It is desirable that, when layer hoisting is disabled, the MPD and non-MPD timings be
roughly the same. Unfortunately, using a separate canvas for each tile (a requirement
for MPD) introduces its own discrepancy into the timing. Using a separate canvas for
each tile doesn't seem to make a difference for 8888 (see the non-MPD 8888 column below)
but slows down GPU rendering (see the non-MPD GPU column below). Since this is how
Chromium renders I propose switching to this regimen (even though it is "slowing down"
GPU rendering).
nanobench mean times (ms) with layer hoisting disabled (for desk_amazon.skp)
8888
MPD non-MPD
1 canvas (old-style) 0.628 1.71
separate (new-style) 0.795 1.63
GPU
MPD non-MPD
1 canvas (old-style) 2.34 1.69
separate (new-style) 2.32 2.66
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/779643002
Two issues with the SKPBench tile computation were causing the MPD path to do more work:
The clip from the parent canvas wasn't being used to trim content off the edges of the MPD tiles
The non-MPD path was not taking the scale into account in its tile placement (resulting in it having fewer, larger active tiles when scaling).
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/776273002
Seems okay after this small patch to skip lockPixels() / unlockPixels().
BUG=skia:3149
CQ_EXTRA_TRYBOTS=client.skia:Test-Ubuntu13.10-GCE-NoGPU-x86_64-Release-TSAN-Trybot
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/773203003
Removes work done by the constructors of picture_nesting benches,
and moves the work to the Benchmark::onPreDraw override.
This avoids PictureNesting::sierpinsky showing up in profile traces
when profiling other benches.
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/725523002
Reason for revert:
Causing breakages on Mac build.
Original issue's description:
> Make nanobench and dm be usable from Chromium build
>
> Move the app logic for each app as follows:
>
> <app>.cpp -- the file which contains main(). Embedders that compile
> their own apps, such as ios shell, upcoming Chromium dm etc, do not use this.
>
> <app>_main.cpp -- the main logic of the Skia test application. This will be
> used by Skia -compiled apps as well as embedder -compiled apps.
>
> <app>_main.h -- the API for the main logic. This will be
> used by Skia -compiled apps as well as embedder -compiled apps.
>
> This way (the upcoming) Chromium dm can setup its Chromium-specific setup
> in custom main(), and then call dm_main(), without the need of any
> SK_BUILD_FOR_XXXX defines controlling whether the tool defines main or not.
>
> BUG=skia:2992
>
> Committed: https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+/c092d3bdab5f723576cc0346cea3ee282a9cb444TBR=mtklein@chromium.org,mtklein@google.com,borenet@google.com,kkinnunen@nvidia.com
NOTREECHECKS=true
NOTRY=true
BUG=skia:2992
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/724073002
Move the app logic for each app as follows:
<app>.cpp -- the file which contains main(). Embedders that compile
their own apps, such as ios shell, upcoming Chromium dm etc, do not use this.
<app>_main.cpp -- the main logic of the Skia test application. This will be
used by Skia -compiled apps as well as embedder -compiled apps.
<app>_main.h -- the API for the main logic. This will be
used by Skia -compiled apps as well as embedder -compiled apps.
This way (the upcoming) Chromium dm can setup its Chromium-specific setup
in custom main(), and then call dm_main(), without the need of any
SK_BUILD_FOR_XXXX defines controlling whether the tool defines main or not.
BUG=skia:2992
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/657373002
The tests path_hairline_{small,big}_AA_conic were calling the test
function with NVPR. This caused a warning in nanobench.
The here removed hunk comes from commit referring to skia:2042 ("Enable
NVPR by default"). This is a workaround for a bug. The bug is fixed by
the commit referring to skia:2078 ("Logan bot fails NVPR assertion in
bench").
The proper fix is indeed make sure that path renderer chain ends up
trying software path renderer, if the path contains conics and is a
hairline.
The removed hunk refers also to skia:2033 ("Figure out what is happening
with conic path segments in NVPR"). The above solution is correct also in case
NVPR would support conics, as NVPR would not still support hairlines.
BUG=skia:2078
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/685213005
Reason for revert:
Not compiling in ANGLE build
Original issue's description:
> Get gpudft support working in dm, gm, nanobench and bench_pictures
>
> Adds a new config to test distance field text.
