tests/silenttestrunner.py
author Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
Sun, 17 Dec 2017 04:31:27 +0100
changeset 35599 af25237be091
parent 28736 403b0a7ab410
child 43076 2372284d9457
permissions -rw-r--r--
perf: add threading capability to perfbdiff Since we are releasing the GIL during diffing, it is interesting to see how a thread pool would perform on diffing. We add a new `--threads` argument to commands. Synchronizing the thread pool is a bit complex because we want to be able to reuse it from one run to another. On my computer (i7 with 4 cores + hyperthreading), I get the following data for about 12000 revisions: threads wall comb wall gain comb overhead none 31.596715 31.59 0.00% 0.00% 1 31.621228 31.62 -0.08% 0.09% 2 16.406202 32.8 48.08% 3.83% 3 11.598334 34.76 63.29% 10.03% 4 9.205421 36.77 70.87% 16.40% 5 8.517604 42.51 73.04% 34.57% 6 7.94645 47.58 74.85% 50.62% 7 7.434972 51.92 76.47% 64.36% 8 7.070638 55.34 77.62% 75.18% Compared to the feature disabled (threads=0), the overhead is negligible with the threading code (threads=1), and the gain is already 48% with two threads.

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
import sys
import unittest

def main(modulename):
    '''run the tests found in module, printing nothing when all tests pass'''
    module = sys.modules[modulename]
    suite = unittest.defaultTestLoader.loadTestsFromModule(module)
    results = unittest.TestResult()
    suite.run(results)
    if results.errors or results.failures:
        for tc, exc in results.errors:
            print('ERROR:', tc)
            print()
            sys.stdout.write(exc)
        for tc, exc in results.failures:
            print('FAIL:', tc)
            print()
            sys.stdout.write(exc)
        sys.exit(1)

if os.environ.get('SILENT_BE_NOISY'):
    main = unittest.main