tasty-bench has fewer dependencies and is agile to keep up with new GHC
versions. This change is especially motivated by support for GHC 9.0.1.
gauge depends on foundation/basement which lagging much behind and seem
to be unmaintained.
* Add 3 interesting cases for each concatMap case
* For mapM, map concurrently on a serial stream so that we measure the
concurrency overhead of mapM only and not both concurrent generation + mapM
* For Async streams add some benchmarks involving the `async` combinator.
* Add a benchmark for `foldrS`
* Now benchmark modules correspond to source modules. The Prelude module in
source corresponds to several modules one for each stream type.
* Benchmarks in the same order/groupings as they appear in source
* All benchmarks now have division according to space complexity
* Refactoring reduces a lot of code duplication especially the stream
generation and elimination functions.
* The RTS options are now completely set in the shell script to run the
benchmarks.
* RTS options can be set on a per benchmark basis. RTS options work correctly
now.
* The set of streaming/infinite stream benchmarks is now complete and we can
run all such benchmarks coneveniently.
* Benchmark "quick"/"speed" options can now be specified on a per benchmark
basis. Longer benchmarks can have fewer iterations/quick run time.
* Benchmarks are grouped in several groups which can be run on a per group
basis. Comparison groups are also defined for convenient comparisons of
different modules (e.g. arrays or streamD/K).
* The benchmark namespaces are grouped in a consistent manner. Benchmark
executables have a consistent naming based on module names.