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- Dhrystone Benchmark: Rationale for Version 2 and Measurement Rules
-
-
- Reinhold P. Weicker
- Siemens AG, E STE 35
- Postfach 3240
- D-8520 Erlangen
- Germany (West)
-
-
-
-
- 1. Why a Version 2 of Dhrystone?
-
- The Dhrystone benchmark program [1] has become a popular benchmark for
- CPU/compiler performance measurement, in particular in the area of
- minicomputers, workstations, PC's and microprocesors. It apparently satisfies
- a need for an easy-to-use integer benchmark; it gives a first performance
- indication which is more meaningful than MIPS numbers which, in their literal
- meaning (million instructions per second), cannot be used across different
- instruction sets (e.g. RISC vs. CISC). With the increasing use of the
- benchmark, it seems necessary to reconsider the benchmark and to check whether
- it can still fulfill this function. Version 2 of Dhrystone is the result of
- such a re-evaluation, it has been made for two reasons:
-
- o Dhrystone has been published in Ada [1], and Versions in Ada, Pascal and C
- have been distributed by Reinhold Weicker via floppy disk. However, the
- version that was used most often for benchmarking has been the version made
- by Rick Richardson by another translation from the Ada version into the C
- programming language, this has been the version distributed via the UNIX
- network Usenet [2].
-
- There is an obvious need for a common C version of Dhrystone, since C is at
- present the most popular system programming language for the class of
- systems (microcomputers, minicomputers, workstations) where Dhrystone is
- used most. There should be, as far as possible, only one C version of
- Dhrystone such that results can be compared without restrictions. In the
- past, the C versions distributed by Rick Richardson (Version 1.1) and by
- Reinhold Weicker had small (though not significant) differences.
-
- Together with the new C version, the Ada and Pascal versions have been
- updated as well.
-
- o As far as it is possible without changes to the Dhrystone statistics,
- optimizing compilers should be prevented from removing significant
- statements. It has turned out in the past that optimizing compilers
- suppressed code generation for too many statements (by "dead code removal"
- or "dead variable elimination"). This has lead to the danger that
- benchmarking results obtained by a naive application of Dhrystone - without
- inspection of the code that was generated - could become meaningless.
-
- The overall policiy for version 2 has been that the distribution of
- statements, operand types and operand locality described in [1] should remain
- unchanged as much as possible. (Very few changes were necessary; their impact
- should be negligible.) Also, the order of statements should remain unchanged.
- Although I am aware of some critical remarks on the benchmark - I agree with
- several of them - and know some suggestions for improvement, I didn't want to
- change the benchmark into something different from what has become known as
- "Dhrystone"; the confusion generated by such a change would probably outweight
- the benefits. If I were to write a new benchmark program, I wouldn't give it
- the name "Dhrystone" since this denotes the program published in [1].
- However, I do recognize the need for a larger number of representative
- programs that can be used as benchmarks; users should always be encouraged to
- use more than just one benchmark.
-
- The new versions (version 2.1 for C, Pascal and Ada) will be distributed as
- widely as possible. (Version 2.1 differs from version 2.0 distributed via the
- UNIX Network Usenet in March 1988 only in a few corrections for minor
- deficiencies found by users of version 2.0.) Readers who want to use the
- benchmark for their own measurements can obtain a copy in machine-readable
- form on floppy disk (MS-DOS or XENIX format) from the author.
-
-
- 2. Overall Characteristics of Version 2
-
- In general, version 2 follows - in the parts that are significant for
- performance measurement, i.e. within the measurement loop - the published
- (Ada) version and the C versions previously distributed. Where the versions
- distributed by Rick Richardson [2] and Reinhold Weicker have been different,
- it follows the version distributed by Reinhold Weicker. (However, the
- differences have been so small that their impact on execution time in all
- likelihood has been negligible.) The initialization and UNIX instrumentation
- part - which had been omitted in [1] - follows mostly the ideas of Rick
- Richardson [2]. However, any changes in the initialization part and in the
- printing of the result have no impact on performance measurement since they
- are outside the measaurement loop. As a concession to older compilers, names
- have been made unique within the first 8 characters for the C version.
-
- The original publication of Dhrystone did not contain any statements for time
- measurement since they are necessarily system-dependent. However, it turned
- out that it is not enough just to inclose the main procedure of Dhrystone in a
- loop and to measure the execution time. If the variables that are computed
- are not used somehow, there is the danger that the compiler considers them as
- "dead variables" and suppresses code generation for a part of the statements.
- Therefore in version 2 all variables of "main" are printed at the end of the
- program. This also permits some plausibility control for correct execution of
- the benchmark.
-
- At several places in the benchmark, code has been added, but only in branches
- that are not executed. The intention is that optimizing compilers should be
- prevented from moving code out of the measurement loop, or from removing code
- altogether. Statements that are executed have been changed in very few places
- only. In these cases, only the role of some operands has been changed, and it
- was made sure that the numbers defining the "Dhrystone distribution"
- (distribution of statements, operand types and locality) still hold as much as
- possible. Except for sophisticated optimizing compilers, execution times for
- version 2.1 should be the same as for previous versions.
