qt5base-lts/tests/benchmarks
David Faure 46ec170d2b Speed up QTimeZone::isTimeZoneIdAvailable by a factor 43
Creating and sorting a list of bytearrays just to check if one entry is
present, is really overkill. By adding a new virtual method
isTimeZoneIdAvailable() in the backend classes, we can do this much more
efficiently.

Implemented for Utc and Tz backends, the others fall back to the
slow way.

The new benchmark shows, in release mode:
Before: 43 msecs per iteration (total: 86, iterations: 2)
After: 1.1 msecs per iteration (total: 73, iterations: 64)

Change-Id: Ic0d79a41d74e2ce6aa088fa7986c41d33902c36b
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
2018-04-23 06:48:12 +00:00
..
corelib Speed up QTimeZone::isTimeZoneIdAvailable by a factor 43 2018-04-23 06:48:12 +00:00
dbus Use dependencies instead of CONFIG+=ordered 2017-12-02 11:09:15 +00:00
gui Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/5.11' into dev 2018-04-12 22:00:35 +02:00
network Benchmarks: tst_tcpserver: Remove unnecessary qprocess include 2018-02-05 07:16:01 +00:00
opengl Updated license headers 2016-01-21 18:55:18 +00:00
plugins/imageformats/jpeg Updated license headers 2016-01-21 18:55:18 +00:00
sql psql: do not try to get table name when PQftable returns InvalidOid 2018-02-22 19:00:08 +00:00
widgets Benchmarks/QGraphicsView: re-enable graphicslayout/graphicslinearlayout 2018-04-04 06:54:39 +00:00
benchmarks.pro Revert "Emit updateBlock signal in QTextDocumentLayout" 2016-07-27 06:46:04 +00:00
README Whitespace cleanup: remove trailing whitespace 2013-03-16 20:22:50 +01:00
trusted-benchmarks.pri

The most reliable way of running benchmarks is to do it in an otherwise idle
system. On a busy system, the results will vary according to the other tasks
demanding attention in the system.

We have managed to obtain quite reliable results by doing the following on
Linux (and you need root):

 - switching the scheduler to a Real-Time mode
 - setting the processor affinity to one single processor
 - disabling the other thread of the same core

This should work rather well for CPU-intensive tasks. A task that is in Real-
Time mode will simply not be preempted by the OS. But if you make OS syscalls,
especially I/O ones, your task will be de-scheduled. Note that this includes
page faults, so if you can, make sure your benchmark's warmup code paths touch
most of the data.

To do this you need a tool called schedtool (package schedtool), from
http://freequaos.host.sk/schedtool/

From this point on, we are using CPU0 for all tasks:

If you have a Hyperthreaded multi-core processor (Core-i5 and Core-i7), you
have to disable the other thread of the same core as CPU0. To discover which
one it is:

$ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/topology/thread_siblings_list

This will print something like 0,4, meaning that CPUs 0 and 4 are sibling
threads on the same core. So we'll turn CPU 4 off:

(as root)
# echo 0 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu4/online

To turn it back on, echo 1 into the same file.

To run a task on CPU 0 exclusively, using FIFO RT priority 10, you run the
following:

(as root)
# schedtool -F -p 10 -a 1 -e ./taskname

For example:
# schedtool -F -p 10 -a 1 -e ./tst_bench_qstring -tickcounter

Warning: if your task livelocks or takes far too long to complete, your system
may be unusable for a long time, especially if you don't have other cores to
run stuff on. To prevent that, run it before schedtool and time it.

You can also limit the CPU time that the task is allowed to take. Run in the
same shell as you'll run schedtool:

$ ulimit -s 300
To limit to 300 seconds (5 minutes)

If your task runs away, it will get a SIGXCPU after consuming 5 minutes of CPU
time (5 minutes running at 100%).

If your app is multithreaded, you may want to give it more CPUs, like CPU0 and
CPU1 with -a 3  (it's a bitmask).

For best results, you should disable ALL other cores and threads of the same
processor. The new Core-i7 have one processor with 4 cores,
each core can run 2 threads; the older Mac Pros have two processors with 4
cores each. So on those Mac Pros, you'd disable cores 1, 2 and 3, while on the
Core-i7, you'll need to disable all other CPUs.

However, disabling just the sibling thread seems to produce very reliable
results for me already, with variance often below 0.5% (even though there are
some measurable spikes).

Other things to try:

Running the benchmark with highest priority, i.e. "sudo nice -19"
usually produces stable results on some machines. If the benchmark also
involves displaying something on the screen (on X11), running it with
"-sync" is a must. Though, in that case the "real" cost is not correct,
but it is useful to discover regressions.

Also; not many people know about ionice (1)
      ionice - get/set program io scheduling class and priority