mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython
fc7bb8c786
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r53304 | vinay.sajip | 2007-01-09 15:50:28 +0100 (Tue, 09 Jan 2007) | 1 line Bug #1627575: Added _open() method to FileHandler which can be used to reopen files. The FileHandler instance now saves the encoding (which can be None) in an attribute called "encoding". ........ r53305 | vinay.sajip | 2007-01-09 15:51:36 +0100 (Tue, 09 Jan 2007) | 1 line Added entry about addition of _open() method to logging.FileHandler. ........ r53306 | vinay.sajip | 2007-01-09 15:54:56 +0100 (Tue, 09 Jan 2007) | 1 line Added a docstring ........ r53316 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-09 20:19:33 +0100 (Tue, 09 Jan 2007) | 4 lines Verify the sizes of the basic ctypes data types against the struct module. Will backport to release25-maint. ........ r53340 | gustavo.niemeyer | 2007-01-10 17:13:40 +0100 (Wed, 10 Jan 2007) | 3 lines Mention in the int() docstring that a base zero has meaning, as stated in http://docs.python.org/lib/built-in-funcs.html as well. ........ r53341 | gustavo.niemeyer | 2007-01-10 17:15:48 +0100 (Wed, 10 Jan 2007) | 2 lines Minor change in int() docstring for proper spacing. ........ r53358 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-10 21:12:13 +0100 (Wed, 10 Jan 2007) | 1 line Change the ctypes version number to "1.1.0". ........ r53361 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-10 21:51:19 +0100 (Wed, 10 Jan 2007) | 1 line Must change the version number in the _ctypes extension as well. ........ r53362 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-01-11 00:12:56 +0100 (Thu, 11 Jan 2007) | 3 lines Fix the signature of log_error(). (A subclass that did the right thing was getting complaints from pychecker.) ........ r53370 | matthias.klose | 2007-01-11 11:26:31 +0100 (Thu, 11 Jan 2007) | 2 lines - Make the documentation match the code and the docstring ........ r53375 | matthias.klose | 2007-01-11 12:44:04 +0100 (Thu, 11 Jan 2007) | 2 lines - idle: Honor the "Cancel" action in the save dialog (Debian bug #299092). ........ r53381 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-01-11 19:22:55 +0100 (Thu, 11 Jan 2007) | 1 line SF #1486663 -- Allow keyword args in subclasses of set() and frozenset(). ........ r53388 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-11 22:18:56 +0100 (Thu, 11 Jan 2007) | 4 lines Fixes for 64-bit Windows: In ctypes.wintypes, correct the definitions of HANDLE, WPARAM, LPARAM data types. Make parameterless foreign function calls work. ........ r53390 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-11 22:23:12 +0100 (Thu, 11 Jan 2007) | 2 lines Correct the comments: the code is right. ........ r53393 | brett.cannon | 2007-01-12 08:27:52 +0100 (Fri, 12 Jan 2007) | 3 lines Fix error where the end of a funcdesc environment was accidentally moved too far down. ........ r53397 | anthony.baxter | 2007-01-12 10:35:56 +0100 (Fri, 12 Jan 2007) | 3 lines add parsetok.h as a dependency - previously, changing this file doesn't cause the right files to be rebuilt. ........ r53401 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-12 21:08:19 +0100 (Fri, 12 Jan 2007) | 3 lines Avoid warnings in the test suite because ctypes.wintypes cannot be imported on non-windows systems. ........ r53402 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-12 21:17:34 +0100 (Fri, 12 Jan 2007) | 6 lines patch #1610795: BSD version of ctypes.util.find_library, by Martin Kammerhofer. release25-maint backport candidate, but the release manager has to decide. ........ r53403 | thomas.heller | 2007-01-12 21:21:53 +0100 (Fri, 12 Jan 2007) | 3 lines patch #1610795: BSD version of ctypes.util.find_library, by Martin Kammerhofer. ........ r53406 | brett.cannon | 2007-01-13 01:29:49 +0100 (Sat, 13 Jan 2007) | 2 lines Deprecate the sets module. ........ r53407 | georg.brandl | 2007-01-13 13:31:51 +0100 (Sat, 13 Jan 2007) | 3 lines Fix typo. ........ r53409 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-01-13 22:00:08 +0100 (Sat, 13 Jan 2007) | 16 lines Bump version number and change copyright year. Add new API linux_distribution() which supports reading the full distribution name and also knows how to parse LSB-style release files. Redirect the old dist() API to the new API (using the short distribution name taken from the release file filename). Add branch and revision to _sys_version(). Add work-around for Cygwin to libc_ver(). Add support for IronPython (thanks for Anthony Baxter) and make Jython support more robust. ........ r53410 | neal.norwitz | 2007-01-13 22:22:37 +0100 (Sat, 13 Jan 2007) | 1 line Fix grammar in docstrings ........ r53411 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-01-13 23:32:21 +0100 (Sat, 13 Jan 2007) | 9 lines Add parameter sys_version to _sys_version(). Change the cache for _sys_version() to take the parameter into account. Add support for parsing the IronPython 1.0.1 sys.version value - even though it still returns '1.0.0'; the version string no longer includes the patch level. ........ r53412 | peter.astrand | 2007-01-13 23:35:35 +0100 (Sat, 13 Jan 2007) | 1 line Fix for bug #1634343: allow specifying empty arguments on Windows ........ r53414 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-01-13 23:59:36 +0100 (Sat, 13 Jan 2007) | 14 lines Add Python implementation to the machine details. Pretty-print the Python version used for running PyBench. Let the user know when calibration has finished. [ 1563844 ] pybench support for IronPython: Simplify Unicode version detection. Make garbage collection and check interval settings optional if the Python implementation doesn't support thess (e.g. IronPython). ........ r53415 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-01-14 00:13:54 +0100 (Sun, 14 Jan 2007) | 5 lines Use defaults if sys.executable isn't set (e.g. on Jython). This change allows running PyBench under Jython. ........ r53416 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-01-14 00:15:33 +0100 (Sun, 14 Jan 2007) | 3 lines Jython doesn't have sys.setcheckinterval() - ignore it in that case. ........ r53420 | gerhard.haering | 2007-01-14 02:43:50 +0100 (Sun, 14 Jan 2007) | 29 lines Merged changes from standalone version 2.3.3. This should probably all be merged into the 2.5 maintenance branch: - self->statement was not checked while fetching data, which could lead to crashes if you used the pysqlite API in unusual ways. Closing the cursor and continuing to fetch data was enough. - Converters are stored in a converters dictionary. The converter name is uppercased first. The old upper-casing algorithm was wrong and was replaced by a simple call to the Python string's upper() method instead. -Applied patch by Glyph Lefkowitz that fixes the problem with subsequent SQLITE_SCHEMA errors. - Improvement to the row type: rows can now be iterated over and have a keys() method. This improves compatibility with both tuple and dict a lot. - A bugfix for the subsecond resolution in timestamps. - Corrected the way the flags PARSE_DECLTYPES and PARSE_COLNAMES are checked for. Now they work as documented. - gcc on Linux sucks. It exports all symbols by default in shared libraries, so if symbols are not unique it can lead to problems with symbol lookup. pysqlite used to crash under Apache when mod_cache was enabled because both modules had the symbol cache_init. I fixed this by applying the prefix pysqlite_ almost everywhere. Sigh. ........ r53423 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-01-14 04:46:33 +0100 (Sun, 14 Jan 2007) | 2 lines Remove a dependency of this test on $COLUMNS. ........ r53425 | ka-ping.yee | 2007-01-14 05:25:15 +0100 (Sun, 14 Jan 2007) | 3 lines Handle old-style instances more gracefully (display documentation on the relevant class instead of documentation on <type 'instance'>). ........ r53440 | vinay.sajip | 2007-01-14 22:49:59 +0100 (Sun, 14 Jan 2007) | 1 line Added WatchedFileHandler (based on SF patch #1598415) ........ r53441 | vinay.sajip | 2007-01-14 22:50:50 +0100 (Sun, 14 Jan 2007) | 1 line Added documentation for WatchedFileHandler (based on SF patch #1598415) ........ r53442 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-01-15 01:02:35 +0100 (Mon, 15 Jan 2007) | 2 lines Doc patch matching r53434 (htonl etc. now always take/return positive ints). ........ |
