This is the benchmark suite for SymPy.
These benchmarks track the performance of various features in SymPy over time.
Results are currently hosted in an ad hoc manner, you may find some results here and here.
The benchmarks are run using airspeed velocity.
When adding benchmarks, mirror the SymPy directory tree for the feature you are adding. If your benchmark is not for a specific feature such that creating subdirectories for your benchmark is not reasonable, put your benchmark in the top level benchmarking directory.
These benchmarks are run using airspeed velocity so, you need to have
asv
installed,
$ pip install asv
or in conda environment, use
$ conda install -c conda-forge asv
If you're not using conda, you also need to have virtualenv
installed.
$ pip install virtualenv
To quickly try out the benchmarks (e.g., while developing a new benchmark), you can run it against a single commit on SymPy master.
$ asv run --quick "HEAD^!"
If you work with conda
, you should change the
"environment_type"
entry in asv.conf.json
from "virtualenv"
to "conda"
. Or you can use,
$ asv run --config asv.conf.conda.json --quick "HEAD^!"
You can also run a specific benchmark based on the function or class
name in benchmarks/
or slow_benchmarks/
folder.
$ asv run --bench <Name>
It also supports regular expressions.
The benchmark results will be stored in your results/
folder.
See asv documentation for additional information.
Currently, this suite is pointing to SymPy's base repository for
benchmarking. In order to run these benchmarks on your local checkout,
you will need to change the value of the "repo"
entry in
asv.conf.json
and asv.conf.conda.json
files, from the base
repository's url to your local directory where your fork is stored.
This value should be a path, relative to the location of
asv.conf.json
config file.
E.g., if your sympy
fork and sympy_benchmarks
are stored in the
same folder then you should change the value of "repo" as
"repo" : "../sympy/",
You can also run benchmarks on your remote fork by using the remote fork's url address instead.
You can also compare the benchmarks between two branches/commits. For that you need to create benchmarks for each one first. Do this for both,
$ asv run -s 1 COMMIT
Then you need to run asv compare
on them.
$ asv compare COMMIT1 COMMIT2
here commit
can be replaced with branch names or commit hashes.
If you are comparing the benchmarks of a branch against master, use the commit hash of the master that branch is based on. Otherwise, new unrelated commits in the master can affect the results. Alternately you can also merge master into the branch first to make sure it is up-to-date.
Generally we're not interested in benchmarking every single commit to the sympy repo. For example, we might be interested in some tagged releases:
$ for release in 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4; do asv run "sympy-$release^!"; done
or all the merge commits to the master branch since some tag:
$ git rev-list --merges sympy-1.0..HEAD
Use asv publish
command to create an HTML report.
It will generate an HTML report in your html/
folder. However, you
may not be able to use the HTML files directly.
After generating the HTML files, you have to use asv preview
to
create a server locally. And navigate to http://127.0.0.1:8080/
to
view the report.
See asv documentation for additional information.