of the size and alignment is based on a trace of SPEC2006. Instead of
repeating the same copy over and over again like the existing tests, it times
several thousand different copies to more accurately estimate the overhead of
branch prediction.
* benchtests/Makefile (string-benchset): Add memcpy-random.
* benchtests/bench-memcpy-random.c: New file.
Add a configure check that looks for python3 and python in that order
since we had agreed in the past to prefer python3 over python in all
our code. The patch also adjusts invocations through the various
Makefiles to use the set variable.
* configure.ac: Check for python3 or python.
* configure: Regenerated.
* config.make.in (PYTHON): New variable.
* benchtests/Makefile: Don't define PYTHON.
(bench): Define target only if PYTHON was defined.
* Rules: Don't define PYTHON.
Define pretty printer targets only if PYTHON was defined.
(tests-printers): Add to tests-unsupported if PYTHON is not
found.
(python-flags, python-invoke): Remove.
(tests-printers-out): Use PYTHON instead of python-invoke.
Currently strsep calls strpbrk is is now a veneer to strcspn. Calling
strcspn directly is faster. Since it handles a delimiter string of size
1 as a special case, this is not needed in strsep itself. Although this
means there is a slightly higher overhead if the delimiter size is 1,
all other cases are slightly faster. The overall performance gain is 5-10%
on AArch64.
The string/bits/string2.h header contains optimizations for constant
delimiters of size 1-3. Benchmarking these showed similar performance for
size 1 (since in all cases strchr/strchrnul is used), while size 2 and 3
can give up to 2x speedup for small input strings. However if these cases
are common it seems much better to add this optimization to strcspn.
So move these header optimizations to string-inlines.c.
Improve the strsep benchmark so that it actually benchmarks something.
The current version contains a delimiter character at every position in the
input string, so there is very little work to do, and the extremely inefficent
simple_strsep implementation appears fastest in every case. The new version
has either no match in the input for the fail case and a match halfway in the
input for the success case. The input is then restored so that each iteration
does exactly the same amount of work. Reduce the number of testcases since
simple_strsep takes a lot of time now.
* benchtests/bench-strsep.c (oldstrsep): Add old implementation.
(do_one_test) Restore original string so iteration works.
* string/string-inlines.c (do_test): Create better input strings.
(test_main) Reduce number of testruns.
* string/string-inlines.c (__old_strsep_1c): New function.
(__old_strsep_2c): Likewise.
(__old_strsep_3c): Likewise.
* string/strsep.c (__strsep): Remove case of small delim string.
Call strcspn directly rather than strpbrk.
* string/bits/string2.h (__strsep): Remove define.
(__strsep_1c): Remove.
(__strsep_2c): Remove.
(__strsep_3c): Remove.
(strsep): Remove.
* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/internal_statvfs.c
(__statvfs_getflags): Rename to __strsep.
This patch adds fmaxf and fminf benchtests. It is based on
math/s_fmax_template.c implementation which checks for basically four
different classes:
1. if x is greater or equal than y.
2. if x is less than y.
3. if x or y is signaling.
4. if y is nan.
Cases 1 and 2 are used for default input number (by mixing normal double
numbers and infinity), while case 3 and 4 are used each for on for a
benchmark class.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and powerpc64-linux-gnu.
* benchtests/Makefile (bench-math): Add fminf and fmaxf.
(CFLAGS-bench-fmaxf.c): New rule.
(CFLAGS-bench-fminf.c): Likewise.
* benchtests/fmaxf-inputs: New file.
* benchtests/fminf-inputs: Likewise.
This patch adds fmax and fmin benchtests. It is based math/s_fmax_template.c
implementation which checks for basically four different classes:
1. if x is greater or equal than y.
2. if x is less than y.
3. if x or y is signaling.
4. if y is nan.
Cases 1 and 2 are used for default input number (by mixing normal double
numbers and infinity), while case 3 and 4 are used each for on for a
benchmark class.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and powerpc64-linux-gnu.
* benchtests/Makefile (bench-math): Add fmin and fmax.
(CFLAGS-bench-fmax.c): New rule.
(CFLAGS-bench-fmin.c): New rule.
* benchtests/fmax-inputs: New file.
* benchtests/fmin-inputs: Likewise.
Benchsets in benchtests use test-skeleton, so they too need to be
linked against the new libsupport DSO.
