Difference between revisions of "Application benchmarking"
(→) |
(→) |
||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
#include <time.h> | #include <time.h> | ||
− | |||
static double TimeSpecToSeconds(struct timespec* ts) | static double TimeSpecToSeconds(struct timespec* ts) | ||
{ | { | ||
return (double)ts->tv_sec + (double)ts->tv_nsec / 1000000000.0; | return (double)ts->tv_sec + (double)ts->tv_nsec / 1000000000.0; | ||
} | } | ||
− | |||
struct timespec start; | struct timespec start; | ||
struct timespec end; | struct timespec end; |
Revision as of 16:32, 16 January 2019
Overview
Application benchmarking is an elementary skill for any performance engineering effort. Because it is the base for any other acitivity it is crucial to measure result in an accurate, deterministic and reproducible way. The following components are required for meaningful application benchmarking:
- Timing: How to accuratly measure time in software.
- Documentation: Because there are many influences it is essential to document all possible performance relvant influences.
- System configuration: Modern systems allow to adjust many performance relevant settings as clock speed, memory settings, cache organisation as well as OS settings.
- Resource allocation and affinity control: What resources are used and how is worked mapped on resources.
Because so many things can go wrong while benchmarking it is imporatant to have a sceptical attitude against good results. Especially for very good results one has to check if the result is reasonable. Further results must be deterministic and reproducable, if required statistic distribution over multiple runs has to be documented.
In the following all examples use the Likwid Performance Tools for tool support.
Timing
For benchmarking an accurate so called wallclock timer (end to end stop watch) is required. Every timer has a minimal time resolution that can be measured. Therefore if the code region to be measured is running shorter the measurement must be extended until it reaches a time duration that can be resolved by the timer used.
Recommended timing routines are
- clock_gettime(), POSIX compliant timing function (man page) which is recommended as a replacement to the widespread gettimeofday()
- MPI_Wtime and omp_get_wtime, standardized programming model specific timing routine for MPI and OpenMP
- Timing in instrumented Likwid regions based on cycle counters for short measurements
Example
#include <time.h>
static double TimeSpecToSeconds(struct timespec* ts) {
return (double)ts->tv_sec + (double)ts->tv_nsec / 1000000000.0;
}
struct timespec start; struct timespec end; double elapsedSeconds; if(clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &start)) { /* handle error */ } /* Do stuff */ if(clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &end)) { /* handle error */ } elapsedSeconds = TimeSpecToSeconds(&end) - TimeSpecToSeconds(&start);