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authorSiddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@redhat.com>2014-03-24 21:16:36 +0530
committerSiddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@redhat.com>2014-03-24 21:16:36 +0530
commit27c673b8de3072caf35bc795aa1cd77a7ca18771 (patch)
tree92046806de6f97a5532ee165f173c9ed74fb1158 /benchtests
parent44152e4b05fcc8bae5628cdb37342d9b7bd5ac3c (diff)
benchtests: Move bench.py to benchtests/scripts/
It makes much more sense to have all benchmarking-related scripts in a single place away from everything else.
Diffstat (limited to 'benchtests')
-rw-r--r--benchtests/Makefile2
-rwxr-xr-xbenchtests/scripts/bench.py299
2 files changed, 300 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/benchtests/Makefile b/benchtests/Makefile
index 89151b42ae..b331d1a579 100644
--- a/benchtests/Makefile
+++ b/benchtests/Makefile
@@ -129,5 +129,5 @@ $(objpfx)bench-%.c: %-inputs $(bench-deps)
{ if [ -n "$($*-INCLUDE)" ]; then \
cat $($*-INCLUDE); \
fi; \
- $(..)scripts/bench.py $(patsubst %-inputs,%,$<); } > $@-tmp
+ $(.)scripts/bench.py $(patsubst %-inputs,%,$<); } > $@-tmp
mv -f $@-tmp $@
diff --git a/benchtests/scripts/bench.py b/benchtests/scripts/bench.py
new file mode 100755
index 0000000000..e500a33ce7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/benchtests/scripts/bench.py
@@ -0,0 +1,299 @@
+#!/usr/bin/python
+# Copyright (C) 2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+# This file is part of the GNU C Library.
+#
+# The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+# modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
+# License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
+# version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+#
+# The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
+# Lesser General Public License for more details.
+#
+# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
+# License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
+# <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+
+"""Benchmark program generator script
+
+This script takes a function name as input and generates a program using
+an input file located in the benchtests directory. The name of the
+input file should be of the form foo-inputs where 'foo' is the name of
+the function.
+"""
+
+from __future__ import print_function
+import sys
+import os
+import itertools
+
+# Macro definitions for functions that take no arguments. For functions
+# that take arguments, the STRUCT_TEMPLATE, ARGS_TEMPLATE and
+# VARIANTS_TEMPLATE are used instead.
+DEFINES_TEMPLATE = '''
+#define CALL_BENCH_FUNC(v, i) %(func)s ()
+#define NUM_VARIANTS (1)
+#define NUM_SAMPLES(v) (1)
+#define VARIANT(v) FUNCNAME "()"
+'''
+
+# Structures to store arguments for the function call. A function may
+# have its inputs partitioned to represent distinct performance
+# characteristics or distinct flavors of the function. Each such
+# variant is represented by the _VARIANT structure. The ARGS structure
+# represents a single set of arguments.
+STRUCT_TEMPLATE = '''
+#define CALL_BENCH_FUNC(v, i) %(func)s (%(func_args)s)
+
+struct args
+{
+%(args)s
+};
+
+struct _variants
+{
+ const char *name;
+ int count;
+ struct args *in;
+};
+'''
+
+# The actual input arguments.
+ARGS_TEMPLATE = '''
+struct args in%(argnum)d[%(num_args)d] = {
+%(args)s
+};
+'''
+
+# The actual variants, along with macros defined to access the variants.
+VARIANTS_TEMPLATE = '''
+struct _variants variants[%(num_variants)d] = {
+%(variants)s
+};
+
+#define NUM_VARIANTS %(num_variants)d
+#define NUM_SAMPLES(i) (variants[i].count)
+#define VARIANT(i) (variants[i].name)
+'''
+
+# Epilogue for the generated source file.
+EPILOGUE = '''
+#define BENCH_FUNC(i, j) ({%(getret)s CALL_BENCH_FUNC (i, j);})
+#define FUNCNAME "%(func)s"
+#include "bench-skeleton.c"'''
+
+
+def gen_source(func, directives, all_vals):
+ """Generate source for the function
+
+ Generate the C source for the function from the values and
+ directives.
+
+ Args:
+ func: The function name
+ directives: A dictionary of directives applicable to this function
+ all_vals: A dictionary input values
+ """
+ # The includes go in first.
+ for header in directives['includes']:
+ print('#include <%s>' % header)
+
+ for header in directives['include-sources']:
+ print('#include "%s"' % header)
+
+ # Print macros. This branches out to a separate routine if
+ # the function takes arguments.
+ if not directives['args']:
+ print(DEFINES_TEMPLATE % {'func': func})
+ outargs = []
+ else:
+ outargs = _print_arg_data(func, directives, all_vals)
+
+ # Print the output variable definitions if necessary.
+ for out in outargs:
+ print(out)
+
+ # If we have a return value from the function, make sure it is
+ # assigned to prevent the compiler from optimizing out the
+ # call.