-
- Because of the self-imposed limitation that the order and distribution of the
- executed statements should not be changed, there are still cases where
- optimizing compilers may not generate code for some statements. To a certain
- degree, this is unavoidable for small synthetic benchmarks. Users of the
- benchmark are advised to check code listings whether code is generated for all
- statements of Dhrystone.
-
- Contrary to the suggestion in the published paper and its realization in the
- versions previously distributed, no attempt has been made to subtract the time
- for the measurement loop overhead. (This calculation has proven difficult to
- implement in a correct way, and its omission makes the program simpler.)
- However, since the loop check is now part of the benchmark, this does have an
- impact - though a very minor one - on the distribution statistics which have
- been updated for this version.
-
-
- 3. Discussion of Individual Changes
-
- In this section, all changes are described that affect the measurement loop
- and that are not just renamings of variables. All remarks refer to the C
- version; the other language versions have been updated similarly.
-
- In addition to adding the measurement loop and the printout statements,
- changes have been made at the following places:
-
- o In procedure "main", three statements have been added in the non-executed
- "then" part of the statement
-
- if (Enum_Loc == Func_1 (Ch_Index, 'C'))
-
- they are
-
- strcpy (Str_2_Loc, "DHRYSTONE PROGRAM, 3'RD STRING");
- Int_2_Loc = Run_Index;
- Int_Glob = Run_Index;
-
- The string assignment prevents movement of the preceding assignment to
- Str_2_Loc (5'th statement of "main") out of the measurement loop (This
- probably will not happen for the C version, but it did happen with another
- language and compiler.) The assignment to Int_2_Loc prevents value
- propagation for Int_2_Loc, and the assignment to Int_Glob makes the value of
- Int_Glob possibly dependent from the value of Run_Index.
-
- o In the three arithmetic computations at the end of the measurement loop in
- "main ", the role of some variables has been exchanged, to prevent the
- division from just cancelling out the multiplication as it was in [1]. A
- very smart compiler might have recognized this and suppressed code
- generation for the division.
-
- o For Proc_2, no code has been changed, but the values of the actual parameter
- have changed due to changes in "main".
-
- o In Proc_4, the second assignment has been changed from
-
- Bool_Loc = Bool_Loc | Bool_Glob;
-
- to
-
- Bool_Glob = Bool_Loc | Bool_Glob;
-
- It now assigns a value to a global variable instead of a local variable
- (Bool_Loc); Bool_Loc would be a "dead variable" which is not used
- afterwards.
-
- o In Func_1, the statement
-
- Ch_1_Glob = Ch_1_Loc;
-
- was added in the non-executed "else" part of the "if" statement, to prevent
- the suppression of code generation for the assignment to Ch_1_Loc.
-
- o In Func_2, the second character comparison statement has been changed to
-
- if (Ch_Loc == 'R')
-
- ('R' instead of 'X') because a comparison with 'X' is implied in the
- preceding "if" statement.
-
- Also in Func_2, the statement
-
- Int_Glob = Int_Loc;
-
- has been added in the non-executed part of the last "if" statement, in order
- to prevent Int_Loc from becoming a dead variable.
-
- o In Func_3, a non-executed "else" part has been added to the "if" statement.
- While the program would not be incorrect without this "else" part, it is
- considered bad programming practice if a function can be left without a
- return value.
-
- To compensate for this change, the (non-executed) "else" part in the "if"
- statement of Proc_3 was removed.
-
- The distribution statistics have been changed only by the addition of the
- measurement loop iteration (1 additional statement, 4 additional local integer
- operands) and by the change in Proc_4 (one operand changed from local to
- global). The distribution statistics in the comment headers have been updated
- accordingly.
-
-
- 4. String Operations
-
- The string operations (string assignment and string comparison) have not been
- changed, to keep the program consistent with the original version.
-
- There has been some concern that the string operations are over-represented in
- the program, and that execution time is dominated by these operations. This
- was true in particular when optimizing compilers removed too much code in the
- main part of the program, this should have been mitigated in version 2.
-
- It should be noted that this is a language-dependent issue: Dhrystone was
- first published in Ada, and with Ada or Pascal semantics, the time spent in
- the string operations is, at least in all implementations known to me,
- considerably smaller. In Ada and Pascal, assignment and comparison of strings
- are operators defined in the language, and the upper bounds of the strings
- occuring in Dhrystone are part of the type information known at compilation
- time. The compilers can therefore generate efficient inline code. In C,
- string assignemt and comparisons are not part of the language, so the string
- operations must be expressed in terms of the C library functions "strcpy" and
- "strcmp". (ANSI C allows an implementation to use inline code for these
- functions.) In addition to the overhead caused by additional function calls,
- these functions are defined for null-terminated strings where the length of
- the strings is not known at compilation time; the function has to check every
- byte for the termination condition (the null byte).
-
- Obviously, a C library which includes efficiently coded "strcpy" and "strcmp"
- functions helps to obtain good Dhrystone results. However, I don't think that
- this is unfair since string functions do occur quite frequently in real
- programs (editors, command interpreters, etc.). If the strings functions are
- implemented efficiently, this helps real programs as well as benchmark
- programs.