* benchtests/Makefile (binaries-benchset): Depend on libsupport
DSO.
calls strcspn, call strcspn directly so we get the end of the token without
an extra call to rawmemchr. Also avoid an unnecessary call to strcspn after
the last token by adding an early exit for an empty string. Change strtok
to tailcall strtok_r to avoid unnecessary code duplication.
Remove the special header optimization for strtok_r of a 1-character
constant string - both strspn and strcspn contain optimizations for this
case. Benchmarking this showed similar performance in the worst case,
but up to 5.5x better performance in the "found" case for large inputs.
* benchtests/bench-strtok.c (oldstrtok): Add old implementation.
* string/strtok.c (strtok): Change to tailcall __strtok_r.
* string/strtok_r.c (__strtok_r): Optimize for performance.
* string/string-inlines.c (__old_strtok_r_1c): New function.
* string/bits/string2.h (__strtok_r): Move to string-inlines.c.
This patch makes the sqrt benchmark use -fno-builtin, as already done
for benchmarks of ffs and ffsll, so that it actually benchmarks the
glibc function as (presumably) intended even in the presence of the
compiler inlining sqrt.
Tested for x86_64 and also used for benchmarking my ARM sqrt patch.
* benchtests/Makefile (CFLAGS-bench-sqrt.c): New variable.
Clear the destination buffer updated by the previous run in bench-memcpy.c
and test-memcpy.c to catch the error when the following implementations do
not copy anything.
[BZ #19907]
* benchtests/bench-memcpy.c (do_one_test): Clear the destination
buffer updated by the previous run.
* string/test-memcpy.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
* benchtests/bench-memmove.c (do_one_test): Add a comment.
* string/test-memmove.c (do_one_test): Likewise.
This patch adds full support for cross-building benchmarks. Some
benchmarks like those that need locales to be generated cannot be
built and are hence skipped for cross builds.
Tested by cross building for aarch64 on x86_64 and then running the
generated benchmark on aarch64.
* benchtests/Makefile (wcsmbs-benchset): Include only for
native builds and runs.
(LOCALES): Likewise.
(bench-build): Build timing-type here instead of the bench
target. Generate locale only for native builds.
* benchtests/README: Add note for cross-building.
For situations where we are cross-building or where we want to avoid
building on the target system, we want a way to only build benchmarks
and then copy them over to the target system to run them. I have also
added a simple enhancement for the 'bench' target where all benchmark
binaries are built and then the benchmarks executed.
Tested on arm.
Makefile.in (bench-build): New target.
Rules (PHONY): Add bench-build target.
benchtests/Makefile (bench): Depend on bench-build.
(bench-build): New target.
From the bug:
Obsolete locale. The ISO-639 code for Hebrew was changed from 'iw'
to 'he' in 1989, according to Bruno Haible on libc-alpha 2003-09-01.
Reported-by: Chris Leonard <cjlhomeaddress@gmail.com>
benchtests should use $(test-via-rtld-prefix) and $(+link-tests) like
other glibc tests.
[BZ #19783]
* benchtests/Makefile (run-bench): Replace $(rtld-prefix) with
$(test-via-rtld-prefix).
($(binaries-bench)): Replace $(+link) with $(+link-tests).
The ffs and ffsll functions were listed as math functions when they
are actually defined in strings.h and string.h respectively. Shuffle
around the Makefile variables a bit and make a separate space for ffs
and ffsll.
The sincos benchmark has only about a dozen inputs that don't measure
the impact of changes to various passes. Since much of the code
properties are inherited from sin and cos, copy those inputs in to get
more comprehensive coverage.
Prevent function calls that don't return anything from being optimized
out by the compiler by marking its input variables as used.
This prevents the sincos function call from being optimized out in the
benchmark.
ChangeLog:
2015-09-18 Wilco Dijkstra <wdijkstr@arm.com>
* benchtests/Makefile: Add bench-math-inlines, link with libm.
* benchtests/bench-math-inlines.c: New benchmark.
* benchtests/bench-util.h: New file.
* benchtests/bench-util.c: New file.
* benchtests/bench-skeleton.c: Add include of bench-util.c/h.
This patch provides optimized versions of strcmp and wcscmp with the z13
vector instructions.
The architecture specific string.h had a typo, which leads to ommiting the
inline version in this file if __USE_STRING_INLINES is defined.
Tested this inline version by tweaking test-strcmp.c.
ChangeLog:
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/strcmp-vx.S: New File.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/strcmp.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/wcscmp-c.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/wcscmp-vx.S: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/wcscmp.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/s390-32/multiarch/strcmp.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/s390-64/multiarch/strcmp.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/Makefile (sysdep_routines): Add strcmp and
wcscmp functions.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/ifunc-impl-list.c
(__libc_ifunc_impl_list): Add ifunc test for strcmp, wcscmp.
