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- package Benchmark;
-
- =head1 NAME
-
- Benchmark - benchmark running times of code
-
- timethis - run a chunk of code several times
-
- timethese - run several chunks of code several times
-
- timeit - run a chunk of code and see how long it goes
-
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
-
- timethis ($count, "code");
-
- # Use Perl code in strings...
- timethese($count, {
- 'Name1' => '...code1...',
- 'Name2' => '...code2...',
- });
-
- # ... or use subroutine references.
- timethese($count, {
- 'Name1' => sub { ...code1... },
- 'Name2' => sub { ...code2... },
- });
-
- $t = timeit($count, '...other code...')
- print "$count loops of other code took:",timestr($t),"\n";
-
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
-
- The Benchmark module encapsulates a number of routines to help you
- figure out how long it takes to execute some code.
-
- =head2 Methods
-
- =over 10
-
- =item new
-
- Returns the current time. Example:
-
- use Benchmark;
- $t0 = new Benchmark;
- # ... your code here ...
- $t1 = new Benchmark;
- $td = timediff($t1, $t0);
- print "the code took:",timestr($td),"\n";
-
- =item debug
-
- Enables or disable debugging by setting the C<$Benchmark::Debug> flag:
-
- debug Benchmark 1;
- $t = timeit(10, ' 5 ** $Global ');
- debug Benchmark 0;
-
- =back
-
- =head2 Standard Exports
-
- The following routines will be exported into your namespace
- if you use the Benchmark module:
-
- =over 10
-
- =item timeit(COUNT, CODE)
-
- Arguments: COUNT is the number of times to run the loop, and CODE is
- the code to run. CODE may be either a code reference or a string to
- be eval'd; either way it will be run in the caller's package.
-
- Returns: a Benchmark object.
-
- =item timethis ( COUNT, CODE, [ TITLE, [ STYLE ]] )
-
- Time COUNT iterations of CODE. CODE may be a string to eval or a
- code reference; either way the CODE will run in the caller's package.
- Results will be printed to STDOUT as TITLE followed by the times.
- TITLE defaults to "timethis COUNT" if none is provided. STYLE
- determines the format of the output, as described for timestr() below.
-
- The COUNT can be zero or negative: this means the I<minimum number of
- CPU seconds> to run. A zero signifies the default of 3 seconds. For
- example to run at least for 10 seconds:
-
- timethis(-10, $code)
-
- or to run two pieces of code tests for at least 3 seconds:
-
- timethese(0, { test1 => '...', test2 => '...'})
-
- CPU seconds is, in UNIX terms, the user time plus the system time of
- the process itself, as opposed to the real (wallclock) time and the
- time spent by the child processes. Less than 0.1 seconds is not
- accepted (-0.01 as the count, for example, will cause a fatal runtime
- exception).
-
- Note that the CPU seconds is the B<minimum> time: CPU scheduling and
- other operating system factors may complicate the attempt so that a
- little bit more time is spent. The benchmark output will, however,
- also tell the number of C<$code> runs/second, which should be a more
- interesting number than the actually spent seconds.
-
- Returns a Benchmark object.
-
- =item timethese ( COUNT, CODEHASHREF, [ STYLE ] )
-
- The CODEHASHREF is a reference to a hash containing names as keys
- and either a string to eval or a code reference for each value.
- For each (KEY, VALUE) pair in the CODEHASHREF, this routine will
- call
-
- timethis(COUNT, VALUE, KEY, STYLE)
-
- The routines are called in string comparison order of KEY.
-
- The COUNT can be zero or negative, see timethis().
-
- =item timediff ( T1, T2 )
-
- Returns the difference between two Benchmark times as a Benchmark
- object suitable for passing to timestr().
-
- =item timestr ( TIMEDIFF, [ STYLE, [ FORMAT ] ] )
-
- Returns a string that formats the times in the TIMEDIFF object in
- the requested STYLE. TIMEDIFF is expected to be a Benchmark object
- similar to that returned by timediff().