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.. | ||
package | ||
Arithmetic.py | ||
Calls.py | ||
CommandLine.py | ||
Constructs.py | ||
Dict.py | ||
Exceptions.py | ||
Imports.py | ||
Instances.py | ||
LICENSE | ||
Lists.py | ||
Lookups.py | ||
NewInstances.py | ||
Numbers.py | ||
README | ||
Setup.py | ||
Strings.py | ||
Tuples.py | ||
Unicode.py | ||
clockres.py | ||
pybench.py | ||
systimes.py |
README
________________________________________________________________________ PYBENCH - A Python Benchmark Suite ________________________________________________________________________ Extendable suite of of low-level benchmarks for measuring the performance of the Python implementation (interpreter, compiler or VM). pybench is a collection of tests that provides a standardized way to measure the performance of Python implementations. It takes a very close look at different aspects of Python programs and let's you decide which factors are more important to you than others, rather than wrapping everything up in one number, like the other performance tests do (e.g. pystone which is included in the Python Standard Library). pybench has been used in the past by several Python developers to track down performance bottlenecks or to demonstrate the impact of optimizations and new features in Python. The command line interface for pybench is the file pybench.py. Run this script with option '--help' to get a listing of the possible options. Without options, pybench will simply execute the benchmark and then print out a report to stdout. Micro-Manual ------------ Run 'pybench.py -h' to see the help screen. Run 'pybench.py' to run the benchmark suite using default settings and 'pybench.py -f <file>' to have it store the results in a file too. It is usually a good idea to run pybench.py multiple times to see whether the environment, timers and benchmark run-times are suitable for doing benchmark tests. You can use the comparison feature of pybench.py ('pybench.py -c <file>') to check how well the system behaves in comparison to a reference run. If the differences are well below 10% for each test, then you have a system that is good for doing benchmark testings. Of you get random differences of more than 10% or significant differences between the values for minimum and average time, then you likely have some background processes running which cause the readings to become inconsistent. Examples include: web-browsers, email clients, RSS readers, music players, backup programs, etc. If you are only interested in a few tests of the whole suite, you can use the filtering option, e.g. 'pybench.py -t string' will only run/show the tests that have 'string' in their name. This is the current output of pybench.py --help: """ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ PYBENCH - a benchmark test suite for Python interpreters/compilers. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Synopsis: pybench.py [option] files... Options and default settings: -n arg number of rounds (10) -f arg save benchmark to file arg () -c arg compare benchmark with the one in file arg () -s arg show benchmark in file arg, then exit () -w arg set warp factor to arg (10) -t arg run only tests with names matching arg () -C arg set the number of calibration runs to arg (20) -d hide noise in comparisons (0) -v verbose output (not recommended) (0) --with-gc enable garbage collection (0) --with-syscheck use default sys check interval (0) --timer arg use given timer (time.time) -h show this help text --help show this help text --debug enable debugging --copyright show copyright --examples show examples of usage Version: 2.0 The normal operation is to run the suite and display the results. Use -f to save them for later reuse or comparisons. Available timers: time.time time.clock systimes.processtime Examples: python2.1 pybench.py -f p21.pybench python2.5 pybench.py -f p25.pybench python pybench.py -s p25.pybench -c p21.pybench """ License ------- See LICENSE file. Sample output ------------- """ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PYBENCH 2.0 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * using Python 2.4.2 * disabled garbage collection * system check interval set to maximum: 2147483647 * using timer: time.time Calibrating tests. Please wait... Running 10 round(s) of the suite at warp factor 10: * Round 1 done in 6.388 seconds. * Round 2 done in 6.485 seconds. * Round 3 done in 6.786 seconds. ... * Round 10 done in 6.546 seconds. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Benchmark: 2006-06-12 12:09:25 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Rounds: 10 Warp: 10 Timer: time.time Machine Details: Platform ID: Linux-2.6.8-24.19-default-x86_64-with-SuSE-9.2-x86-64 Processor: x86_64 Python: Executable: /usr/local/bin/python Version: 2.4.2 Compiler: GCC 3.3.4 (pre 3.3.5 20040809) Bits: 64bit Build: Oct 1 2005 15:24:35 (#1) Unicode: UCS2 Test minimum average operation overhead ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BuiltinFunctionCalls: 126ms 145ms 0.28us 0.274ms BuiltinMethodLookup: 124ms 130ms 0.12us 0.316ms CompareFloats: 109ms 110ms 0.09us 0.361ms CompareFloatsIntegers: 100ms 104ms 0.12us 0.271ms CompareIntegers: 137ms 138ms 0.08us 0.542ms CompareInternedStrings: 124ms 127ms 0.08us 1.367ms CompareLongs: 100ms 104ms 0.10us 0.316ms CompareStrings: 111ms 115ms 0.12us 0.929ms CompareUnicode: 108ms 128ms 0.17us 0.693ms ConcatStrings: 142ms 155ms 0.31us 0.562ms ConcatUnicode: 119ms 127ms 0.42us 0.384ms CreateInstances: 123ms 128ms 1.14us 0.367ms CreateNewInstances: 121ms 126ms 1.49us 0.335ms CreateStringsWithConcat: 130ms 135ms 0.14us 0.916ms CreateUnicodeWithConcat: 130ms 135ms 0.34us 0.361ms DictCreation: 108ms 109ms 0.27us 0.361ms DictWithFloatKeys: 149ms 153ms 0.17us 0.678ms DictWithIntegerKeys: 124ms 126ms 0.11us 0.915ms DictWithStringKeys: 114ms 117ms 0.10us 0.905ms ForLoops: 110ms 111ms 4.46us 0.063ms IfThenElse: 118ms 119ms 0.09us 0.685ms ListSlicing: 116ms 120ms 8.59us 0.103ms NestedForLoops: 125ms 137ms 0.09us 0.019ms NormalClassAttribute: 124ms 136ms 0.11us 0.457ms NormalInstanceAttribute: 110ms 117ms 0.10us 0.454ms PythonFunctionCalls: 107ms 113ms 0.34us 0.271ms PythonMethodCalls: 140ms 149ms 0.66us 0.141ms Recursion: 156ms 166ms 3.32us 0.452ms SecondImport: 112ms 118ms 1.18us 0.180ms SecondPackageImport: 118ms 127ms 1.27us 0.180ms SecondSubmoduleImport: 140ms 151ms 1.51us 0.180ms SimpleComplexArithmetic: 128ms 139ms 0.16us 0.361ms SimpleDictManipulation: 134ms 136ms 0.11us 0.452ms SimpleFloatArithmetic: 110ms 113ms 0.09us 0.571ms SimpleIntFloatArithmetic: 106ms 111ms 0.08us 0.548ms SimpleIntegerArithmetic: 106ms 109ms 0.08us 0.544ms SimpleListManipulation: 103ms 113ms 0.10us 0.587ms SimpleLongArithmetic: 112ms 118ms 0.18us 0.271ms SmallLists: 105ms 116ms 0.17us 0.366ms SmallTuples: 108ms 128ms 0.24us 0.406ms SpecialClassAttribute: 119ms 136ms 0.11us 0.453ms SpecialInstanceAttribute: 143ms 155ms 0.13us 0.454ms StringMappings: 115ms 121ms 0.48us 0.405ms StringPredicates: 120ms 129ms 0.18us 2.064ms StringSlicing: 111ms 127ms 0.23us 0.781ms TryExcept: 125ms 126ms 0.06us 0.681ms TryRaiseExcept: 133ms 137ms 2.14us 0.361ms TupleSlicing: 117ms 120ms 0.46us 0.066ms UnicodeMappings: 156ms 160ms 4.44us 0.429ms UnicodePredicates: 117ms 121ms 0.22us 2.487ms UnicodeProperties: 115ms 153ms 0.38us 2.070ms UnicodeSlicing: 126ms 129ms 0.26us 0.689ms ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Totals: 6283ms 6673ms """ ________________________________________________________________________ Writing New Tests ________________________________________________________________________ pybench tests are simple modules defining one or more pybench.Test subclasses. Writing a test essentially boils down to