> Clean up some flags and #defines to read "distance field text",
> not "distance field fonts" to be consistent with Chromium
>
> NOTREECHECKS=true
>
> Committed: https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+/06ba179838ba4fe187cf290750aeeb4a02a2960bTBR=bsalomon@google.com,mtklein@google.com,reed@google.com
NOTREECHECKS=true
NOTRY=true
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/707723005
Adds a new config to test distance field text.
Clean up some flags and #defines to read "distance field text",
not "distance field fonts" to be consistent with Chromium
NOTREECHECKS=true
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/699453005
- The expected case is now a single bulk-load insert() call instead of N;
- reserve() and flushDeferredInserts() can fold into insert() now;
- SkBBH subclasses may take ownership of the bounds
This appears to be a performance no-op on both my Mac and N5. I guess
even the simplest indirect branch predictor ("same as last time") can predict
the repeated virtual calls to SkBBH::insert() perfectly.
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/670213002
Add a new enum to differentiate between a complete decode and a
partial decode (with the third value being failure). Return this
value from SkImageDecoder::onDecode (in all subclasses, plus
SkImageDecoder_empty) and ::decode.
For convenience, if the enum is treated as a boolean, success and
partial success are both considered true.
Note that the static helper functions (DecodeFile etc) still return
true and false (for one thing, this allows us to continue to use
SkImageDecoder::DecodeMemory as an SkPicture::InstallPixelRefProc in
SkPicture::CreateFromStream).
Also correctly report failure in SkASTCImageDecoder::onDecode when
SkTextureCompressor::DecompressBufferFromFormat fails.
BUG=skia:3037
BUG:b/17419670
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/647023006
Add a unique-per-subclass namespace tag to make Keys from different
domains comparable.
Also drop the SkPictureShader cache and convert to using the global
resource cache instead.
R=reed@google.com,mtklein@google.com,robertphillips@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/668223002
Got to keep our precious data in event of a crash.
With --flushEvery 10 I'm not seeing this cost any wall time.
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/653083003
The original bench was hitting the cache since it was using the same color filter for all loops. By creating a new color filter within the loop, at least this part of it is solved. I'm not 100% sure this is the right way, but at least the numbers are a bit more reasonable and are affected by the output resolution.
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/648483002
Draw thick-stroked Beziers by computing the outset quadratic, measuring the error, and subdividing until the error is within a predetermined limit.
To try this CL out, change src/core/SkStroke.h:18 to
#define QUAD_STROKE_APPROXIMATION 1
or from the command line: CPPFLAGS="-D QUAD_STROKE_APPROXIMATION=1" ./gyp_skia
Here's what's in this CL:
bench/BezierBench.cpp : a microbench for examining where the time is going
gm/beziers.cpp : random Beziers with various thicknesses
gm/smallarc.cpp : a distillation of bug skia:2769
samplecode/SampleRotateCircles.cpp : controls added for error, limit, width
src/core/SkStroke.cpp : the new stroke implementation (disabled)
tests/StrokerTest.cpp : a stroke torture test that checks normal and extreme values
The new stroke algorithm has a tweakable parameter:
stroker.setError(1); (SkStrokeRec.cpp:112)
The stroke error is the allowable gap between the midpoint of the stroke quadratic and the center Bezier. As the projection from the quadratic approaches the endpoints, the error is decreased proportionally so that it is always inside the quadratic curve.
An overview of how this works:
- For a given T range of a Bezier, compute the perpendiculars and find the points outset and inset for some radius.
- Construct tangents for the quadratic stroke.
- If the tangent don't intersect between them (may happen with cubics), subdivide.
- If the quadratic stroke end points are close (again, may happen with cubics), draw a line between them.
- Compute the quadratic formed by the intersecting tangents.
- If the midpoint of the quadratic is close to the midpoint of the Bezier perpendicular, return the quadratic.
- If the end of the stroke at the Bezier midpoint doesn't intersect the quad's bounds, subdivide.
- Find where the Bezier midpoint ray intersects the quadratic.
- If the intersection is too close to the quad's endpoints, subdivide.
- If the error is large proportional to the intersection's distance to the quad's endpoints, subdivide.
BUG=skia:723,skia:2769
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/558163005
Make the Sk GL context class, SkGLNativeContext, an abstract base class. Before,
it depended on ifdefs to implement the platform dependent polymorphism. Move
the logic to subclasses of the various platform implementations.
This a step to enable Skia embedders to compile dm and bench_pictures. The
concrete goal is to support running these test apps with Chromium command buffer.