-
- STYLE can be any of 'all', 'noc', 'nop' or 'auto'. 'all' shows each
- of the 5 times available ('wallclock' time, user time, system time,
- user time of children, and system time of children). 'noc' shows all
- except the two children times. 'nop' shows only wallclock and the
- two children times. 'auto' (the default) will act as 'all' unless
- the children times are both zero, in which case it acts as 'noc'.
-
- FORMAT is the L<printf(3)>-style format specifier (without the
- leading '%') to use to print the times. It defaults to '5.2f'.
-
- =back
-
- =head2 Optional Exports
-
- The following routines will be exported into your namespace
- if you specifically ask that they be imported:
-
- =over 10
-
- =item clearcache ( COUNT )
-
- Clear the cached time for COUNT rounds of the null loop.
-
- =item clearallcache ( )
-
- Clear all cached times.
-
- =item disablecache ( )
-
- Disable caching of timings for the null loop. This will force Benchmark
- to recalculate these timings for each new piece of code timed.
-
- =item enablecache ( )
-
- Enable caching of timings for the null loop. The time taken for COUNT
- rounds of the null loop will be calculated only once for each
- different COUNT used.
-
- =back
-
- =head1 NOTES
-
- The data is stored as a list of values from the time and times
- functions:
-
- ($real, $user, $system, $children_user, $children_system)
-
- in seconds for the whole loop (not divided by the number of rounds).
-
- The timing is done using time(3) and times(3).
-
- Code is executed in the caller's package.
-
- The time of the null loop (a loop with the same
- number of rounds but empty loop body) is subtracted
- from the time of the real loop.
-
- The null loop times are cached, the key being the
- number of rounds. The caching can be controlled using
- calls like these:
-
- clearcache($key);
- clearallcache();
-
- disablecache();
- enablecache();
-
- =head1 INHERITANCE
-
- Benchmark inherits from no other class, except of course
- for Exporter.
-
- =head1 CAVEATS
-
- Comparing eval'd strings with code references will give you
- inaccurate results: a code reference will show a slower
- execution time than the equivalent eval'd string.
-
- The real time timing is done using time(2) and
- the granularity is therefore only one second.
-
- Short tests may produce negative figures because perl
- can appear to take longer to execute the empty loop
- than a short test; try:
-
- timethis(100,'1');
-
- The system time of the null loop might be slightly
- more than the system time of the loop with the actual
- code and therefore the difference might end up being E<lt> 0.
-
- =head1 AUTHORS
-
- Jarkko Hietaniemi <F<jhi@iki.fi>>, Tim Bunce <F<Tim.Bunce@ig.co.uk>>
-
- =head1 MODIFICATION HISTORY
-
- September 8th, 1994; by Tim Bunce.
-
- March 28th, 1997; by Hugo van der Sanden: added support for code
- references and the already documented 'debug' method; revamped
- documentation.
-
- April 04-07th, 1997: by Jarkko Hietaniemi, added the run-for-some-time
- functionality.
-
- =cut
-
- # evaluate something in a clean lexical environment
- sub _doeval { eval shift }
-
- #
- # put any lexicals at file scope AFTER here
- #
-
- use Carp;
- use Exporter;
- @ISA=(Exporter);
- @EXPORT=qw(timeit timethis timethese timediff timestr);
- @EXPORT_OK=qw(clearcache clearallcache disablecache enablecache);
-
- &init;
-
- sub init {
- $debug = 0;
- $min_count = 4;
- $min_cpu = 0.4;
- $defaultfmt = '5.2f';
- $defaultstyle = 'auto';
- # The cache can cause a slight loss of sys time accuracy. If a
- # user does many tests (>10) with *very* large counts (>10000)
- # or works on a very slow machine the cache may be useful.
