ReBench is a tool to run and document benchmark experiments. Currently, it is mostly used for benchmarking language implementations, but it can be used to monitor the performance of all kinds of other applications and programs, too.
The ReBench configuration format is a text format based on YAML. A configuration file defines how to build and execute a set of experiments, i.e. benchmarks. It describes which executable was used, which parameters were given to the benchmarks, and the number of iterations to be used to obtain statistically reliable results.
With this approach, the configuration contains all benchmark-specific information to reproduce a benchmark run. However, it does not capture the whole system.
The data of all benchmark runs is recorded in a data file for later analysis. Important for long-running experiments, benchmarks can be aborted and continued at a later time.
ReBench focuses on the execution aspect and does not provide advanced analysis facilities itself. Instead, the recorded results should be processed by dedicated tools such as scripts for statistical analysis in R, Python, etc, or Codespeed, for continuous performance tracking.
The documentation for ReBench is hosted at https://rebench.readthedocs.io/.
ReBench is designed to
Denoise configures a Linux system for benchmarking. It adapts parameters of the CPU frequency management and task scheduling to reduce some of the variability that can cause widely different benchmark results for the same experiment.
Denoise is inspired by Krun, which has many more features to carefully minimize possible interference. Krun is the tool of choice if the most reliable results are required. ReBench only adapts a subset of the parameters, while staying self-contained and minimizing external dependencies.
ReBench isn't
ReBench is implemented in Python and can be installed via pip:
pip install rebench
To reduce noise generated by the system, rebench-denoise
depends on:
sudo
rights. rebench
will attempt to determine suitable configuration
parameters and suggest them. This includes allowing the execution of rebench-denoise
via sudo
without password and with the permission to set environment variables (SETENV
).cpuset
to reserve cores for benchmarking.
On Ubuntu: apt install cpuset
Please note that rebench-denoise
is only tested on Ubuntu. It is designed to degrade
gracefully and report the expected implications when it cannot adapt system
settings. See the docs for details.
A minimal configuration file looks like this:
# this run definition will be chosen if no parameters are given to rebench
default_experiment: all
default_data_file: 'example.data'
# a set of suites with different benchmarks and possibly different settings
benchmark_suites:
ExampleSuite:
gauge_adapter: RebenchLog
command: Harness %(benchmark)s %(input)s %(variable)s
input_sizes: [2, 10]
variable_values:
- val1
benchmarks:
- Bench1
- Bench2
# a set of executables for the benchmark execution
executors:
MyBin1:
path: bin
executable: test-vm1.py %(cores)s
cores: [1]
MyBin2:
path: bin
executable: test-vm2.py
# combining benchmark suites and executions
experiments:
Example:
suites:
- ExampleSuite
executions:
- MyBin1
- MyBin2
Saved as test.conf
, this configuration could be executed with ReBench as follows:
rebench test.conf
See the documentation for details: https://rebench.readthedocs.io/.
In case you encounter issues, please feel free to open an issue so that we can help.
For contributions, we use the normal GitHub flow of pull requests, discussion, and revisions. For larger contributions, it is likely useful to discuss them upfront in an issue first.
For the development setup, the currently recommended
way is to use pip install --editable .
in the root directory of the repository.
You may also want to use a virtual environment to avoid conflicts with other Python packages.
For instance:
git clone https://github.com/smarr/rebench.git
cd rebench
pip install --editable .
Unit tests and linting can be run with:
python -m pytest
python -m pylint rebench
If you use ReBench for research and in academic publications, please consider citing it.
The preferred citation is:
@misc{ReBench:2018,
author = {Marr, Stefan},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1311762},
month = {August},
note = {Version 1.0},
publisher = {GitHub},
title = {ReBench: Execute and Document Benchmarks Reproducibly},
year = 2018
}
Some publications that have been using ReBench include: