criterion-1.1.0.0: Robust, reliable performance measurement and analysis

Copyright(c) 2009-2014 Bryan O'Sullivan
LicenseBSD-style
Maintainerbos@serpentine.com
Stabilityexperimental
PortabilityGHC
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell98

Criterion.Main

Contents

Description

Wrappers for compiling and running benchmarks quickly and easily. See defaultMain below for an example.

Synopsis

How to write benchmarks

The Benchmarkable type is a container for code that can be benchmarked. The value inside must run a benchmark the given number of times. We are most interested in benchmarking two things:

  • IO actions. Any IO action can be benchmarked directly.
  • Pure functions. GHC optimises aggressively when compiling with -O, so it is easy to write innocent-looking benchmark code that doesn't measure the performance of a pure function at all. We work around this by benchmarking both a function and its final argument together.

Benchmarking IO actions

Any IO action can be benchmarked easily if its type resembles this:

IO a

Benchmarking pure code

Because GHC optimises aggressively when compiling with -O, it is potentially easy to write innocent-looking benchmark code that will only be evaluated once, for which all but the first iteration of the timing loop will be timing the cost of doing nothing.

To work around this, we provide two functions for benchmarking pure code.

The first will cause results to be fully evaluated to normal form (NF):

nf :: NFData b => (a -> b) -> a -> Benchmarkable

The second will cause results to be evaluated to weak head normal form (the Haskell default):

whnf :: (a -> b) -> a -> Benchmarkable

As both of these types suggest, when you want to benchmark a function, you must supply two values:

  • The first element is the function, saturated with all but its last argument.
  • The second element is the last argument to the function.

Here is an example that makes the use of these functions clearer. Suppose we want to benchmark the following function:

firstN :: Int -> [Int]
firstN k = take k [(0::Int)..]

So in the easy case, we construct a benchmark as follows:

nf firstN 1000

Fully evaluating a result

The whnf harness for evaluating a pure function only evaluates the result to weak head normal form (WHNF). If you need the result evaluated all the way to normal form, use the nf function to force its complete evaluation.

Using the firstN example from earlier, to naive eyes it might appear that the following code ought to benchmark the production of the first 1000 list elements:

whnf firstN 1000

Since we are using whnf, in this case the result will only be forced until it reaches WHNF, so what this would actually benchmark is merely how long it takes to produce the first list element!

Types

data Benchmarkable

A pure function or impure action that can be benchmarked. The Int64 parameter indicates the number of times to run the given function or action.

data Benchmark

Specification of a collection of benchmarks and environments. A benchmark may consist of:

  • An environment that creates input data for benchmarks, created with env.
  • A single Benchmarkable item with a name, created with bench.
  • A (possibly nested) group of Benchmarks, created with bgroup.

Instances

Creating a benchmark suite

env

Arguments

:: NFData env 
=> IO env

Create the environment. The environment will be evaluated to normal form before being passed to the benchmark.

-> (env -> Benchmark)

Take the newly created environment and make it available to the given benchmarks.

-> Benchmark 

Run a benchmark (or collection of benchmarks) in the given environment. The purpose of an environment is to lazily create input data to pass to the functions that will be benchmarked.

A common example of environment data is input that is read from a file. Another is a large data structure constructed in-place.

Motivation. In earlier versions of criterion, all benchmark inputs were always created when a program started running. By deferring the creation of an environment when its associated benchmarks need the its, we avoid two problems that this strategy caused:

  • Memory pressure distorted the results of unrelated benchmarks. If one benchmark needed e.g. a gigabyte-sized input, it would force the garbage collector to do extra work when running some other benchmark that had no use for that input. Since the data created by an environment is only available when it is in scope, it should be garbage collected before other benchmarks are run.
  • The time cost of generating all needed inputs could be significant in cases where no inputs (or just a few) were really needed. This occurred often, for instance when just one out of a large suite of benchmarks was run, or when a user would list the collection of benchmarks without running any.