* string/strcmp.c (STRCMP): Define and use macro.
* benchtests/bench-wcscmp.c: New File.
* benchtests/Makefile (wcsmbs-bench): Add wcscmp.
* sysdeps/s390/bits/string.h: Fix typo: _HAVE_STRING_ARCH_strcmp
instead of _HAVE_STRING_ARCH_memchr.
This patch provides optimized versions of strlen and wcslen with the z13 vector
instructions.
The helper macro IFUNC_VX_IMPL is introduced and is used to register all
__<func>_c() and __<func>_vx() functions within __libc_ifunc_impl_list()
to the ifunc test framework.
ChangeLog:
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/Makefile: New File.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/strlen-c.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/strlen-vx.S: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/strlen.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/wcslen-c.c: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/wcslen-vx.S: Likewise.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/wcslen.c: Likewise.
* string/strlen.c (STRLEN): Define and use macro.
* sysdeps/s390/multiarch/ifunc-impl-list.c
(IFUNC_VX_IMPL): New macro function.
(__libc_ifunc_impl_list): Add ifunc test for strlen, wcslen.
* benchtests/Makefile (wcsmbs-bench): New variable.
(string-bench-all): Added wcsmbs-bench.
* benchtests/bench-wcslen.c: New File.
This script is a sample implementation that uses import_bench to
construct two benchmark objects and compare them. If detailed timing
information is available (when one does `make DETAILED=1 bench`), it
writes out graphs for all functions it benchmarks and prints
significant differences in timings of the two benchmark runs. If
detailed timing information is not available, it points out
significant differences in aggregate times.
Call this script as follows:
compare_bench.py schema_file.json bench1.out bench2.out
Alternatively, if one wants to set a different threshold for warnings
(default is a 10% difference):
compare_bench.py schema_file.json bench1.out bench2.out 25
The threshold in the example above is 25%. schema_file.json is the
JSON schema (which is $srcdir/benchtests/scripts/benchout.schema.json
for the benchmark output file) and bench1.out and bench2.out are the
two benchmark output files to compare.
The key functionality here is the compress_timings function which
groups together points that are close together into a single point
that is the mean of all its representative points. Any point in such
a group is at most 1.5x the smallest point in that group. The
detailed derivation is a comment in the function.
* benchtests/scripts/compare_bench.py: New file.
* benchtests/scripts/import_bench.py (mean): New function.
(split_list): Likewise.
(do_for_all_timings): Likewise.
(compress_timings): Likewise.
This is the beginning of a module to import and process benchmark
outputs. The module currently supports importing of a bench.out and
validating it against a schema file. In future this could grow a set
of routines that benchmark consumers may find useful to build their
own analysis tools. I have altered validate_bench to use this module
too.
* benchtests/scripts/import_bench.py: New file.
* benchtests/scripts/validate_benchout.py: Import import_bench
instead of jsonschema.
(validate_bench): Remove function.
(main): Use import_bench.
This patch optimizes strcpy for ppc64/power7 for unaligned source or
destination address. The source or destination address is aligned
to doubleword and data is shifted based on the alignment and
added with the previous loaded data to be written as a doubleword.
For each load, cmpb instruction is used for faster null check.
The word aligned optimization is also removed, since the new unaligned
code path shows better results handling word-aligned strings.
More combination of unaligned inputs is also added in benchtest
to measure the improvement.The new optimization shows 2 to 80% of
performance improvement for longer string though it does not show
big difference on string size less than 16 due to additional checks.
TEST_IFUNC is only tested in two headers, bench-string.h and
test-string.h, after it gets defined by those headers, and it never
gets undefined.
Thus no defines of TEST_IFUNC are needed, and the *-ifunc.c tests that
just define TEST_IFUNC and include other tests are also redundant, as
is the code to remove $(tests-ifunc) and $(xtests-ifunc) conditionally
from tests and xtests. This patch removes the useless defines and
tests of TEST_IFUNC and the associated useless tests and makefile
code. It thereby fixes a series of warnings
"../string/test-string.h:21:0: warning: "TEST_IFUNC" redefined" where
test-string.h defines TEST_IFUNC to empty, other files define it to 1
and this produces warnings.
Tested for x86_64.
* debug/test-stpcpy_chk-ifunc.c: Remove file.
