# Benchmarks In this document, we describe the benchmark types used for the runtime - Engine micro benchmarks in the section [Engine JMH microbenchmarks](#engine-jmh-microbenchmarks) and standard library benchmarks in the section [Standard library benchmarks](#standard-library-benchmarks), and how and where are the results stored and visualized in the section [Visualization](#visualization). To track the performance of the engine, we use [JMH](https://openjdk.org/projects/code-tools/jmh/). There are two types of benchmarks: - [micro benchmarks](#engine-jmh-microbenchmarks) located directly in the `runtime-benchmarks` SBT project. These benchmarks are written in Java, and are used to measure the performance of specific parts of the engine. - [standard library benchmarks](#standard-library-benchmarks) located in the `test/Benchmarks` Enso project. These benchmarks are entirely written in Enso, along with the harness code. ## Engine JMH microbenchmarks These benchmarks are written in Java and are used to measure the performance of specific parts of the engine. The sources are located in the `runtime-benchmarks` SBT project, under `engine/runtime-benchmarks` directory. ### Running the benchmarks To run the benchmarks, use `bench` or `benchOnly` command in the `runtime-benchmarks` project - `bench` runs all the benchmarks and `benchOnly` runs only one benchmark specified with the fully qualified name. The aforementioned commands are mere shortcuts to the [standard JMH launcher](https://github.com/openjdk/jmh/blob/master/jmh-core/src/main/java/org/openjdk/jmh/Main.java). To get the full power of the JMH launcher, invoke simply `run` with cmdline options passed to the launcher. For the full options summary, see the [JMH source code](https://github.com/openjdk/jmh/blob/master/jmh-core/src/main/java/org/openjdk/jmh/runner/options/CommandLineOptions.java), or invoke `run -h`. You can change the parameters to the benchmarks either by modifying the annotations directly in the source code, or by passing the parameters to the JMH runner. For example, to run the benchmarks with 3 warmup iterations and 2 measurement iterations, use: ``` sbt:runtime-benchmarks> run -w 3 -i 2 ``` ### Debugging the benchmarks Currently, the best way to debug the benchmark is to set the `@Fork` annotation to 0, and to run `withDebug` command like this: ``` withDebug --debugger benchOnly -- ``` ## Standard library benchmarks Unlike the Engine micro benchmarks, these benchmarks are written entirely in Enso and located in the `test/Benchmarks` Enso project. There are two ways to run these benchmarks: - [Running standalone](#running-standalone) - [Running via JMH launcher](#running-via-jmh-launcher) Note that to avoid inflating the run-time of the std-lib benchmarks on the CI, some extra benchmarks (which are not measuring important functionality, but may serve as a baseline when trying to understand performance of similar scenarios) are disabled by default. To enable them, set the `ENSO_ENABLE_EXTRA_BENCHMARKS` environment variable before running any benchmarks. ### Running standalone There is a universal launcher that enlists and executes all available benchmarks in `test/Benchmarks` project. Run it with ```bash enso$ runEngineDistribution --run test/Benchmarks ``` command. The launcher accepts additional `filter` argument which allows one to select a benchmark of one's choice by checking for substrings in group or benchmark name. For example: ```bash enso$ runEngineDistribution --run test/Benchmarks New_Vector ``` runs all the benchmarks that have `New_Vector` in their name. The harness within the project is not meant for any sophisticated benchmarking, but rather for quick local evaluation. See the `Bench.measure` method documentation for more details. For more sophisticated approach, run the benchmarks via the JMH launcher. ### Running via JMH launcher The JMH launcher is located in `std-bits/benchmarks` directory, as `std-benchmarks` SBT project. It is a single Java class with a `main` method that just delegates to the [standard JMH launcher](https://github.com/openjdk/jmh/blob/master/jmh-core/src/main/java/org/openjdk/jmh/Main.java), therefore, supports all the command line options as the standard launcher. For the full options summary, either see the [JMH source code](https://github.com/openjdk/jmh/blob/master/jmh-core/src/main/java/org/openjdk/jmh/runner/options/CommandLineOptions.java), or run the launcher with `-h` option. The `std-benchmarks` SBT project supports `bench` and `benchOnly` commands, that work the same as in the `runtime-benchmarks` project, with the exception that the benchmark name does not have to be specified as a fully qualified name, but as a regular expression. To access the full flexibility of the JMH launcher, run it via `Bench/run` - for example, to see the help message: `Bench/run -h`. For example, you can run all the benchmarks that have "New_Vector" in their name with just 3 seconds for warmup iterations and 2 measurement iterations with `Bench/run -w 3 -i 2 New_Vector`. Whenever you add or delete any benchmarks from `test/Benchmarks` project, the generated JMH sources need to be recompiled with `Bench/clean; Bench/compile`. You do not need to recompile the `std-benchmarks` project if you only modify the benchmark sources. ## Visualization The benchmarks are invoked as a daily [GitHub Action](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/actions/workflows/benchmark.yml), that can be invoked manually on a specific branch as well. The results are kept in the artifacts produced from the actions. In `tools/performance/engine-benchmarks` directory, there is a simple Python script for collecting and processing the results. See the [README in that directory](../../tools/performance/engine-benchmarks/README.md) for more information about how to run that script. This script is invoked regularly on a private machine and the results are published in [https://enso-org.github.io/engine-benchmark-results/](https://enso-org.github.io/engine-benchmark-results/).