With this change, Chromium can implement its own version of SkGLNativeContext
that uses command buffer, and host the implementation in its own repository.
Implements the above by renaming the SkGLContextHelper to SkGLContext and
removing the unneeded SkGLNativeContext. Also removes
SkGLNativeContext::AutoRestoreContext functionality, it appeared to be unused:
no use in Skia code, and no tests.
BUG=skia:2992
Committed: https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+/a90ed4e83897b45d6331ee4c54e1edd4054de9a8
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/630843002
Reason for revert:
nanobech failing on Android
Original issue's description:
> Make the Sk GL context class an abstract base class
>
> Make the Sk GL context class, SkGLNativeContext, an abstract base class. Before,
> it depended on ifdefs to implement the platform dependent polymorphism. Move
> the logic to subclasses of the various platform implementations.
>
> This a step to enable Skia embedders to compile dm and bench_pictures. The
> concrete goal is to support running these test apps with Chromium command buffer.
>
> With this change, Chromium can implement its own version of SkGLNativeContext
> that uses command buffer, and host the implementation in its own repository.
>
> Implements the above by renaming the SkGLContextHelper to SkGLContext and
> removing the unneeded SkGLNativeContext. Also removes
> SkGLNativeContext::AutoRestoreContext functionality, it appeared to be unused:
> no use in Skia code, and no tests.
>
> BUG=skia:2992
>
> Committed: https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+/a90ed4e83897b45d6331ee4c54e1edd4054de9a8TBR=kkinnunen@nvidia.com
NOTREECHECKS=true
NOTRY=true
BUG=skia:2992
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/639793002
Make the Sk GL context class, SkGLNativeContext, an abstract base class. Before,
it depended on ifdefs to implement the platform dependent polymorphism. Move
the logic to subclasses of the various platform implementations.
This a step to enable Skia embedders to compile dm and bench_pictures. The
concrete goal is to support running these test apps with Chromium command buffer.
With this change, Chromium can implement its own version of SkGLNativeContext
that uses command buffer, and host the implementation in its own repository.
Implements the above by renaming the SkGLContextHelper to SkGLContext and
removing the unneeded SkGLNativeContext. Also removes
SkGLNativeContext::AutoRestoreContext functionality, it appeared to be unused:
no use in Skia code, and no tests.
BUG=skia:2992
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/630843002
Now that the old backend's not using BBHs, we can specialize them for
SkRecord's needs. The only thing we really want to store is op index, which
should always be small enough to fit into an unsigned (unsigned also helps keep
it straight from other ints floating around).
This means we'll need half (32-bit) or a quarter (64-bit) the bytes in SkTileGrid,
because we don't have to store an extra int for ordering.
BUG=skia:2834
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/617393004
This removes:
1) ability to record old pictures with SkPictureRecorder;
2) a couple tests specific to the old backend.
The functionality of DEPRECATED_beginRecording() now lives in
(private) SkPicture::Backport(), which is the only place we
need it now.
BUG=skia:
TBR=reed@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/618303002
This makes it considerably cheaper to run SKP recording benchmarks, without
affecting their measurements and without really affecting SKP playback
benchmarks at all.
On my machine, running out/Release/nanobench --match skp --config nondrendering
drops in run time from 6.7s to 2.5s, and the peak RAM usage drops from 129M to 50M.
I'm strongly considering making this lazy decoding the default.
BUG=skia:
R=robertphillips@google.com, mtklein@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/572933006
Today we measure SkPicture playback speed, but not the time it takes to record
the SkPicture. This fixes that by reading SKPs from disk and re-recording them.
On the console, recording shows up first as the nonrendering skp benches,
followed later by the usual playback benches:
maxrss loops min median mean max stddev samples config bench
51M 2 165µs 168µs 169µs 178µs 3% ▆▄▃█▂▄▁▂▁▁ nonrendering tabl_slashdot.skp
57M 1 9.72ms 9.77ms 9.79ms 9.97ms 1% █▂▂▅▃▂▁▄▂▁ nonrendering desk_pokemonwiki.skp
57M 32 2.92µs 2.96µs 3.03µs 3.46µs 6% ▅▁▁▁▁▁▁█▂▁ nonrendering desk_yahoosports.skp
...