* debug/test-strcpy_chk-ifunc.c: Likewise.
* wcsmbs/test-wcschr-ifunc.c: Likewise.
* wcsmbs/test-wcscmp-ifunc.c: Likewise.
* wcsmbs/test-wcscpy-ifunc.c: Likewise.
* wcsmbs/test-wcslen-ifunc.c: Likewise.
* wcsmbs/test-wcsrchr-ifunc.c: Likewise.
* wcsmbs/test-wmemcmp-ifunc.c: Likewise.
* Rules [$(multi-arch) = no] (tests): Do not filter out
$(tests-ifunc).
[$(multi-arch) = no] (xtests): Do not filter out $(xtests-ifunc).
* debug/Makefile (tests-ifunc): Remove variable.
(tests): Do not add $(tests-ifunc).
* wcsmbs/Makefile (tests-ifunc): Remove variable.
(tests): Do not add $(tests-ifunc).
* benchtests/bench-string.h (TEST_IFUNC): Remove macro.
[TEST_IFUNC]: Remove conditionals.
* string/test-string.h (TEST_IFUNC): Remove macro.
[TEST_IFUNC]: Remove conditionals.
Add a microbenchmark for measuring malloc and free performance with
varying numbers of threads. The benchmark allocates and frees buffers
of random sizes in a random order and measures the overall execution
time and RSS. Variants of the benchmark are run with 1, 8, 16 and
32 threads.
The random block sizes used follow an inverse square distribution
which is intended to mimic the behaviour of real applications which
tend to allocate many more small blocks than large ones.
ChangeLog:
2014-11-05 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* benchtests/Makefile: (bench-malloc): Add malloc thread
scalability benchmark.
* benchtests/bench-malloc-threads.c: New file.
This patch adds an optimized memset implementation for POWER8. For
sizes from 0 to 255 bytes, a word/doubleword algorithm similar to
POWER7 optimized one is used.
For size higher than 255 two strategies are used:
1. If the constant is different than 0, the memory is written with
altivec vector instruction;
2. If constant is 0, dbcz instructions are used. The loop is unrolled
to clear 512 byte at time.
Using vector instructions increases throughput considerable, with a
double performance for sizes larger than 1024. The dcbz loops unrolls
also shows performance improvement, by doubling throughput for sizes
larger than 8192 bytes.
One wart in the original support for test wrappers for cross testing,
as noted in
<https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2012-10/msg00722.html>, is the
requirement for test wrappers to pass a poorly-defined set of
environment variables from the build system to the system running the
glibc under test. Although some variables are passed explicitly via
$(test-wrapper-env), including LD_* variables that simply can't be
passed implicitly because of the side effects they'd have on the build
system's dynamic linker, others are passed implicitly, including
variables such as GCONV_PATH and LOCPATH that could potentially affect
the build system's libc (so effectively relying on any such effects
not breaking the wrappers). In addition, the code in
cross-test-ssh.sh for preserving environment variables is fragile (it
depends on how bash formats a list of exported variables, and could
well break for multi-line variable definitions where the contents
contain things looking like other variable definitions).
This patch moves to explicitly passing environment variables via
$(test-wrapper-env). Makefile variables that previously used
$(test-wrapper) are split up into -before-env and -after-env parts
that can be passed separately to the various .sh files used in
testing, so those files can then insert environment settings between
the two parts.
The common default environment settings in make-test-out are made into
a separate makefile variable that can also be passed to scripts,
rather than many scripts duplicating those settings (for testing an
installed glibc, it is desirable to have the GCONV_PATH setting on
just one place, so just that one place needs to support it pointing to
an installed sysroot instead of the build tree). The default settings
are included in the variables such as $(test-program-prefix), so that
if tests do not need any non-default settings they can continue to use
single variables rather than the split-up variables.
Although this patch cleans up LC_ALL=C settings (that being part of
the common defaults), various LANG=C and LANGUAGE=C settings remain.
Those are generally unnecessary and I propose a subsequent cleanup to
remove them. LC_ALL takes precedence over LANG, and while LANGUAGE
takes precedence over LC_ALL, it only does so for settings other than
LC_ALL=C. So LC_ALL=C on its own is sufficient to ensure the C
locale, and anything that gets LC_ALL=C does not need the other
settings.
While preparing this patch I noticed some tests with .sh files that
appeared to do nothing beyond what the generic makefile support for
tests can do (localedata/tst-wctype.sh - the makefiles support -ENV
variables and .input files - and localedata/tst-mbswcs.sh - just runs
five tests that could be run individually from the makefile). So I
propose another subsequent cleanup to move those to using the generic
support instead of special .sh files.