Creation. An environment is created right before its related benchmarks are run. The IO action that creates the environment is run, then the newly created environment is evaluated to normal form (hence the NFData constraint) before being passed to the function that receives the environment.

Complex environments. If you need to create an environment that contains multiple values, simply pack the values into a tuple.

Lazy pattern matching. In situations where a "real" environment is not needed, e.g. if a list of benchmark names is being generated, undefined will be passed to the function that receives the environment. This avoids the overhead of generating an environment that will not actually be used.

The function that receives the environment must use lazy pattern matching to deconstruct the tuple, as use of strict pattern matching will cause a crash if undefined is passed in.

Example. This program runs benchmarks in an environment that contains two values. The first value is the contents of a text file; the second is a string. Pay attention to the use of a lazy pattern to deconstruct the tuple in the function that returns the benchmarks to be run.

setupEnv = do
  let small = replicate 1000 1
  big <- readFile "/usr/dict/words"
  return (small, big)

main = defaultMain [
   -- notice the lazy pattern match here!
   env setupEnv $ \ ~(small,big) ->
   bgroup "small" [
     bench "length" $ whnf length small
   , bench "length . filter" $ whnf (length . filter (==1)) small
   ]
 ,  bgroup "big" [
     bench "length" $ whnf length big
   , bench "length . filter" $ whnf (length . filter (==1)) big
   ]
 ]

Discussion. The environment created in the example above is intentionally not ideal. As Haskell's scoping rules suggest, the variable big is in scope for the benchmarks that use only small. It would be better to create a separate environment for big, so that it will not be kept alive while the unrelated benchmarks are being run.

bench

Arguments

:: String

A name to identify the benchmark.

-> Benchmarkable

An activity to be benchmarked.

-> Benchmark 

Create a single benchmark.

bgroup

Arguments

:: String

A name to identify the group of benchmarks.

-> [Benchmark]

Benchmarks to group under this name.

-> Benchmark 

Group several benchmarks together under a common name.

Running a benchmark

nf :: NFData b => (a -> b) -> a -> Benchmarkable

Apply an argument to a function, and evaluate the result to head normal form (NF).

whnf :: (a -> b) -> a -> Benchmarkable

Apply an argument to a function, and evaluate the result to weak head normal form (WHNF).

nfIO :: NFData a => IO a -> Benchmarkable

Perform an action, then evaluate its result to head normal form. This is particularly useful for forcing a lazy IO action to be completely performed.

whnfIO :: IO a -> Benchmarkable

Perform an action, then evaluate its result to weak head normal form (WHNF). This is useful for forcing an IO action whose result is an expression to be evaluated down to a more useful value.

Turning a suite of benchmarks into a program

defaultMain :: [Benchmark] -> IO ()

An entry point that can be used as a main function.

import Criterion.Main

fib :: Int -> Int
fib 0 = 0
fib 1 = 1
fib n = fib (n-1) + fib (n-2)

main = defaultMain [
       bgroup "fib" [ bench "10" $ whnf fib 10
                    , bench "35" $ whnf fib 35
                    , bench "37" $ whnf fib 37
                    ]
                   ]

defaultMainWith :: Config -> [Benchmark] -> IO ()

An entry point that can be used as a main function, with configurable defaults.

Example:

import Criterion.Main.Options
import Criterion.Main

myConfig = defaultConfig {
             -- Do not GC between runs.
             forceGC = False
           }

main = defaultMainWith myConfig [
         bench "fib 30" $ whnf fib 30
       ]

If you save the above example as "Fib.hs", you should be able to compile it as follows:

ghc -O --make Fib

Run "Fib --help" on the command line to get a list of command line options.

defaultConfig :: Config

Default benchmarking configuration.

Other useful code

makeMatcher

Arguments

:: MatchType 
-> [String]

Command line arguments.

-> Either String (String -> Bool) 

Create a function that can tell if a name given on the command line matches a benchmark.