- &disablecache;
- &clearallcache;
- }
-
- sub debug { $debug = ($_[1] != 0); }
-
- sub clearcache { delete $cache{$_[0]}; }
- sub clearallcache { %cache = (); }
- sub enablecache { $cache = 1; }
- sub disablecache { $cache = 0; }
-
- # --- Functions to process the 'time' data type
-
- sub new { my @t = (time, times, @_ == 2 ? $_[1] : 0);
- print "new=@t\n" if $debug;
- bless \@t; }
-
- sub cpu_p { my($r,$pu,$ps,$cu,$cs) = @{$_[0]}; $pu+$ps ; }
- sub cpu_c { my($r,$pu,$ps,$cu,$cs) = @{$_[0]}; $cu+$cs ; }
- sub cpu_a { my($r,$pu,$ps,$cu,$cs) = @{$_[0]}; $pu+$ps+$cu+$cs ; }
- sub real { my($r,$pu,$ps,$cu,$cs) = @{$_[0]}; $r ; }
-
- sub timediff {
- my($a, $b) = @_;
- my @r;
- for (my $i=0; $i < @$a; ++$i) {
- push(@r, $a->[$i] - $b->[$i]);
- }
- bless \@r;
- }
-
- sub timestr {
- my($tr, $style, $f) = @_;
- my @t = @$tr;
- warn "bad time value (@t)" unless @t==6;
- my($r, $pu, $ps, $cu, $cs, $n) = @t;
- my($pt, $ct, $t) = ($tr->cpu_p, $tr->cpu_c, $tr->cpu_a);
- $f = $defaultfmt unless defined $f;
- # format a time in the required style, other formats may be added here
- $style ||= $defaultstyle;
- $style = ($ct>0) ? 'all' : 'noc' if $style eq 'auto';
- my $s = "@t $style"; # default for unknown style
- $s=sprintf("%2d wallclock secs (%$f usr %$f sys + %$f cusr %$f csys = %$f CPU)",
- @t,$t) if $style eq 'all';
- $s=sprintf("%2d wallclock secs (%$f usr + %$f sys = %$f CPU)",
- $r,$pu,$ps,$pt) if $style eq 'noc';
- $s=sprintf("%2d wallclock secs (%$f cusr + %$f csys = %$f CPU)",
- $r,$cu,$cs,$ct) if $style eq 'nop';
- $s .= sprintf(" @ %$f/s (n=$n)", $n / ( $pu + $ps )) if $n;
- $s;
- }
-
- sub timedebug {
- my($msg, $t) = @_;
- print STDERR "$msg",timestr($t),"\n" if $debug;
- }
-
- # --- Functions implementing low-level support for timing loops
-
- sub runloop {
- my($n, $c) = @_;
-
- $n+=0; # force numeric now, so garbage won't creep into the eval
- croak "negative loopcount $n" if $n<0;
- confess "Usage: runloop(number, [string | coderef])" unless defined $c;
- my($t0, $t1, $td); # before, after, difference
-
- # find package of caller so we can execute code there
- my($curpack) = caller(0);
- my($i, $pack)= 0;
- while (($pack) = caller(++$i)) {
- last if $pack ne $curpack;
- }
-
- my ($subcode, $subref);
- if (ref $c eq 'CODE') {
- $subcode = "sub { for (1 .. $n) { local \$_; package $pack; &\$c; } }";
- $subref = eval $subcode;
- }
- else {
- $subcode = "sub { for (1 .. $n) { local \$_; package $pack; $c;} }";
- $subref = _doeval($subcode);
- }
- croak "runloop unable to compile '$c': $@\ncode: $subcode\n" if $@;
- print STDERR "runloop $n '$subcode'\n" if $debug;
-
- $t0 = Benchmark->new(0);
- &$subref;
- $t1 = Benchmark->new($n);
- $td = &timediff($t1, $t0);
-
- timedebug("runloop:",$td);
- $td;
- }
-
-
- sub timeit {
- my($n, $code) = @_;
- my($wn, $wc, $wd);
-
- printf STDERR "timeit $n $code\n" if $debug;
-
- if ($cache && exists $cache{$n}) {
- $wn = $cache{$n};
- } else {
- $wn = &runloop($n, '');
- $cache{$n} = $wn;
- }
-
- $wc = &runloop($n, $code);
-
- $wd = timediff($wc, $wn);
-
- timedebug("timeit: ",$wc);
- timedebug(" - ",$wn);
- timedebug(" = ",$wd);
-
- $wd;
- }
-
-
- my $default_for = 3;
- my $min_for = 0.1;
-
- sub runfor {
- my ($code, $tmax) = @_;
-
- if ( not defined $tmax or $tmax == 0 ) {
- $tmax = $default_for;
- } elsif ( $tmax < 0 ) {
- $tmax = -$tmax;
- }
-
- die "runfor(..., $tmax): timelimit cannot be less than $min_for.\n"
- if $tmax < $min_for;
-
- my ($n, $td, $tc, $ntot, $rtot, $utot, $stot, $cutot, $cstot );
-
- # First find the minimum $n that gives a non-zero timing.