147M 1 3.86ms 3.87ms 3.97ms 4.81ms 7% █▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 8888 tabl_slashdot.skp_1
147M 1 4.54ms 4.56ms 4.55ms 4.56ms 0% █▅▇▅█▅▂▁▅▁ 565 tabl_slashdot.skp_1
147M 2 3.08ms 3.24ms 4.17ms 8.18ms 50% █▁▁█▁▁▁▁▁▁ gpu tabl_slashdot.skp_1
147M 1 1.61ms 1.62ms 1.69ms 2.33ms 13% █▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁▁ 8888 desk_pokemonwiki.skp_1
147M 1 1.44ms 1.44ms 1.45ms 1.47ms 1% ▅▂█▂▂▅▁▁▂▁ 565 desk_pokemonwiki.skp_1
...
On skiaperf.com, they'll also be separated out from playback benches by bench_type.
BUG=skia:
R=reed@google.com, mtklein@google.com, jcgregorio@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/559153002
Chrome's using a bounding box, so it's a good idea for our
bots to do so too.
When set, we'll create an SkTileGrid to match the
parameters of --clip, and so should always hit its fast
path.
This will impose a small overhead (querying the BBH) on all
SKPs, but make large SKPs render more quickly. E.g. on
GPU desk_pokemonwiki should show about a 30% improvement,
tabl_mozilla about 40%, and one very long page from my
personal suite, askmefast.com, gets 5x faster.
(The performance changes are not the point of the CL, but
something we should be aware of.)
BUG=
R=bsalomon@google.com, mtklein@google.com, robertphillips@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/497493003
--key describes the type of run (describes the line on the chart), --properties
describes the run itself (describes the dot on the chart).
We'll pass --properties gitHash <git hash> build_number <build number> --key
... to nanobench from the bots.
And... delete a whole lot of dead code.
Example: nanobench --properties gitHash foo build_number 1234 --key bar baz
{
"build_number" : "1234",
"gitHash" : "foo",
"key" : {
"bar" : "baz"
},
"results" : {
....
Friends with https://codereview.chromium.org/491943002
BUG=skia:
R=jcgregorio@google.com, mtklein@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/488213002
drawPatch now receives as parameter const SkPoint cubics[12]
Adjusted derived classes and serialization.
Ajusted GM's and benches that take into account combinations of optional
parameters, the scale of the patch and 4 different types of patches.
Planning on adding the extra functionality of SkPatch in another CL.
BUG=skia:
R=egdaniel@google.com, reed@google.com
Author: dandov@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/463493002
Share command flags between dm and unit tests.
Also, allow dm's core to be included by itself and iOSShell.
Command line flags that are the same (or nearly the same) in DM
and in skia_tests have been moved to common_flags. Authors,
please check to see that the shared common flag is correct for
the tool.
For iOS, the 'tool_main' entry point has a wrapper to allow multiple
tools to be statically linked in the iOSShell.
Since SkCommandLineFlags::Parse can only be called once, these calls
are disabled in the IOS build.
Since the iOS app directory is dynamically assigned a name, use '@' to
select it. (This is the same convention chosen by the Mobile Harness
iOS file system utilities.)
Move the heart of dm.gyp into dm.gypi so that it can be included by
itself and iOSShell.gyp.
Add tools/flags/SkCommonFlags.* to define and declare common
command line flags.
Add support for dm to iOSShell.
BUG=skia:
R=scroggo@google.com, mtklein@google.com, jvanverth@google.com, bsalomon@google.com
Author: caryclark@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/389653004
We're moving away from BigQuery for storing results so the output doens't have to conform to BQ requirements, which allows simplifying the format. Also stop parsing the filename for information and pass in buildbot parameters explicitly.
Adds the following flags to nanobench:
--key
--gitHash
BUG=skia:
R=mtklein@google.com, bsalomon@google.com
Author: jcgregorio@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/392393002
This seems to be ~100x higher resolution than QueryPerformanceCounter. AFAIK, all our Windows perf bots have constant_tsc, so we can be a bit more direct about using rdtsc directly: it'll always tick at the max CPU frequency.
Now, the question remains, what is the max CPU frequency to divide through by? It looks like QueryPerformanceFrequency actually gives the CPU frequency in kHz, suspiciously exactly what we need to divide through to get elapsed milliseconds. That was a freebie.
I did some before/after comparison on slow benchmarks. Timings look the same. Going to land this without review tonight to see what happens on the bots; happy to review carefully tomorrow.
R=mtklein@google.com
TBR=bungeman
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/394363003