ikarus/benchmarks.larceny/src/gcbench.java

175 lines
7.4 KiB
Java

// This is adapted from a benchmark written by John Ellis and Pete Kovac
// of Post Communications.
// It was modified by Hans Boehm of Silicon Graphics.
//
// This is no substitute for real applications. No actual application
// is likely to behave in exactly this way. However, this benchmark was
// designed to be more representative of real applications than other
// Java GC benchmarks of which we are aware.
// It attempts to model those properties of allocation requests that
// are important to current GC techniques.
// It is designed to be used either to obtain a single overall performance
// number, or to give a more detailed estimate of how collector
// performance varies with object lifetimes. It prints the time
// required to allocate and collect balanced binary trees of various
// sizes. Smaller trees result in shorter object lifetimes. Each cycle
// allocates roughly the same amount of memory.
// Two data structures are kept around during the entire process, so
// that the measured performance is representative of applications
// that maintain some live in-memory data. One of these is a tree
// containing many pointers. The other is a large array containing
// double precision floating point numbers. Both should be of comparable
// size.
//
// The results are only really meaningful together with a specification
// of how much memory was used. It is possible to trade memory for
// better time performance. This benchmark should be run in a 32 MB
// heap, though we don't currently know how to enforce that uniformly.
//
// Unlike the original Ellis and Kovac benchmark, we do not attempt
// measure pause times. This facility should eventually be added back
// in. There are several reasons for omitting it for now. The original
// implementation depended on assumptions about the thread scheduler
// that don't hold uniformly. The results really measure both the
// scheduler and GC. Pause time measurements tend to not fit well with
// current benchmark suites. As far as we know, none of the current
// commercial Java implementations seriously attempt to minimize GC pause
// times.
class Node {
Node left, right;
int i, j;
Node(Node l, Node r) { left = l; right = r; }
Node() { }
}
public class gcbench {
public static final int kStretchTreeDepth = 18; // about 16Mb
public static final int kLongLivedTreeDepth = 16; // about 4Mb
public static final int kArraySize = 500000; // about 4Mb
public static final int kMinTreeDepth = 4;
public static final int kMaxTreeDepth = 16;
// Nodes used by a tree of a given size
static int TreeSize(int i) {
return ((1 << (i + 1)) - 1);
}
// Number of iterations to use for a given tree depth
static int NumIters(int i) {
return 2 * TreeSize(kStretchTreeDepth) / TreeSize(i);
}
// Build tree top down, assigning to older objects.
static void Populate(int iDepth, Node thisNode) {
if (iDepth<=0) {
return;
} else {
iDepth--;
thisNode.left = new Node();
thisNode.right = new Node();
Populate (iDepth, thisNode.left);
Populate (iDepth, thisNode.right);
}
}
// Build tree bottom-up
static Node MakeTree(int iDepth) {
if (iDepth<=0) {
return new Node();
} else {
return new Node(MakeTree(iDepth-1),
MakeTree(iDepth-1));
}
}
static void PrintDiagnostics() {
long lFreeMemory = Runtime.getRuntime().freeMemory();
long lTotalMemory = Runtime.getRuntime().totalMemory();
System.out.print(" Total memory available="
+ lTotalMemory + " bytes");
System.out.println(" Free memory=" + lFreeMemory + " bytes");
}
static void TimeConstruction(int depth) {
Node root;
long tStart, tFinish;
int iNumIters = NumIters(depth);
Node tempTree;
System.out.println("Creating " + iNumIters +
" trees of depth " + depth);
tStart = System.currentTimeMillis();
for (int i = 0; i < iNumIters; ++i) {
tempTree = new Node();
Populate(depth, tempTree);
tempTree = null;
}
tFinish = System.currentTimeMillis();
System.out.println("\tTop down construction took "
+ (tFinish - tStart) + "msecs");
tStart = System.currentTimeMillis();
for (int i = 0; i < iNumIters; ++i) {
tempTree = MakeTree(depth);
tempTree = null;
}
tFinish = System.currentTimeMillis();
System.out.println("\tBottom up construction took "
+ (tFinish - tStart) + "msecs");
}
public static void main(String args[]) {
Node root;
Node longLivedTree;
Node tempTree;
long tStart, tFinish;
long tElapsed;
System.out.println("Garbage Collector Test");
System.out.println(
" Stretching memory with a binary tree of depth "
+ kStretchTreeDepth);
PrintDiagnostics();
tStart = System.currentTimeMillis();
// Stretch the memory space quickly
tempTree = MakeTree(kStretchTreeDepth);
tempTree = null;
// Create a long lived object
System.out.println(
" Creating a long-lived binary tree of depth " +
kLongLivedTreeDepth);
longLivedTree = new Node();
Populate(kLongLivedTreeDepth, longLivedTree);
// Create long-lived array, filling half of it
System.out.println(
" Creating a long-lived array of "
+ kArraySize + " doubles");
double array[] = new double[kArraySize];
for (int i = 0; i < kArraySize/2; ++i) {
array[i] = 1.0/i;
}
PrintDiagnostics();
for (int d = kMinTreeDepth; d <= kMaxTreeDepth; d += 2) {
TimeConstruction(d);
}
if (longLivedTree == null || array[1000] != 1.0/1000)
System.out.println("Failed");
// fake reference to LongLivedTree
// and array
// to keep them from being optimized away
tFinish = System.currentTimeMillis();
tElapsed = tFinish-tStart;
PrintDiagnostics();
System.out.println("Completed in " + tElapsed + "ms.");
}
} // class JavaGC