providing two methods: .test() which runs .rounds number of .operations test operations each and .calibrate() which does the same except that it doesn't actually execute the operations. Here's an example: ------------------ from pybench import Test class IntegerCounting(Test): # Version number of the test as float (x.yy); this is important # for comparisons of benchmark runs - tests with unequal version # number will not get compared. version = 1.0 # The number of abstract operations done in each round of the # test. An operation is the basic unit of what you want to # measure. The benchmark will output the amount of run-time per # operation. Note that in order to raise the measured timings # significantly above noise level, it is often required to repeat # sets of operations more than once per test round. The measured # overhead per test round should be less than 1 second. operations = 20 # Number of rounds to execute per test run. This should be # adjusted to a figure that results in a test run-time of between # 1-2 seconds (at warp 1). rounds = 100000 def test(self): """ Run the test. The test needs to run self.rounds executing self.operations number of operations each. """ # Init the test a = 1 # Run test rounds # # NOTE: Use xrange() for all test loops unless you want to face # a 20MB process ! # for i in xrange(self.rounds): # Repeat the operations per round to raise the run-time # per operation significantly above the noise level of the # for-loop overhead. # Execute 20 operations (a += 1): a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 a += 1 def calibrate(self): """ Calibrate the test. This method should execute everything that is needed to setup and run the test - except for the actual operations that you intend to measure. pybench uses this method to measure the test implementation overhead. """ # Init the test a = 1 # Run test rounds (without actually doing any operation) for i in xrange(self.rounds): # Skip the actual execution of the operations, since we # only want to measure the test's administration overhead. pass Registering a new test module ----------------------------- To register a test module with pybench, the classes need to be imported into the pybench.Setup module. pybench will then scan all the symbols defined in that module for subclasses of pybench.Test and automatically add them to the benchmark suite. Breaking Comparability ---------------------- If a change is made to any individual test that means it is no longer strictly comparable with previous runs, the '.version' class variable should be updated. Therefafter, comparisons with previous versions of the test will list as "n/a" to reflect the change. Version History --------------- 2.0: rewrote parts of pybench which resulted in more repeatable timings: - made timer a parameter - changed the platform default timer to use high-resolution timers rather than process timers (which have a much lower resolution) - added option to select timer - added process time timer (using systimes.py) - changed to use min() as timing estimator (average is still taken as well to provide an idea of the difference) - garbage collection is turned off per default - sys check interval is set to the highest possible value - calibration is now a separate step and done using a different strategy that allows measuring the test overhead more accurately - modified the tests to each give a run-time of between 100-200ms using warp 10 - changed default warp factor to 10 (from 20) - compared results with timeit.py and confirmed measurements - bumped all test versions to 2.0 - updated platform.py to the latest version - changed the output format a bit to make it look nicer - refactored the APIs somewhat 1.3+: Steve Holden added the NewInstances test and the filtering option during the NeedForSpeed sprint; this also triggered a long discussion on how to improve benchmark timing and finally resulted in the release of 2.0 1.3: initial checkin into the Python SVN repository Have fun, -- Marc-Andre Lemburg mal@lemburg.com