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author | Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@redhat.com> | 2013-10-07 11:51:24 +0530 |
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committer | Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@redhat.com> | 2013-10-07 11:51:25 +0530 |
commit | a357259bf854478d154727bbc9e39f89c952f6cc (patch) | |
tree | 11e1d64d36fbfb9c3ed40215ac7cebfee6f6e004 /scripts | |
parent | 9ec1b13d0162034464202b06d81b9daa9fe840e7 (diff) | |
download | glibc-a357259bf854478d154727bbc9e39f89c952f6cc.tar.gz |
Add more directives to benchmark input files
This patch adds some more directives to the benchmark inputs file,
moving functionality from the Makefile and making the code generation
script a bit cleaner. The function argument and return types that
were earlier added as variables in the makefile and passed to the
script via command line arguments are now the 'args' and 'ret'
directive respectively. 'args' should be a colon separated list of
argument types (skipped if the function doesn't accept any arguments)
and 'ret' should be the return type.
Additionally, an 'includes' directive may have a comma separated list
of headers to include in the source. For example, the pow input file
now looks like this:
42.0, 42.0
1.0000000000000020, 1.5
I did this to unclutter the benchtests Makefile a bit and eventually
eliminate dependency of the tests on the Makefile and have tests
depend on their respective include files only.
Diffstat (limited to 'scripts')
-rwxr-xr-x | scripts/bench.pl | 134 |
1 files changed, 70 insertions, 64 deletions
diff --git a/scripts/bench.pl b/scripts/bench.pl index dcf1355282..5fe95d0c2f 100755 --- a/scripts/bench.pl +++ b/scripts/bench.pl @@ -21,40 +21,78 @@ use strict; use warnings; # Generate a benchmark source file for a given input. -if (@ARGV < 2) { - die "Usage: bench.pl <function> [parameter types] [return type]" +if (@ARGV < 1) { + die "Usage: bench.pl <function>" } -my $arg; my $func = $ARGV[0]; my @args; my $ret = "void"; my $getret = ""; -my $retval = ""; -if (@ARGV >= 2) { - @args = split(':', $ARGV[1]); -} +# We create a hash of inputs for each variant of the test. +my $variant = ""; +my @curvals; +my %vals; +my @include_files; +my $incl; + +open INPUTS, "<$func-inputs" or die $!; + +LINE:while (<INPUTS>) { + chomp; + + # Directives. + if (/^## (\w+): (.*)/) { + # Function argument types. + if ($1 eq "args") { + @args = split(":", $2); + } + + # Function return type. + elsif ($1 eq "ret") { + $ret = $2; + } -if (@ARGV == 3) { - $ret = $ARGV[2]; + elsif ($1 eq "includes") { + @include_files = split (",", $2); + } + + # New variant. This is the only directive allowed in the body of the + # inputs to separate inputs into variants. All others should be at the + # top or else all hell will break loose. + elsif ($1 eq "name") { + + # Save values in the previous variant. + my @copy = @curvals; + $vals{$variant} = \@copy; + + # Prepare for the next. + $variant=$2; + undef @curvals; + next LINE; + } + } + + # Skip over comments. + if (/^#/) { + next LINE; + } + push (@curvals, $_); } -my $decl = "extern $ret $func ("; -# Function has no arguments. -if (@args == 0 || $args[0] eq "void") { - print "$decl void);\n"; - print "#define CALL_BENCH_FUNC(i,j) $func();\n"; - print "#define NUM_VARIANTS (1)\n"; - print "#define NUM_SAMPLES(v) (1)\n"; - print "#define VARIANT(v) FUNCNAME \"()\"\n" +my $bench_func = "#define CALL_BENCH_FUNC(v, i) $func ("; + + +# Print the definitions and macros. +foreach $incl (@include_files) { + print "#include <" . $incl . ">\n"; } -# The function has arguments, so parse them and populate the inputs. -else { - my $num = 0; - my $bench_func = "#define CALL_BENCH_FUNC(v, i) $func ("; +if (@args > 0) { + # Save values in the last variant. + $vals{$variant} = \@curvals; my $struct = "struct _variants { @@ -65,60 +103,21 @@ else { my $arg_struct = "struct args {"; + my $num = 0; + my $arg; foreach $arg (@args) { if ($num > 0) { $bench_func = "$bench_func,"; - $decl = "$decl,"; } $arg_struct = "$arg_struct volatile $arg arg$num;"; $bench_func = "$bench_func variants[v].in[i].arg$num"; - $decl = "$decl $arg"; $num = $num + 1; } $arg_struct = $arg_struct . "};\n"; - $decl = $decl . ");\n"; $bench_func = $bench_func . ");\n"; - # We create a hash of inputs for each variant of the test. - my $variant = ""; - my @curvals; - my %vals; - - open INPUTS, "<$func-inputs" or die $!; - - LINE:while (<INPUTS>) { - chomp; - - # New variant. - if (/^## (\w+): (\w+)/) { - #We only identify Name for now. - if ($1 ne "name") { - next LINE; - } - - # Save values in the last variant. - my @copy = @curvals; - $vals{$variant} = \@copy; - - # Prepare for the next. - $variant=$2; - undef @curvals; - next LINE; - } - - # Skip over comments. - if (/^#/) { - next LINE; - } - push (@curvals, $_); - } - - $vals{$variant} = \@curvals; - - # Print the definitions and macros. - print $decl; print $bench_func; print $arg_struct; print $struct; @@ -147,17 +146,24 @@ else { $c += 1; } print "};\n\n"; - # Finally, print the last set of macros. print "#define NUM_VARIANTS $c\n"; print "#define NUM_SAMPLES(i) (variants[i].count)\n"; print "#define VARIANT(i) (variants[i].name)\n"; } +else { + print $bench_func . ");\n"; + print "#define NUM_VARIANTS (1)\n"; + print "#define NUM_SAMPLES(v) (1)\n"; + print "#define VARIANT(v) FUNCNAME \"()\"\n" +} + + # In some cases not storing a return value seems to result in the function call # being optimized out. if ($ret ne "void") { - print "static volatile $ret ret = 0.0;\n"; + print "static volatile $ret ret;\n"; $getret = "ret = "; } |