-
- my $nmin;
-
- for ($n = 1, $tc = 0; $tc <= 0; $n *= 2 ) {
- $td = timeit($n, $code);
- $tc = $td->[1] + $td->[2];
- }
-
- $nmin = $n;
-
- my $ttot = 0;
- my $tpra = 0.05 * $tmax; # Target/time practice.
-
- # Double $n until we have think we have practiced enough.
- for ( $n = 1; $ttot < $tpra; $n *= 2 ) {
- $td = timeit($n, $code);
- $tc = $td->cpu_p;
- $ntot += $n;
- $rtot += $td->[0];
- $utot += $td->[1];
- $stot += $td->[2];
- $ttot = $utot + $stot;
- $cutot += $td->[3];
- $cstot += $td->[4];
- }
-
- my $r;
-
- # Then iterate towards the $tmax.
- while ( $ttot < $tmax ) {
- $r = $tmax / $ttot - 1; # Linear approximation.
- $n = int( $r * $n );
- $n = $nmin if $n < $nmin;
- $td = timeit($n, $code);
- $ntot += $n;
- $rtot += $td->[0];
- $utot += $td->[1];
- $stot += $td->[2];
- $ttot = $utot + $stot;
- $cutot += $td->[3];
- $cstot += $td->[4];
- }
-
- return bless [ $rtot, $utot, $stot, $cutot, $cstot, $ntot ];
- }
-
- # --- Functions implementing high-level time-then-print utilities
-
- sub n_to_for {
- my $n = shift;
- return $n == 0 ? $default_for : $n < 0 ? -$n : undef;
- }
-
- sub timethis{
- my($n, $code, $title, $style) = @_;
- my($t, $for, $forn);
-
- if ( $n > 0 ) {
- croak "non-integer loopcount $n, stopped" if int($n)<$n;
- $t = timeit($n, $code);
- $title = "timethis $n" unless defined $title;
- } else {
- $fort = n_to_for( $n );
- $t = runfor($code, $fort);
- $title = "timethis for $fort" unless defined $title;
- $forn = $t->[-1];
- }
- local $| = 1;
- $style = "" unless defined $style;
- printf("%10s: ", $title);
- print timestr($t, $style, $defaultfmt),"\n";
-
- $n = $forn if defined $forn;
-
- # A conservative warning to spot very silly tests.
- # Don't assume that your benchmark is ok simply because
- # you don't get this warning!
- print " (warning: too few iterations for a reliable count)\n"
- if $n < $min_count
- || ($t->real < 1 && $n < 1000)
- || $t->cpu_a < $min_cpu;
- $t;
- }
-
- sub timethese{
- my($n, $alt, $style) = @_;
- die "usage: timethese(count, { 'Name1'=>'code1', ... }\n"
- unless ref $alt eq HASH;
- my @names = sort keys %$alt;
- $style = "" unless defined $style;
- print "Benchmark: ";
- if ( $n > 0 ) {
- croak "non-integer loopcount $n, stopped" if int($n)<$n;
- print "timing $n iterations of";
- } else {
- print "running";
- }
- print " ", join(', ',@names);
- unless ( $n > 0 ) {
- my $for = n_to_for( $n );
- print ", each for at least $for CPU seconds";
- }
- print "...\n";
-
- # we could save the results in an array and produce a summary here
- # sum, min, max, avg etc etc
- foreach my $name (@names) {
- timethis ($n, $alt -> {$name}, $name, $style);
- }
- }
-
- 1;
-