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author | Paul Zimmermann <Paul.Zimmermann@inria.fr> | 2020-08-04 13:27:39 +0200 |
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committer | Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com> | 2020-08-04 12:44:41 -0400 |
commit | 50a8dd367e305bb6c6146c564fd48c193cc94069 (patch) | |
tree | 34e00a7cd75c9a8c757ec490379e7db00067de82 | |
parent | 45069ac2a994758d06c035804a600066016801f9 (diff) | |
download | glibc-50a8dd367e305bb6c6146c564fd48c193cc94069.tar.gz glibc-50a8dd367e305bb6c6146c564fd48c193cc94069.tar.xz glibc-50a8dd367e305bb6c6146c564fd48c193cc94069.zip |
benchtests/README update.
Improve documentation of the 'name' directive and the 'workload' mechanism. Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
-rw-r--r-- | benchtests/README | 20 |
1 files 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: ============== |