improve documentation of the 'name' directive and the 'workload' mechanism

Carlos O'Donell carlos@redhat.com
Tue Aug 4 16:49:40 GMT 2020


On 8/4/20 7:31 AM, Paul Zimmermann wrote:
>        Hi,
> 
> here is a patch improving the 'name' directive and the 'workload' mechanism
> (for "make bench"). Feedback is welcome. I will submit separately later on
> some new workload traces for sin, exp, pow, sinf128, expf128, powf128.
> 
> Paul Zimmermann

Paul,

This looks good and I've pushed this for glibc 2.32. Thanks.

Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>

> From b8ff91bf0bfb26114d1b4e5d30f210f41a4ff58d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> From: Paul Zimmermann <Paul.Zimmermann@inria.fr>
> Date: Tue, 4 Aug 2020 13:27:39 +0200
> Subject: [PATCH] improve documentation of the 'name' directive and the
>  'workload' mechanism
> 
> ---
>  benchtests/README | 20 ++++++++++++++------
>  1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/benchtests/README b/benchtests/README
> index f440f3295a..44736d7e63 100644
> --- a/benchtests/README
> +++ b/benchtests/README
> @@ -125,17 +125,25 @@ math functions perform computations at different levels of precision (64-bit vs
>  performance of these functions.  One could separate inputs for these domains in
>  the same file by using the `name' directive that looks something like this:
>  
> -  ##name: 240bit
> +  ##name: 240bits
>  
> -See the pow-inputs file for an example of what such a partitioned input file
> -would look like.
> +All inputs after the ##name: 240bits directive and until the next `name'
> +directive (or the end of file) are part of the "240bits" benchmark and
> +will be output separately in benchtests/bench.out.  See the pow-inputs file
> +for an example of what such a partitioned input file would look like.
>  
> -It is also possible to measure throughput of a (partial) trace extracted from
> -a real workload.  In this case the whole trace is iterated over multiple times
> -rather than repeating every input multiple times.  This can be done via:
> +It is also possible to measure latency and reciprocal throughput of a
> +(partial) trace extracted from a real workload.  In this case the whole trace
> +is iterated over multiple times rather than repeating every input multiple
> +times.  This can be done via:
>  
>    ##name: workload-<name>
>  
> +where <name> is simply used to distinguish between different traces in the
> +same file.  To create such a trace, you can simply extract using printf()
> +values uses for a specific application, or generate random values in some
> +interval.  See the expf-inputs file for an example of this workload mechanism.
> +
>  Benchmark Sets:
>  ==============
>  
> 


-- 
Cheers,
Carlos.



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