already exist. It's quite possible some uses of $(shared-thread-library) should actually be a new $(thread-library) variable that's set appropriately in the --disable-shared case, if those uses would in fact work without shared libraries. I didn't change the status quo that those cases hardcode use of a shared library whether or not it's actually needed (but other uses such as $(libm) and $(libdl) would now get the static library if the shared library isn't built, when some previously hardcoded use of the shared library - if they actually need shared libraries, the test itself needs an enable-shared conditional anyway). Tested x86_64. * benchtests/Makefile ($(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-math))): Depend on $(libm), not $(common-objpfx)math/libm.so. ($(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-pthread))): Depend on $(shared-thread-library), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so. * elf/Makefile ($(objpfx)noload): Depend on $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so. ($(objpfx)tst-audit8): Depend on $(libm), not $(common-objpfx)math/libm.so. * malloc/Makefile ($(objpfx)libmemusage.so): Depend on $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so. * math/Makefile ($(addprefix $(objpfx),$(filter-out $(tests-static),$(tests)))): Depend on $(libm), not $(objpfx)libm.so. Do not condition on [$(build-shared) = yes]. ($(objpfx)test-fenv-tls): Depend on $(shared-thread-library), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so. * misc/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-tsearch): Depend on $(libm), not $(common-objpfx)math/libm.so$(libm.so-version) or $(common-objpfx)math/libm.a depending on [$(build-shared) = yes]. * nptl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-unload): Depend on $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so. * setjmp/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable. ($(objpfx)tst-setjmp-fp): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm). * stdio-common/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable. ($(objpfx)tst-printf-round): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm). * stdlib/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable. ($(objpfx)bug-getcontext): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm). ($(objpfx)tst-strtod-round): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-tininess): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-strtod-underflow): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-strtod6): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-tls-atexit): Depend on $(shared-thread-library) and $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so and $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so.
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$(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-math)): $(libm)
$(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(math-benchset)): $(libm)
Use existing makefile variables for dependencies on glibc libraries. glibc's Makeconfig defines some variables such as $(libm) and $(libdl) for linking with libraries built by glibc, and nptl/Makeconfig (included by the toplevel Makeconfig) defines others such as $(shared-thread-library). In some places glibc's Makefiles use those variables when linking against the relevant libraries, but in other places they hardcode the location of the libraries in the build tree. This patch cleans up various places to use the variables that already exist (in the case of libm, replacing several duplicate definitions of a $(link-libm) variable in subdirectory Makefiles). (It's not necessarily exactly equivalent to what the existing code does - in particular, $(shared-thread-library) includes libpthread_nonshared, but is replacing places that just referred to libpthread.so. But I think that change is desirable on the general principle of linking things as close as possible to the way in which they would be linked with an installed library, unless there is a clear reason not to do so.) To support running tests with an installed copy of glibc without needing the full build tree from when that copy was built, I think it will be useful to use such variables more generally and systematically - every time the rules for building a test refer to some file from the build tree that's also installed by glibc, use a makefile variable so that the installed-testing case can point those variables to installed copies of the files. This patch just deals with straightforward cases where such variables already exist. It's quite possible some uses of $(shared-thread-library) should actually be a new $(thread-library) variable that's set appropriately in the --disable-shared case, if those uses would in fact work without shared libraries. I didn't change the status quo that those cases hardcode use of a shared library whether or not it's actually needed (but other uses such as $(libm) and $(libdl) would now get the static library if the shared library isn't built, when some previously hardcoded use of the shared library - if they actually need shared libraries, the test itself needs an enable-shared conditional anyway). Tested x86_64. * benchtests/Makefile ($(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-math))): Depend on $(libm), not $(common-objpfx)math/libm.so. ($(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-pthread))): Depend on $(shared-thread-library), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so. * elf/Makefile ($(objpfx)noload): Depend on $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so. ($(objpfx)tst-audit8): Depend on $(libm), not $(common-objpfx)math/libm.so. * malloc/Makefile ($(objpfx)libmemusage.so): Depend on $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so. * math/Makefile ($(addprefix $(objpfx),$(filter-out $(tests-static),$(tests)))): Depend on $(libm), not $(objpfx)libm.so. Do not condition on [$(build-shared) = yes]. ($(objpfx)test-fenv-tls): Depend on $(shared-thread-library), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so. * misc/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-tsearch): Depend on $(libm), not $(common-objpfx)math/libm.so$(libm.so-version) or $(common-objpfx)math/libm.a depending on [$(build-shared) = yes]. * nptl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-unload): Depend on $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so. * setjmp/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable. ($(objpfx)tst-setjmp-fp): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm). * stdio-common/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable. ($(objpfx)tst-printf-round): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm). * stdlib/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable. ($(objpfx)bug-getcontext): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm). ($(objpfx)tst-strtod-round): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-tininess): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-strtod-underflow): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-strtod6): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-tls-atexit): Depend on $(shared-thread-library) and $(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so and $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so.