Tested x86_64 (native) and powerpc32 (cross).
* Makeconfig (run-program-env): New variable.
(run-program-prefix-before-env): Likewise.
(run-program-prefix-after-env): Likewise.
(run-program-prefix): Define in terms of new variables.
(built-program-cmd-before-env): New variable.
(built-program-cmd-after-env): Likewise.
(built-program-cmd): Define in terms of new variables.
(test-program-prefix-before-env): New variable.
(test-program-prefix-after-env): Likewise.
(test-program-prefix): Define in terms of new variables.
(test-program-cmd-before-env): New variable.
(test-program-cmd-after-env): Likewise.
(test-program-cmd): Define in terms of new variables.
* Rules (make-test-out): Use $(run-program-env).
* scripts/cross-test-ssh.sh (env_blacklist): Remove variable.
(help): Do not mention environment variables. Mention
--timeoutfactor option.
(timeoutfactor): New variable.
(blacklist_exports): Remove function.
(exports): Remove variable.
(command): Do not include ${exports}.
* manual/install.texi (Configuring and compiling): Do not mention
test wrappers preserving environment variables. Mention that last
assignment to a variable must take precedence.
* INSTALL: Regenerated.
* benchtests/Makefile (run-bench): Use $(run-program-env).
* catgets/Makefile ($(objpfx)test1.cat): Use
$(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and
$(built-program-cmd-after-env).
($(objpfx)test2.cat): Do not specify environment variables
explicitly.
($(objpfx)de/libc.cat): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env),
$(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env).
($(objpfx)test-gencat.out): Use $(test-program-cmd-before-env),
$(run-program-env) and $(test-program-cmd-after-env).
($(objpfx)sample.SJIS.cat): Do not specify environment variables
explicitly.
* catgets/test-gencat.sh: Use test_program_cmd_before_env,
run_program_env and test_program_cmd_after_env arguments.
* elf/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-pathopt.out): Use $(run-program-env).
* elf/tst-pathopt.sh: Use run_program_env argument.
* iconvdata/Makefile ($(objpfx)iconv-test.out): Use
$(test-wrapper-env) and $(run-program-env).
* iconvdata/run-iconv-test.sh: Use test_wrapper_env and
run_program_env arguments.
* iconvdata/tst-table.sh: Do not set GCONV_PATH explicitly.
* intl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-gettext.out): Use
$(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and
$(test-program-prefix-after-env).
($(objpfx)tst-gettext2.out): Likewise.
* intl/tst-gettext.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env,
run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments.
* intl/tst-gettext2.sh: Likewise.
* intl/tst-gettext4.sh: Do not set environment variables
explicitly.
* intl/tst-gettext6.sh: Likewise.
* intl/tst-translit.sh: Likewise.
* malloc/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-mtrace.out): Use
$(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and
$(test-program-prefix-after-env).
* malloc/tst-mtrace.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env,
run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments.
* math/Makefile (run-regen-ulps): Use $(run-program-env).
* nptl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-tls6.out): Use $(run-program-env).
* nptl/tst-tls6.sh: Use run_program_env argument. Set LANG=C
explicitly with each use of ${test_wrapper_env}.
* posix/Makefile ($(objpfx)wordexp-tst.out): Use
$(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and
$(test-program-prefix-after-env).
* posix/tst-getconf.sh: Do not set environment variables
explicitly.
* posix/wordexp-tst.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env,
run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments.
* stdio-common/tst-printf.sh: Do not set environment variables
explicitly.
* stdlib/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-fmtmsg.out): Use
$(test-program-prefix-before-env), $(run-program-env) and
$(test-program-prefix-after-env).
* stdlib/tst-fmtmsg.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env,
run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments.
Split $test calls into $test_pre and $test.
* timezone/Makefile (build-testdata): Use
$(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and
$(built-program-cmd-after-env).
localedata/ChangeLog:
* Makefile ($(addprefix $(objpfx),$(CTYPE_FILES))): Use
$(built-program-cmd-before-env), $(run-program-env) and
$(built-program-cmd-after-env).
($(objpfx)sort-test.out): Use $(test-program-prefix-before-env),
$(run-program-env) and $(test-program-prefix-after-env).
($(objpfx)tst-fmon.out): Use $(run-program-prefix-before-env),
$(run-program-env) and $(run-program-prefix-after-env).
