chronos
performs lazy benchmarking of shell commands with continuous feedback and improving precision.
Please look at the documentation of the module for an overview of the api: Chronos.Bench
chronos
will benchmark the specified commands until you abort it
with ctrl-c or it reaches some termination criterion specified by the
command line. It updates every iteration the measurements of the
benchmarks so you can terminate it when you're satisfied with the
presented precision. It will intersperse all benchmarks for fastest
possible overview and to distribute any external load over all
benchmarks to improve precision.
chronos
presents rich command line options.
You can as well use autocomplete of your shell with following command:
source <(chronos --bash-completion-script `which chronos`)
Normally, the output of --bash-completion-script
should be coppied in the appropriate directory.
You can use chronos
as a haskell library to benchmark pure or impure functions or shell commands.
module Main where
import Chronos.Bench
main :: IO ()
main = defaultMain
[ bench "fib 1" fib 1
, bench "fib 2" fib 2
, bench "fib 4" fib 4
, bench "fib 8" fib 8
]
fib :: Int -> Int
fib 1 = 1
fib 2 = 1
fib n = fib (n-1) + fib (n-2)
module Main where
import Chronos.Bench
import Control.Concurrent
import Data.IORef
main :: IO ()
main = defaultMain
[ benchIO "ioref" (newIORef True)
, benchIO "mvar" (newMVar True)
, benchIO "qsem" (newQSem 5)
, benchIO "chan" (newChan :: IO (Chan Int))
]
module Main where
import Chronos.Bench
main :: IO ()
main = defaultMain
[ benchShell "sleep is slow" "sleep 0"
, benchShell "echo is fast" "echo"
, benchShell "true is faster" "true"
]
Comparing chronos
to bench
and hyperfine
:
chronos
- intersperses all benchmarks, therefore allowing you fast comparisons
- uses scientific notation
- is more robust to external loads because ouf the interspersing (it will affect all benchmarks and not only some)
- uses a number of significant digits according to the current standard error (so with time more digits are presented and not always 4 which is often the wrong thing to do)
- uses bars with confidence intervals on the command line for easy comparison
Comparing chronos
to criterion
:
chronos
- has got a much simpler api
- can be used in testsuites
- has got much simpler internals
- has got less dependencies
- doesn't measure allocations
- doesn't measure cpu time