Benchmark
A library to benchmark code snippets, similar to unit tests. Example:
#include <benchmark/benchmark.h>
static void BM_SomeFunction(benchmark::State& state) {
for (auto _ : state) {
SomeFunction();
}
}
BENCHMARK(BM_SomeFunction);
BENCHMARK_MAIN();
Getting Started
To get started, see Requirements and
Installation. See Usage for a full example and the
User Guide for a more comprehensive feature overview.
It may also help to read the Google Test documentation
as some of the structural aspects of the APIs are similar.
Resources
Discussion group
IRC channels:
Additional Tooling Documentation
Assembly Testing Documentation
Building and installing Python bindings
Requirements
The library can be used with C++03. However, it requires C++14 to build,
including compiler and standard library support.
See dependencies.md for more details regarding supported
compilers and standards.
If you have need for a particular compiler to be supported, patches are very welcome.
See Platform-Specific Build Instructions.
Installation
This describes the installation process using cmake. As pre-requisites, you'll
need git and cmake installed.
See dependencies.md for more details regarding supported
versions of build tools.
$ git clone https://github.com/google/benchmark.git
$ cd benchmark
$ cmake -E make_directory "build"
$ cmake -E chdir "build" cmake -DBENCHMARK_DOWNLOAD_DEPENDENCIES=on -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ../
$ cmake --build "build" --config Release
This builds the benchmark
and benchmark_main
libraries and tests.
On a unix system, the build directory should now look something like this:
/benchmark
/build
/src
/libbenchmark.a
/libbenchmark_main.a
/test
...
Next, you can run the tests to check the build.
$ cmake -E chdir "build" ctest --build-config Release
If you want to install the library globally, also run:
sudo cmake --build "build" --config Release --target install
Note that Google Benchmark requires Google Test to build and run the tests. This
dependency can be provided two ways:
- Checkout the Google Test sources into
benchmark/googletest
. - Otherwise, if
-DBENCHMARK_DOWNLOAD_DEPENDENCIES=ON
is specified during
configuration as above, the library will automatically download and build
any required dependencies.
If you do not wish to build and run the tests, add -DBENCHMARK_ENABLE_GTEST_TESTS=OFF
to CMAKE_ARGS
.
Debug vs Release
By default, benchmark builds as a debug library. You will see a warning in the
output when this is the case. To build it as a release library instead, add
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
when generating the build system files, as shown
above. The use of --config Release
in build commands is needed to properly
support multi-configuration tools (like Visual Studio for example) and can be
skipped for other build systems (like Makefile).
To enable link-time optimisation, also add -DBENCHMARK_ENABLE_LTO=true
when
generating the build system files.
If you are using gcc, you might need to set GCC_AR
and GCC_RANLIB
cmake
cache variables, if autodetection fails.
If you are using clang, you may need to set LLVMAR_EXECUTABLE
,
LLVMNM_EXECUTABLE
and LLVMRANLIB_EXECUTABLE
cmake cache variables.
To enable sanitizer checks (eg., asan
and tsan
), add:
-DCMAKE_C_FLAGS="-g -O2 -fno-omit-frame-pointer -fsanitize=address -fsanitize=thread -fno-sanitize-recover=all"
-DCMAKE_CXX_FLAGS="-g -O2 -fno-omit-frame-pointer -fsanitize=address -fsanitize=thread -fno-sanitize-recover=all "
Stable and Experimental Library Versions
The main branch contains the latest stable version of the benchmarking library;
the API of which can be considered largely stable, with source breaking changes
being made only upon the release of a new major version.
Newer, experimental, features are implemented and tested on the
v2
branch. Users who wish
to use, test, and provide feedback on the new features are encouraged to try
this branch. However, this branch provides no stability guarantees and reserves
the right to change and break the API at any time.
Usage
Basic usage
Define a function that executes the code to measure, register it as a benchmark
function using the BENCHMARK
macro, and ensure an appropriate main
function
is available:
#include <benchmark/benchmark.h>
static void BM_StringCreation(benchmark::State& state) {
for (auto _ : state)
std::string empty_string;
}
BENCHMARK(BM_StringCreation);
static void BM_StringCopy(benchmark::State& state) {
std::string x = "hello";
for (auto _ : state)
std::string copy(x);
}
BENCHMARK(BM_StringCopy);
BENCHMARK_MAIN();
To run the benchmark, compile and link against the benchmark
library
(libbenchmark.a/.so). If you followed the build steps above, this library will
be under the build directory you created.
$ g++ mybenchmark.cc -std=c++11 -isystem benchmark/include \
-Lbenchmark/build/src -lbenchmark -lpthread -o mybenchmark
Alternatively, link against the benchmark_main
library and remove
BENCHMARK_MAIN();
above to get the same behavior.
The compiled executable will run all benchmarks by default. Pass the --help
flag for option information or see the User Guide.
Usage with CMake
If using CMake, it is recommended to link against the project-provided
benchmark::benchmark
and benchmark::benchmark_main
targets using
target_link_libraries
.
It is possible to use find_package
to import an installed version of the
library.
find_package(benchmark REQUIRED)
Alternatively, add_subdirectory
will incorporate the library directly in
to one's CMake project.
add_subdirectory(benchmark)
Either way, link to the library as follows.
target_link_libraries(MyTarget benchmark::benchmark)