+ if directives['ret']:
+ print('static %s volatile ret;' % directives['ret'])
+ getret = 'ret = '
+ else:
+ getret = ''
+
+ print(EPILOGUE % {'getret': getret, 'func': func})
+
+
+def _print_arg_data(func, directives, all_vals):
+ """Print argument data
+
+ This is a helper function for gen_source that prints structure and
+ values for arguments and their variants and returns output arguments
+ if any are found.
+
+ Args:
+ func: Function name
+ directives: A dictionary of directives applicable to this function
+ all_vals: A dictionary input values
+
+ Returns:
+ Returns a list of definitions for function arguments that act as
+ output parameters.
+ """
+ # First, all of the definitions. We process writing of
+ # CALL_BENCH_FUNC, struct args and also the output arguments
+ # together in a single traversal of the arguments list.
+ func_args = []
+ arg_struct = []
+ outargs = []
+
+ for arg, i in zip(directives['args'], itertools.count()):
+ if arg[0] == '<' and arg[-1] == '>':
+ pos = arg.rfind('*')
+ if pos == -1:
+ die('Output argument must be a pointer type')
+
+ outargs.append('static %s out%d;' % (arg[1:pos], i))
+ func_args.append(' &out%d' % i)
+ else:
+ arg_struct.append(' %s volatile arg%d;' % (arg, i))
+ func_args.append('variants[v].in[i].arg%d' % i)
+
+ print(STRUCT_TEMPLATE % {'args' : '\n'.join(arg_struct), 'func': func,
+ 'func_args': ', '.join(func_args)})
+
+ # Now print the values.
+ variants = []
+ for (k, vals), i in zip(all_vals.items(), itertools.count()):
+ out = [' {%s},' % v for v in vals]
+
+ # Members for the variants structure list that we will
+ # print later.
+ variants.append(' {"%s(%s)", %d, in%d},' % (func, k, len(vals), i))
+ print(ARGS_TEMPLATE % {'argnum': i, 'num_args': len(vals),
+ 'args': '\n'.join(out)})
+
+ # Print the variants and the last set of macros.
+ print(VARIANTS_TEMPLATE % {'num_variants': len(all_vals),
+ 'variants': '\n'.join(variants)})
+ return outargs
+
+
+def _process_directive(d_name, d_val):
+ """Process a directive.
+
+ Evaluate the directive name and value passed and return the
+ processed value. This is a helper function for parse_file.
+
+ Args:
+ d_name: Name of the directive
+ d_val: The string value to process
+
+ Returns:
+ The processed value, which may be the string as it is or an object
+ that describes the directive.
+ """
+ # Process the directive values if necessary. name and ret don't
+ # need any processing.
+ if d_name.startswith('include'):
+ d_val = d_val.split(',')
+ elif d_name == 'args':
+ d_val = d_val.split(':')
+
+ # Return the values.
+ return d_val
+
+
+def parse_file(func):
+ """Parse an input file
+
+ Given a function name, open and parse an input file for the function
+ and get the necessary parameters for the generated code and the list
+ of inputs.
+
+ Args:
+ func: The function name
+
+ Returns:
+ A tuple of two elements, one a dictionary of directives and the
+ other a dictionary of all input values.
+ """
+ all_vals = {}
+ # Valid directives.
+ directives = {
+ 'name': '',
+ 'args': [],
+ 'includes': [],
+ 'include-sources': [],
+ 'ret': ''
+ }
+
+ try:
+ with open('%s-inputs' % func) as f:
+ for line in f:
+ # Look for directives and parse it if found.
+ if line.startswith('##'):
+ try:
+ d_name, d_val = line[2:].split(':', 1)
+ d_name = d_name.strip()
+ d_val = d_val.strip()
+ directives[d_name] = _process_directive(d_name, d_val)
+ except (IndexError, KeyError):
+ die('Invalid directive: %s' % line[2:])
+
+ # Skip blank lines and comments.
+ line = line.split('#', 1)[0].rstrip()
+ if not line:
+ continue
+
+ # Otherwise, we're an input. Add to the appropriate
+ # input set.
+ cur_name = directives['name']
+ all_vals.setdefault(cur_name, [])
+ all_vals[cur_name].append(line)
+ except IOError as ex:
+ die("Failed to open input file (%s): %s" % (ex.filename, ex.strerror))
+
+ return directives, all_vals
+
+
+def die(msg):
+ """Exit with an error
+
+ Prints an error message to the standard error stream and exits with
+ a non-zero status.
+
+ Args:
+ msg: The error message to print to standard error
+ """
+ print('%s\n' % msg, file=sys.stderr)
+ sys.exit(os.EX_DATAERR)
+
+
+def main(args):
+ """Main function
+
+ Use the first command line argument as function name and parse its
+ input file to generate C source that calls the function repeatedly
+ for the input.
+
+ Args:
+ args: The command line arguments with the program name dropped
+
+ Returns:
+ os.EX_USAGE on error and os.EX_OK on success.
+ """
+ if len(args) != 1:
+ print('Usage: %s <function>' % sys.argv[0])
+ return os.EX_USAGE
+
+ directives, all_vals = parse_file(args[0])
+ gen_source(args[0], directives, all_vals)
+ return os.EX_OK
+
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+ sys.exit(main(sys.argv[1:]))