a90c680386
- Rename TileGrid -> Quilt to avoid the name overload. - Tag all failing GMs with kSkipTiled_Flag. You may be wondering, do any GMs pass? Yes, some do! And that trends towards all of them as we increase --quiltTile. Two GMs only fail in --quilt mode in 565. Otherwise all GMs which fail are skipped, and those which don't fail aren't. (The 8888 variants of those two GMs are skipped even though they pass.) BUG=skia:2477 R=reed@google.com, mtklein@google.com Author: mtklein@chromium.org Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/256373002 git-svn-id: http://skia.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@14457 2bbb7eff-a529-9590-31e7-b0007b416f81 |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
DM.cpp | ||
DMBenchTask.cpp | ||
DMBenchTask.h | ||
DMCpuGMTask.cpp | ||
DMCpuGMTask.h | ||
DMExpectations.h | ||
DMExpectationsTask.cpp | ||
DMExpectationsTask.h | ||
DMGpuGMTask.cpp | ||
DMGpuGMTask.h | ||
DMGpuSupport.h | ||
DMPipeTask.cpp | ||
DMPipeTask.h | ||
DMQuiltTask.cpp | ||
DMQuiltTask.h | ||
DMRecordTask.cpp | ||
DMRecordTask.h | ||
DMReplayTask.cpp | ||
DMReplayTask.h | ||
DMReporter.cpp | ||
DMReporter.h | ||
DMSerializeTask.cpp | ||
DMSerializeTask.h | ||
DMTask.cpp | ||
DMTask.h | ||
DMTaskRunner.cpp | ||
DMTaskRunner.h | ||
DMTestTask.cpp | ||
DMTestTask.h | ||
DMUtil.cpp | ||
DMUtil.h | ||
DMWriteTask.cpp | ||
DMWriteTask.h | ||
README |
DM is like GM, but multithreaded. It doesn't do everything GM does yet. Current approximate list of missing features: --config pdf --mismatchPath --missingExpectationsPath --writePicturePath --deferred DM's design is based around Tasks and a TaskRunner. A Task represents an independent unit of work that might fail. We make a task for each GM/configuration pair we want to run. Tasks can kick off new tasks themselves. For example, a CpuTask can kick off a ReplayTask to make sure recording and playing back an SkPicture gives the same result as direct rendering. The TaskRunner runs all tasks on one of two threadpools, whose sizes are configurable by --cpuThreads and --gpuThreads. Ideally we'd run these on a single threadpool but it can swamp the GPU if we shove too much work into it at once. --cpuThreads defaults to the number of cores on the machine. --gpuThreads defaults to 1, but you may find 2 or 4 runs a little faster. So the main flow of DM is: for each GM: for each configuration: kick off a new task < tasks run, maybe fail, and maybe kick off new tasks > wait for all tasks to finish report failures