($(objpfx)tst-locale.out): Use $(built-program-cmd-before-env),
$(run-program-env) and $(built-program-cmd-after-env).
($(objpfx)tst-trans.out): Use $(run-program-prefix-before-env),
$(run-program-env), $(run-program-prefix-after-env),
$(test-program-prefix-before-env) and
$(test-program-prefix-after-env).
($(objpfx)tst-ctype.out): Use $(test-program-cmd-before-env),
$(run-program-env) and $(test-program-cmd-after-env).
($(objpfx)tst-wctype.out): Likewise.
($(objpfx)tst-langinfo.out): Likewise.
($(objpfx)tst-langinfo-static.out): Likewise.
* gen-locale.sh: Use localedef_before_env, run_program_env and
localedef_after_env arguments.
* sort-test.sh: Use test_program_prefix_before_env,
run_program_env and test_program_prefix_after_env arguments.
* tst-ctype.sh: Use tst_ctype_before_env, run_program_env and
tst_ctype_after_env arguments.
* tst-fmon.sh: Use run_program_prefix_before_env, run_program_env
and run_program_prefix_after_env arguments.
* tst-langinfo.sh: Use tst_langinfo_before_env, run_program_env
and tst_langinfo_after_env arguments.
* tst-locale.sh: Use localedef_before_env, run_program_env and
localedef_after_env arguments.
* tst-mbswcs.sh: Do not set environment variables explicitly.
* tst-numeric.sh: Likewise.
* tst-rpmatch.sh: Likewise.
* tst-trans.sh: Use run_program_prefix_before_env,
run_program_env, run_program_prefix_after_env,
test_program_prefix_before_env and test_program_prefix_after_env
arguments.
* tst-wctype.sh: Use tst_wctype_before_env, run_program_env and
tst_wctype_after_env arguments.
Add a new 'init' directive that specifies the name of the function to
call to do function-specific initialization. This is useful for
benchmarks that need to do a one-time initialization before the
functions are executed.
glibc's Makeconfig defines some variables such as $(libm) and $(libdl)
for linking with libraries built by glibc, and nptl/Makeconfig
(included by the toplevel Makeconfig) defines others such as
$(shared-thread-library).
In some places glibc's Makefiles use those variables when linking
against the relevant libraries, but in other places they hardcode the
location of the libraries in the build tree. This patch cleans up
various places to use the variables that already exist (in the case of
libm, replacing several duplicate definitions of a $(link-libm)
variable in subdirectory Makefiles). (It's not necessarily exactly
equivalent to what the existing code does - in particular,
$(shared-thread-library) includes libpthread_nonshared, but is
replacing places that just referred to libpthread.so. But I think
that change is desirable on the general principle of linking things as
close as possible to the way in which they would be linked with an
installed library, unless there is a clear reason not to do so.)
To support running tests with an installed copy of glibc without
needing the full build tree from when that copy was built, I think it
will be useful to use such variables more generally and systematically
- every time the rules for building a test refer to some file from the
build tree that's also installed by glibc, use a makefile variable so
that the installed-testing case can point those variables to installed
copies of the files. This patch just deals with straightforward cases
where such variables already exist.
It's quite possible some uses of $(shared-thread-library) should
actually be a new $(thread-library) variable that's set appropriately
in the --disable-shared case, if those uses would in fact work without
shared libraries. I didn't change the status quo that those cases
hardcode use of a shared library whether or not it's actually needed
(but other uses such as $(libm) and $(libdl) would now get the static
library if the shared library isn't built, when some previously
hardcoded use of the shared library - if they actually need shared
libraries, the test itself needs an enable-shared conditional anyway).
Tested x86_64.
* benchtests/Makefile
($(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-math))): Depend on $(libm),
not $(common-objpfx)math/libm.so.
($(addprefix $(objpfx)bench-,$(bench-pthread))): Depend on
$(shared-thread-library), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so.
* elf/Makefile ($(objpfx)noload): Depend on $(libdl), not
$(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so.
($(objpfx)tst-audit8): Depend on $(libm), not
$(common-objpfx)math/libm.so.
* malloc/Makefile ($(objpfx)libmemusage.so): Depend on $(libdl),
not $(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so.
* math/Makefile
($(addprefix $(objpfx),$(filter-out $(tests-static),$(tests)))):
Depend on $(libm), not $(objpfx)libm.so. Do not condition on
[$(build-shared) = yes].
($(objpfx)test-fenv-tls): Depend on $(shared-thread-library), not
$(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so.