-
- I admit that the string comparison in Dhrystone terminates later (after
- scanning 20 characters) than most string comparisons in real programs. For
- consistency with the original benchmark, I didn't change the program despite
- this weakness.
-
-
- 5. Intended Use of Dhrystone
-
- When Dhrystone is used, the following "ground rules" apply:
-
- o Separate compilation (Ada and C versions)
-
- As mentioned in [1], Dhrystone was written to reflect actual programming
- practice in systems programming. The division into several compilation
- units (5 in the Ada version, 2 in the C version) is intended, as is the
- distribution of inter-module and intra-module subprogram calls. Although on
- many systems there will be no difference in execution time to a Dhrystone
- version where all compilation units are merged into one file, the rule is
- that separate compilation should be used. The intention is that real
- programming practice, where programs consist of several independently
- compiled units, should be reflected. This also has implies that the
- compiler, while compiling one unit, has no information about the use of
- variables, register allocation etc. occuring in other compilation units.
- Although in real life compilation units will probably be larger, the
- intention is that these effects of separate compilation are modeled in
- Dhrystone.
-
- A few language systems have post-linkage optimization available (e.g., final
- register allocation is performed after linkage). This is a borderline case:
- Post-linkage optimization involves additional program preparation time
- (although not as much as compilation in one unit) which may prevent its
- general use in practical programming. I think that since it defeats the
- intentions given above, it should not be used for Dhrystone.
-
- Unfortunately, ISO/ANSI Pascal does not contain language features for
- separate compilation. Although most commercial Pascal compilers provide
- separate compilation in some way, we cannot use it for Dhrystone since such
- a version would not be portable. Therefore, no attempt has been made to
- provide a Pascal version with several compilation units.
-
- o No procedure merging
-
- Although Dhrystone contains some very short procedures where execution would
- benefit from procedure merging (inlining, macro expansion of procedures),
- procedure merging is not to be used. The reason is that the percentage of
- procedure and function calls is part of the "Dhrystone distribution" of
- statements contained in [1]. This restriction does not hold for the string
- functions of the C version since ANSI C allows an implementation to use
- inline code for these functions.
-
- o Other optimizations are allowed, but they should be indicated
-
- It is often hard to draw an exact line between "normal code generation" and
- "optimization" in compilers: Some compilers perform operations by default
- that are invoked in other compilers only when optimization is explicitly
- requested. Also, we cannot avoid that in benchmarking people try to achieve
- results that look as good as possible. Therefore, optimizations performed
- by compilers - other than those listed above - are not forbidden when
- Dhrystone execution times are measured. Dhrystone is not intended to be
- non-optimizable but is intended to be similarly optimizable as normal
- programs. For example, there are several places in Dhrystone where
- performance benefits from optimizations like common subexpression
- elimination, value propagation etc., but normal programs usually also
- benefit from these optimizations. Therefore, no effort was made to
- artificially prevent such optimizations. However, measurement reports
- should indicate which compiler optimization levels have been used, and
- reporting results with different levels of compiler optimization for the
- same hardware is encouraged.
-
- o Default results are those without "register" declarations (C version)
-
- When Dhrystone results are quoted without additional qualification, they
- should be understood as results obtained without use of the "register"
- attribute. Good compilers should be able to make good use of registers even
- without explicit register declarations ([3], p. 193).
-
- Of course, for experimental purposes, post-linkage optimization, procedure
- merging and/or compilation in one unit can be done to determine their effects.
- However, Dhrystone numbers obtained under these conditions should be
- explicitly marked as such; "normal" Dhrystone results should be understood as
- results obtained following the ground rules listed above.
-
- In any case, for serious performance evaluation, users are advised to ask for
- code listings and to check them carefully. In this way, when results for
- different systems are compared, the reader can get a feeling how much
- performance difference is due to compiler optimization and how much is due to
- hardware speed.
-
-
- 6. Acknowledgements
-
- The C version 2.1 of Dhrystone has been developed in cooperation with Rick
- Richardson (Tinton Falls, NJ), it incorporates many ideas from the "Version
- 1.1" distributed previously by him over the UNIX network Usenet. Through his
- activity with Usenet, Rick Richardson has made a very valuable contribution to
- the dissemination of the benchmark. I also thank Chaim Benedelac (National
- Semiconductor), David Ditzel (SUN), Earl Killian and John Mashey (MIPS), Alan
- Smith and Rafael Saavedra-Barrera (UC at Berkeley) for their help with
- comments on earlier versions of the benchmark.
-
-
- 7. Bibliography
-
- [1]
- Reinhold P. Weicker: Dhrystone: A Synthetic Systems Programming Benchmark.
- Communications of the ACM 27, 10 (Oct. 1984), 1013-1030
-
- [2]
- Rick Richardson: Dhrystone 1.1 Benchmark Summary (and Program Text)
- Informal Distribution via "Usenet", Last Version Known to me: Sept. 21,
- 1987
-
- [3]
- Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie: The C Programming Language.
- Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs (NJ) 1978
-
-