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$(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-pthread)): $(shared-thread-library)
$(objpfx)bench-malloc-thread: $(shared-thread-library)
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# Rules to build and execute the benchmarks. Do not put any benchmark
# parameters beyond this point.
# We don't want the benchmark programs to run in parallel since that could
# affect their performance.
.NOTPARALLEL:
bench-extra-objs = json-lib.o
extra-objs += $(bench-extra-objs)
others-extras = $(bench-extra-objs)
include ../Rules
binaries-bench := $(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench))
binaries-benchset := $(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(benchset))
binaries-bench-malloc := $(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-malloc))
# The default duration: 10 seconds.
ifndef BENCH_DURATION
BENCH_DURATION := 10
endif
CPPFLAGS-nonlib += -DDURATION=$(BENCH_DURATION) -D_ISOMAC
# Use clock_gettime to measure performance of functions. The default is to use
# HP_TIMING if it is available.
ifdef USE_CLOCK_GETTIME
CPPFLAGS-nonlib += -DUSE_CLOCK_GETTIME
else
# On x86 processors, use RDTSCP, instead of RDTSC, to measure performance
# of functions. All x86 processors since 2010 support RDTSCP instruction.
ifdef USE_RDTSCP
CPPFLAGS-nonlib += -DUSE_RDTSCP
endif
endif
DETAILED_OPT :=
ifdef DETAILED
DETAILED_OPT := -d
endif
# This makes sure CPPFLAGS-nonlib and CFLAGS-nonlib are passed
# for all these modules.
cpp-srcs-left := $(binaries-benchset:=.c) $(binaries-bench:=.c) \
$(binaries-bench-malloc:=.c)
lib := nonlib
include $(patsubst %,$(..)libof-iterator.mk,$(cpp-srcs-left))
bench-deps := bench-skeleton.c bench-timing.h Makefile
run-bench = $(test-wrapper-env) \
Don't require test wrappers to preserve environment variables, use more consistent environment. One wart in the original support for test wrappers for cross testing, as noted in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-10/msg00722.html>, is the requirement for test wrappers to pass a poorly-defined set of environment variables from the build system to the system running the glibc under test. Although some variables are passed explicitly via $(test-wrapper-env), including LD_* variables that simply can't be passed implicitly because of the side effects they'd have on the build system's dynamic linker, others are passed implicitly, including variables such as GCONV_PATH and LOCPATH that could potentially affect the build system's libc (so effectively relying on any such effects not breaking the wrappers). In addition, the code in cross-test-ssh.sh for preserving environment variables is fragile (it depends on how bash formats a list of exported variables, and could well break for multi-line variable definitions where the contents contain things looking like other variable definitions). This patch moves to explicitly passing environment variables via $(test-wrapper-env). Makefile variables that previously used $(test-wrapper) are split up into -before-env and -after-env parts that can be passed separately to the various .sh files used in testing, so those files can then insert environment settings between the two parts. The common default environment settings in make-test-out are made into a separate makefile variable that can also be passed to scripts, rather than many scripts duplicating those settings (for testing an installed glibc, it is desirable to have the GCONV_PATH setting on just one place, so just that one place needs to support it pointing to an installed sysroot instead of the build tree). The default settings are included in the variables such as $(test-program-prefix), so that if tests do not need any non-default settings they can continue to use single variables rather than the split-up variables. Although this patch cleans up LC_ALL=C settings (that being part of the common defaults), various LANG=C and LANGUAGE=C settings remain. Those are generally unnecessary and I propose a subsequent cleanup to remove them. LC_ALL takes precedence over LANG, and while LANGUAGE takes precedence over LC_ALL, it only does so for settings other than LC_ALL=C. So LC_ALL=C on its own is sufficient to ensure the C locale, and anything that gets LC_ALL=C does not need the other settings. While preparing this patch I noticed some tests with .sh files that appeared to do nothing beyond what the generic makefile support for tests can do (localedata/tst-wctype.sh - the makefiles support -ENV variables and .input files - and localedata/tst-mbswcs.sh - just runs five tests that could be run individually from the makefile). So I propose another subsequent cleanup to move those to using the generic support instead of special .sh files. Tested x86_64 (native) and powerpc32 (cross). * Makeconfig (run-program-env): New variable. (run-program-prefix-before-env): Likewise. (run-program-prefix-after-env): Likewise. (run-program-prefix): Define in terms of new variables. (built-program-cmd-before-env): New variable. (built-program-cmd-after-env): Likewise. (built-program-cmd): Define in terms of new