* misc/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-tsearch): Depend on $(libm), not
$(common-objpfx)math/libm.so$(libm.so-version) or
$(common-objpfx)math/libm.a depending on [$(build-shared) = yes].
* nptl/Makefile ($(objpfx)tst-unload): Depend on $(libdl), not
$(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so.
* setjmp/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable.
($(objpfx)tst-setjmp-fp): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm).
* stdio-common/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable.
($(objpfx)tst-printf-round): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm).
* stdlib/Makefile (link-libm): Remove variable.
($(objpfx)bug-getcontext): Depend on $(libm), not $(link-libm).
($(objpfx)tst-strtod-round): Likewise.
($(objpfx)tst-tininess): Likewise.
($(objpfx)tst-strtod-underflow): Likewise.
($(objpfx)tst-strtod6): Likewise.
($(objpfx)tst-tls-atexit): Depend on $(shared-thread-library) and
$(libdl), not $(common-objpfx)nptl/libpthread.so and
$(common-objpfx)dlfcn/libdl.so.
Using -lm and -lpthread results in the shared objects in the system
being used to link against. This happened to work for libm because
there haven't been any changes to the libm ABI recently that could
break the existing benchmarks. This doesn't always work for the
pthread benchmarks. The correct way to build against libraries in the
build directory is to have the binaries explicitly depend on them so
that $(+link) can pick them up.
Add a small library to print JSON values and use it to improve the
readability of the benchmark output and the readability of the
benchmark code.
ChangeLog:
2014-04-11 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* benchtests/Makefile (extra-objs): Add json-lib.o.
(bench-func): Tidy up JSON output.
* benchtests/bench-skeleton.c: Include json-lib.h.
(main): Use JSON library functions to do output of
benchmark results.
* benchtests/bench-timing-type.c (main): Output the
timing type simply, leaving formatting to the user.
* benchtests/json-lib.c: New file.
* benchtests/json-lib.h: Likewise.
We have a single thread that runs a no-op initialization once and then
repeatedly runs checks of the initialization (i.e., an acquire load and
conditional jump) in a tight loop. This gives us, on average, the
best-case latency of pthread_once (the initialization is the
exactly-once slow path, and we're not looking at initialization-related
synchronization overheads in this case).
Without this flag it is possible that the compiler will optimize
away the calls to ffs/ffsll.
ChangeLog:
2014-04-01 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* benchtests/Makefile (CFLAGS-bench-ffs.c): Add
-fno-builtin. (CFLAGS-bench-ffsll.c): Likewise.
Add benchtests for ffs and ffsll. There is no benchtest for ffsl as
it is identical to one of the other functions.
2014-03-31 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* benchtests/Makefile (bench): Add ffs and ffsll to list
of tests.
* benchtests/ffs-inputs: New file.
* benchtests/ffsll-inputs: Likewise.
This patch adds an option to get detailed benchmark output for
functions. Invoking the benchmark with 'make DETAILED=1 bench' causes
each benchmark program to store a mean execution time for each input
it works on. This is useful to give a more comprehensive picture of
performance of functions compared to just the single mean figure.
This patch changes the output format of the main benchmark output file
(bench.out) to an extensible format. I chose JSON over XML because in
addition to being extensible, it is also not too verbose.
Additionally it has good support in python.
The significant change I have made in terms of functionality is to put
timing information as an attribute in JSON instead of a string and to
do that, there is a separate program that prints out a JSON snippet
mentioning the type of timing (hp_timing or clock_gettime). The mean
timing has now changed from iterations per unit to actual timing per
iteration.
This benchmark can take longer than the default 2 seconds on slower
platforms, so increase it to 10 seconds.
ChangeLog:
2014-03-26 Will Newton <will.newton@linaro.org>
* benchtests/bench-strtod.c (TIMEOUT): Define to 10.
In <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2014-01/msg00196.html> I
noted it was necessary to add includes of Makeconfig early in various
subdirectory makefiles for the tests-special variable settings added
by that patch to be conditional on configuration information. No-one
commented on the general question there of whether Makeconfig should
always be included immediately after the definition of subdir.
This patch implements that early inclusion of Makeconfig in each
directory (which is a lot easier than consistent placement of includes
of Rules). Includes are added if needed, or moved up if already
present. Subdirectory "all:" targets are removed, since Makeconfig
provides one.
