Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Enrico Granata 4e969282fd Misc fixes:
- make an overload of Launch() that takes an init list of const char* if all you need to tweak in the launch info are the command-line arguments
- make Run() return an int that you can use as an exit-code
- make dynamic values work properly when recursing in FetchVariables()
- make the po output more obvious in verbose mode

llvm-svn: 178578
2013-04-02 21:31:18 +00:00
Enrico Granata 8fab9fdac2 Integrating option parsing in TestCase for added convenience
To hook it up to individual test cases:
- define GetLongOptions() in your test case class to return something other than NULL (hopefully an array of options :-)
- implement ParseOption() to check for the short option char and do the right thing - return true at the end if you want more options to come your way or false if you don’t
- make sure that your Setup() call takes int& and char**& so that optind post-processing can happen - and call TestCase::Setup from your setup

llvm-svn: 178482
2013-04-01 18:02:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton 880afc5728 Much more cleanup on the performance testing infrastructure:
- Added new abtract Results class to keep CoreFoundation out of the tests. There are many subclasses for different settings:
    Results::Result::Dictionary
    Results::Result::Array
    Results::Result::Unsigned
    Results::Result::Double
    Results::Result::String
- Gauge<T> can now write themselves out via a templatized write to results function:
    template <class T>
    Results::ResultSP GetResult (const char *description, T value);
  
- There are four specializations of this so far:
    template <>
    Results::ResultSP GetResult (const char *description, double value);

    template <>
    Results::ResultSP GetResult (const char *description, uint64_t value);

    template <>
    Results::ResultSP GetResult (const char *description, std::string value);

    template <>
    Results::ResultSP GetResult (const char *description, MemoryStats value);
- Don't emit the virtual memory reading from the task info call as it really doesn't mean much as it includes way too much (shared cache + other stuff we don't have control over)
- Fixed other test cases to build correctly and use the new classes

llvm-svn: 177696
2013-03-22 02:31:35 +00:00
Greg Clayton 5dbe5d4b62 Add correct file headers to all source files.
llvm-svn: 177625
2013-03-21 03:39:51 +00:00
Enrico Granata e16dfcdb5b Making the test step count a member variable so that it can be accessed easily
llvm-svn: 177594
2013-03-20 22:42:34 +00:00
Greg Clayton e0b924e3bf More cleanup on the lldb-perf code:
- TestCase.m_thread is now filled in with the first thread that has a valid
  stop reason. This eliminates the need for the SelectMyThread() functions.
- The first thread that stops for a reason is also set as the selected thread
  in the process in case any command line commands are run.
- Changed launch over to take a SBLaunchInfo parameter so that the launch
  function doesn't keep getting new arguments as they are needed.
- TestCase::Setup() and TestCase::Launch(SBLaunchInfo) now return bool to 
  indicate success of setup and launch.
- ActionWanted::Next(SBThread) was renamed to ActionWanted::StepOver(SBThread)
- ActionWanted::Finish(SBThread) was renamed to ActionWanted::StepOut(SBThread)

llvm-svn: 177376
2013-03-19 04:41:22 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7b8f738227 Code cleanup:
- don't use preprocessor macros
- use switch statements
- don't put anything in the lldb namespace, use "lldb_perf" namespace.
- Pass the action struct into each TestStep() for each step fill in
- Modify the ActionWanted class to have accessors to make the continue, next, finish, kill instead of using preproc macros

llvm-svn: 177332
2013-03-18 22:34:00 +00:00
Enrico Granata 86910577cc <rdar://problem/13228487>
A test case for the performance of some LLDB formatters
Changes and improvements to the testing infrastructure itself

llvm-svn: 177100
2013-03-14 19:00:42 +00:00
Enrico Granata f58cececaa Initial checkin of a new project: LLDB Performance Testing Infrastructure
This is a very basic implementation of a library that easily allows to drive LLDB.framework to write test cases for performance

This is separate from the LLDB testsuite in test/ in that:
a) this uses C++ instead of Python to avoid measures being affected by SWIG
b) this is in very early development and needs lots of tweaking before it can be considered functionally complete
c) this is not meant to test correctness but to help catch performance regressions

There is a sample application built against the library (in darwin/sketch) that uses the famous sample app Sketch as an inferior to measure certain basic parameters of LLDB's behavior.
The resulting output is a PLIST much like the following:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<array>
	<dict>
		<key>fetch-frames</key>
		<real>0.13161715522222225</real>
	</dict>
	<dict>
		<key>file-line-bkpt</key>
		<real>0.029111678750000002</real>
	</dict>
	<dict>
		<key>fetch-modules</key>
		<real>0.00026376766666666668</real>
	</dict>
	<dict>
		<key>fetch-vars</key>
		<real>0.17820429311111111</real>
	</dict>
	<dict>
		<key>run-expr</key>
		<real>0.029676525769230768</real>
	</dict>
</array>
</plist>

Areas for improvement:
- code cleanups (I will be out of the office for a couple days this coming week, but please keep ideas coming!)
- more metrics and test cases
- better error checking

This toolkit also comprises a simple event-loop-driven controller for LLDB, similar yet much simpler to what the Driver does to implement the lldb command-line tool.

llvm-svn: 176715
2013-03-08 20:29:13 +00:00