variables. (test-program-prefix-before-env): New variable. (test-program-prefix-after-env): Likewise. (test-program-prefix): Define in terms of new variables. (test-program-cmd-before-env): New variable. (test-program-cmd-after-env): Likewise. (test-program-cmd): Define in terms of new variables. * Rules (make-test-out): Use $(run-program-env). * scripts/cross-test-ssh.sh (env_blacklist): Remove variable. (help): Do not mention environment variables. Mention --timeoutfactor option. (timeoutfactor): New variable. (blacklist_exports): Remove function. (exports): Remove variable. (command): Do not include ${exports}. * manual/install.texi (Configuring and compiling): Do not mention test wrappers preserving environment variables. Mention that last assignment to a variable must take precedence. * INSTALL: Regenerated. * benchtests/Makefile (run-bench): Use $(run-program-env). * catgets/Makefile ($(objpfx)test1.cat): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)test2.cat): Do not specify environment variables explicitly. ($(objpfx)de/libc.cat): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)test-gencat.out): Use $(test-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)sample.SJIS.cat): Do not specify environment variables explicitly. * catgets/test-gencat.sh: Use test_program_cmd_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_cmd_after_env arguments. * elf/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-pathopt.out): Use $(run-program-env). * elf/tst-pathopt.sh: Use run_program_env argument. * iconvdata/Makefile ($(objpfx)iconv-test.out): Use $(test-wrapper-env) and $(run-program-env). * iconvdata/run-iconv-test.sh: Use test_wrapper_env and run_program_env arguments. * iconvdata/tst-table.sh: Do not set GCONV_PATH explicitly. * intl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-gettext.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-gettext2.out): Likewise. * intl/tst-gettext.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * intl/tst-gettext2.sh: Likewise. * intl/tst-gettext4.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * intl/tst-gettext6.sh: Likewise. * intl/tst-translit.sh: Likewise. * malloc/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-mtrace.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). * malloc/tst-mtrace.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * math/Makefile (run-regen-ulps): Use $(run-program-env). * nptl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-tls6.out): Use $(run-program-env). * nptl/tst-tls6.sh: Use run_program_env argument. Set LANG=C explicitly with each use of ${test_wrapper_env}. * posix/Makefile ($(objpfx)wordexp-tst.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). * posix/tst-getconf.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * posix/wordexp-tst.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * stdio-common/tst-printf.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * stdlib/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-fmtmsg.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). * stdlib/tst-fmtmsg.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. Split $test calls into $test_pre and $test. * timezone/Makefile (build-testdata): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). localedata/ChangeLog: * Makefile ($(addprefix $(objpfx),$(CTYPE_FILES))): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)sort-test.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-fmon.out): Use $(run-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(run-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-locale.out): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-trans.out): Use $(run-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env), $(run-program-prefix-after-env), $(test-program-prefix-before-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-ctype.out): Use $(test-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and $(test-program-cmd-after-env). ($(objpfx)tst-wctype.out): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-langinfo.out): Likewise. ($(objpfx)tst-langinfo-static.out): Likewise. * gen-locale.sh: Use localedef_before_env, run_program_env and localedef_after_env arguments. * sort-test.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * tst-ctype.sh: Use tst_ctype_before_env, run_program_env and tst_ctype_after_env arguments. * tst-fmon.sh: Use run_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env and run_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * tst-langinfo.sh: Use tst_langinfo_before_env, run_program_env and tst_langinfo_after_env arguments. * tst-locale.sh: Use localedef_before_env, run_program_env and localedef_after_env arguments. * tst-mbswcs.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly. * tst-numeric.sh: Likewise. * tst-rpmatch.sh: Likewise. * tst-trans.sh: Use run_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env, run_program_prefix_after_env, test_program_prefix_before_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments. * tst-wctype.sh: Use tst_wctype_before_env, run_program_env and tst_wctype_after_env arguments.
