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Benchmarking tips
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Introduction
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For benchmarking a patch we want to reduce all possible sources of
noise as much as possible. How to do that is very OS dependent.
Note that low noise is required, but not sufficient. It does not
exclude measurement bias.
See `"Producing Wrong Data Without Doing Anything Obviously Wrong!" by Mytkowicz, Diwan, Hauswith and Sweeney (ASPLOS 2009) <https://users.cs.northwestern.edu/~robby/courses/322-2013-spring/mytkowicz-wrong-data.pdf>`_
for example.
General
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* Use a high resolution timer, e.g. perf under linux.
* Run the benchmark multiple times to be able to recognize noise.
* Disable as many processes or services as possible on the target system.
* Disable frequency scaling, turbo boost and address space
randomization (see OS specific section).
* Static link if the OS supports it. That avoids any variation that
might be introduced by loading dynamic libraries. This can be done
by passing ``-DLLVM_BUILD_STATIC=ON`` to cmake.
* Try to avoid storage. On some systems you can use tmpfs. Putting the
program, inputs and outputs on tmpfs avoids touching a real storage
system, which can have a pretty big variability.
To mount it (on linux and freebsd at least)::
mount -t tmpfs -o size=<XX>g none dir_to_mount
Linux
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* Disable address space randomization::
echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space
* Set scaling_governor to performance::
for i in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor
do
echo performance > $i
done
* Use https://github.com/lpechacek/cpuset to reserve cpus for just the
program you are benchmarking. If using perf, leave at least 2 cores
so that perf runs in one and your program in another::
cset shield -c N1,N2 -k on
This will move all threads out of N1 and N2. The ``-k on`` means
that even kernel threads are moved out.
* Disable the SMT pair of the cpus you will use for the benchmark. The
pair of cpu N can be found in
``/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpuN/topology/thread_siblings_list`` and
disabled with::
echo 0 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpuX/online
* Run the program with::
cset shield --exec -- perf stat -r 10 <cmd>
This will run the command after ``--`` in the isolated cpus. The
particular perf command runs the ``<cmd>`` 10 times and reports
statistics.
With these in place you can expect perf variations of less than 0.1%.
Linux Intel
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* Disable turbo mode::
echo 1 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/intel_pstate/no_turbo