69 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
69 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
# Benchmarking
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GitLab CE comes with a set of benchmarks that are executed for every build. This
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makes it easier to measure performance of certain components over time.
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Benchmarks are written as RSpec tests using a few extra helpers. To write a
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benchmark, first tag the top-level `describe`:
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```ruby
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describe MaruTheCat, benchmark: true do
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end
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```
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This ensures the benchmark is executed separately from other test collections.
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It also exposes the various RSpec matchers used for writing benchmarks to the
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test group.
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Next, lets write the actual benchmark:
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```ruby
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describe MaruTheCat, benchmark: true do
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let(:maru) { MaruTheChat.new }
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describe '#jump_in_box' do
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benchmark_subject { maru.jump_in_box }
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it { is_expected.to iterate_per_second(9000) }
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end
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end
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```
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Here `benchmark_subject` is a small wrapper around RSpec's `subject` method that
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makes it easier to specify the subject of a benchmark. Using RSpec's regular
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`subject` would require us to write the following instead:
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```ruby
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subject { -> { maru.jump_in_box } }
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```
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The `iterate_per_second` matcher defines the amount of times per second a
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subject should be executed. The higher the amount of iterations the better.
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By default the allowed standard deviation is a maximum of 30%. This can be
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adjusted by chaining the `with_maximum_stddev` on the `iterate_per_second`
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matcher:
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```ruby
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it { is_expected.to iterate_per_second(9000).with_maximum_stddev(50) }
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```
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This can be useful if the code in question depends on external resources of
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which the performance can vary a lot (e.g. physical HDDs, network calls, etc).
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However, in most cases 30% should be enough so only change this when really
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needed.
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## Benchmarks Location
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Benchmarks should be stored in `spec/benchmarks` and should follow the regular
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Rails specs structure. That is, model benchmarks go in `spec/benchmark/models`,
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benchmarks for code in the `lib` directory go in `spec/benchmarks/lib`, etc.
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## Underlying Technology
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The benchmark setup uses [benchmark-ips][benchmark-ips] which takes care of the
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heavy lifting such as warming up code, calculating iterations, standard
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deviation, etc.
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[benchmark-ips]: https://github.com/evanphx/benchmark-ips
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