2014-06-06 22:19:27 +00:00
$(run-program-env) \
$($*-ENV) $(test-via-rtld-prefix) $${run}
timing-type := $(objpfx)bench-timing-type
2013-04-16 08:37:21 +00:00
bench-clean:
rm -f $(binaries-bench) $(addsuffix .o,$(binaries-bench))
rm -f $(binaries-benchset) $(addsuffix .o,$(binaries-benchset))
rm -f $(binaries-bench-malloc) $(addsuffix .o,$(binaries-bench-malloc))
rm -f $(timing-type) $(addsuffix .o,$(timing-type))
rm -f $(addprefix $(objpfx),$(bench-extra-objs))
# Validate the passed in BENCHSET
ifneq ($(strip ${BENCHSET}),)
VALIDBENCHSETNAMES := bench-pthread bench-math bench-string string-benchset \
wcsmbs-benchset stdlib-benchset stdio-common-benchset math-benchset \
malloc-thread
INVALIDBENCHSETNAMES := $(filter-out ${VALIDBENCHSETNAMES},${BENCHSET})
ifneq (${INVALIDBENCHSETNAMES},)
$(info The following values in BENCHSET are invalid: ${INVALIDBENCHSETNAMES})
$(info The valid ones are: ${VALIDBENCHSETNAMES})
$(error Invalid BENCHSET value)
endif
endif
bench: bench-build bench-set bench-func bench-malloc
# Target to only build the benchmark without running it. We generate locales
# only if we're building natively.
ifeq (no,$(cross-compiling))
bench-build: $(gen-locales) $(timing-type) $(binaries-bench) \
$(binaries-benchset) $(binaries-bench-malloc)
else
bench-build: $(timing-type) $(binaries-bench) $(binaries-benchset) \
$(binaries-bench-malloc)
endif
bench-set: $(binaries-benchset)
for run in $^; do \
echo "Running $${run}"; \
$(run-bench) > $${run}.out; \
done
2013-04-16 08:37:21 +00:00
bench-malloc: $(binaries-bench-malloc)
for run in $^; do \
for thr in 1 8 16 32; do \
echo "Running $${run} $${thr}"; \
$(run-bench) $${thr} > $${run}-$${thr}.out; \
done;\
done
# Build and execute the benchmark functions. This target generates JSON
# formatted bench.out. Each of the programs produce independent JSON output,
# so one could even execute them individually and process it using any JSON
# capable language or tool.
bench-func: $(binaries-bench)
if [ -n '$^' ] ; then \
{ timing_type=$$($(timing-type)); \
echo "{\"timing_type\": \"$${timing_type}\","; \
echo " \"functions\": {"; \
for run in $^; do \
if ! [ "x$${run}" = "x$<" ]; then \
echo ","; \
fi; \
echo "Running $${run}" >&2; \
$(run-bench) $(DETAILED_OPT); \
done; \
echo; \
echo " }"; \
echo "}"; \
} > $(objpfx)bench.out-tmp; \
if [ -f $(objpfx)bench.out ]; then \
mv -f $(objpfx)bench.out $(objpfx)bench.out.old; \
fi; \
mv -f $(objpfx)bench.out-tmp $(objpfx)bench.out; \
$(PYTHON) scripts/validate_benchout.py $(objpfx)bench.out \
scripts/benchout.schema.json; \
fi
$(timing-type) $(binaries-bench) $(binaries-benchset) \
$(binaries-bench-malloc): %: %.o $(objpfx)json-lib.o \
$(link-extra-libs-tests) \
$(sort $(filter $(common-objpfx)lib%,$(link-libc))) \
$(addprefix $(csu-objpfx),start.o) $(+preinit) $(+postinit)
$(+link-tests)
$(objpfx)bench-%.c: %-inputs $(bench-deps)
{ if [ -n "$($*-INCLUDE)" ]; then \
cat $($*-INCLUDE); \
fi; \
$(PYTHON) scripts/bench.py $(patsubst %-inputs,%,$<); } > $@-tmp
mv -f $@-tmp $@