There is potential for further cleanups I haven't done. Rules and
Makerules have code such as
ifneq "$(findstring env,$(origin headers))" ""
headers :=
endif
to override to empty any value of various variables that came from the
environment. I think there is a case for Makeconfig setting all the
subdirectory variables (other than subdir) to empty to ensure no
outside value is going to take effect if a subdirectory fails to
define a variable. (A list of such variables, possibly out of date
and incomplete, is in manual/maint.texi.) Rules and Makerules would
give errors if Makeconfig hadn't already been included, instead of
including it themselves. The special code to override values coming
from the environment would then be obsolete and could be removed.
Tested x86_64, including that installed binaries are identical before
and after the patch.
* argp/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
* assert/Makefile: Likewise.
* benchtests/Makefile: Likewise.
* catgets/Makefile: Likewise.
* conform/Makefile: Likewise.
* crypt/Makefile: Likewise.
* csu/Makefile: Likewise.
(all): Remove target.
* ctype/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
* debug/Makefile: Likewise.
* dirent/Makefile: Likewise.
* dlfcn/Makefile: Likewise.
* gmon/Makefile: Likewise.
* gnulib/Makefile: Likewise.
* grp/Makefile: Likewise.
* gshadow/Makefile: Likewise.
* hesiod/Makefile: Likewise.
* hurd/Makefile: Likewise.
(all): Remove target.
* iconvdata/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after
defining subdir.
* inet/Makefile: Likewise.
* intl/Makefile: Likewise.
* io/Makefile: Likewise.
* libio/Makefile: Likewise.
(all): Remove target.
* locale/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
* login/Makefile: Likewise.
* mach/Makefile: Likewise.
(all): Remove target.
* malloc/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
(all): Remove target.
* manual/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
* math/Makefile: Likewise.
* misc/Makefile: Likewise.
* nis/Makefile: Likewise.
* nss/Makefile: Likewise.
* po/Makefile: Likewise.
(all): Remove target.
* posix/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
* pwd/Makefile: Likewise.
* resolv/Makefile: Likewise.
* resource/Makefile: Likewise.
* rt/Makefile: Likewise.
* setjmp/Makefile: Likewise.
* shadow/Makefile: Likewise.
* signal/Makefile: Likewise.
* socket/Makefile: Likewise.
* soft-fp/Makefile: Likewise.
* stdio-common/Makefile: Likewise.
* stdlib/Makefile: Likewise.
* streams/Makefile: Likewise.
* string/Makefile: Likewise.
* sunrpc/Makefile: Likewise.
(all): Remove target.
* sysvipc/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
* termios/Makefile: Likewise.
* time/Makefile: Likewise.
* timezone/Makefile: Likewise.
(all): Remove target.
* wcsmbs/Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining
subdir.
* wctype/Makefile: Likewise.
libidn/ChangeLog:
* Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir.
localedata/ChangeLog:
* Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir.
(all): Remove target.
nptl/ChangeLog:
* Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir.
nptl_db/ChangeLog:
* Makefile: Include Makeconfig immediately after defining subdir.
We have multiple tests that copy & paste the same logic for disabling the
fortification output. Let's unify this in the test-skeleton instead.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Add a comprehensive number of inputs for all branches in sin and cos
computation, excluding the fast paths. This also adds a number of
inputs for the multiple precision slow paths.
Add a more comprehensive set of inputs for the atan function. I have
also fixed the name on the multiple precision fallback inputs (I
couldn't find any new inputs there) to reflect the fact that the
fallback is only 144bits and not 768bits as I had earlier mentioned.
Like sinh and cosh, this patch has benchmark inputs for asinh and
acosh, generated using a random number generator and spread over
significant branches, ignoring the fast return paths.
Add a full set of inputs for sinh and cosh functions generated using a
random number generator and spreading it over all branches in the
function, ignoring the fast paths (i.e. immediate return for special
values).
This patch adds the ability to accept output arguments to functions
being benchmarked, by nesting the argument type in <> in the args
directive. It includes the sincos implementation as an example, where
the function would have the following args directive:
## args: double:<double *>:<double *>
This simply adds a definition for a static variable whose pointer gets
passed into the function, so it's not yet possible to pass something
more complicated like a pre-allocated string or array. That would be
a good feature to add if a function needs it.
The values in the input file will map only to the input arguments. So
if I had a directive like this for a function foo:
## args: int:<int *>:int:<int *>
and I have a value list like this:
1, 2
3, 4
5, 6
then the function calls generated would be:
foo (1, &out1, 2, &out2);
foo (3, &out1, 4, &out2);
foo (5, &out1, 6, &out2);