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Feature #10165

closed

Use Process.clock_gettime to speed up Benchmark.realtime.

Added by phiggins (Pete Higgins) about 10 years ago. Updated about 10 years ago.

Status:
Closed
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:64511]

Description

This patch changes the Benchmark.realtime method to use the Process.clock_gettime internally when generating the time elapsed. Calling Process.clock_gettime is faster than the current way of creating Time objects.

I wrote a benchmark script (also attached) to demonstrate the difference:

require 'benchmark'

def old_benchmark
  r0 = Time.now
  yield
  Time.now - r0
end

def new_benchmark
  r0 = Process.clock_gettime(Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC)
  yield
  Process.clock_gettime(Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC) - r0
end

n = (ARGV.first || 1_000_000).to_i

puts "#{n} iterations."

Benchmark.bmbm do |b|
  b.report("old") { n.times { old_benchmark { nil } } }
  b.report("new") { n.times { new_benchmark { nil } } }
end

When I run this on my local machine I see this output:

1000000 iterations.
Rehearsal ---------------------------------------
old   0.860000   0.000000   0.860000 (  0.863118)
new   0.360000   0.000000   0.360000 (  0.355242)
------------------------------ total: 1.220000sec

          user     system      total        real
old   0.870000   0.010000   0.880000 (  0.866577)
new   0.330000   0.000000   0.330000 (  0.328982)

I discussed this idea originally with Eric Hodel, but he has not reviewed this code.


Files

benchmark_benchmark_realtime.rb (424 Bytes) benchmark_benchmark_realtime.rb phiggins (Pete Higgins), 08/23/2014 08:58 PM
faster_benchmark_realtime.diff (909 Bytes) faster_benchmark_realtime.diff phiggins (Pete Higgins), 08/23/2014 08:59 PM
faster_benchmark_realtime_2.diff (1.1 KB) faster_benchmark_realtime_2.diff phiggins (Pete Higgins), 08/24/2014 12:22 AM

Updated by normalperson (Eric Wong) about 10 years ago

I like this. The speedup is from reduction of allocations+GC

I think you need to fall back to CLOCK_REALTIME on systems w/o
CLOCK_MONOTONIC, though. Based on my reading of process.c,
CLOCK_REALTIME is always available. So something like this:

if defined?(Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC)
  BENCHMARK_CLOCK = Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC
else
  # Ruby may use gettimeofday to emulate:
  BENCHMARK_CLOCK = Process::CLOCK_REALTIME
end

def realtime # :yield:
  r0 = Process.clock_gettime(BENCHMARK_CLOCK)
  yield
  Process.clock_gettime(BENCHMARK_CLOCK) - r0
end

Updated by phiggins (Pete Higgins) about 10 years ago

Eric Wong wrote:

I like this. The speedup is from reduction of allocations+GC

I think you need to fall back to CLOCK_REALTIME on systems w/o
CLOCK_MONOTONIC, though. Based on my reading of process.c,
CLOCK_REALTIME is always available. So something like this:

It wasn't clear from the docs if there was a way to tell which modes were supported. Thanks for looking into that!

I've made an updated patch with the changes Eric Wong suggested.

Actions #3

Updated by Anonymous about 10 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Closed
  • % Done changed from 0 to 100

Applied in changeset r47260.


lib/benchmark.rb: speedup by reducing allocations

  • lib/benchmark.rb (module Benchmark): define BENCHMARK_CLOCK
    (realtime): use Process.clock_gettime(BENCHMARK_CLOCK)
    [Feature #10165]

  • test/benchmark/test_benchmark.rb (test_realtime_output): new test

Updated by normalperson (Eric Wong) about 10 years ago

Thanks Pete! I committed your patch as r47260.
I couldn't resist, so I also made r47622 to modify measure, too.
(smaller improvement, 1.30s vs 1.44s on my VM)

require 'benchmark'
p(Benchmark.measure { 100000.times { Benchmark.measure {} } })
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