criterion-cycles-per-byte 0.6.1

measure time with CPU cycles for criterion
Documentation

criterion-cycles-per-byte

GITHUB Crates.io docs

CyclesPerByte measures ticks using the CPU read time-stamp counter instruction.

Cycle measurement instructions

Architecture Instruction
x86 rdtsc / rdpru
x86_64 rdtsc / rdpru
aarch64 (running GNU/Linux kernel) pmccntr
loongarch64 rdtime.d

The RDPRU instruction is available only on AMD CPUs since Zen 2 and it is not used by default. To enable it use the rdpru configuration flag, e.g. by using RUSTFLAGS="--cfg rdpru". Note that this crate does not check availability of the instruction at runtime, which may result in the "illegal instruction" exception during benchmark execution.

After enabling rdpru it is also strongly recommended to pin benchmarks to one core, e.g. by using taskset: RUSTFLAGS="--cfg rdpru" taskset --cpu-list 0 cargo bench. Otherwise, the crate may produce wildly incorrect measurments caused by benchmark thread migration across CPU cores.

Warnings: x86

Unless rdpru is enabled, this crate measures clock ticks rather than cycles. It will not provide accurate results on modern machines unless you calculate the ratio of ticks to cycles and take steps to ensure that that ratio remains consistent.

Warnings: aarch64

In case you're planning to use this library on an aarch64 target, running GNU/Linux kernel, I advise you to read src/lib.rs#L61-L68.

Example

use criterion::{criterion_group, criterion_main, BenchmarkId, Criterion};
use criterion_cycles_per_byte::CyclesPerByte;

fn bench(c: &mut Criterion<CyclesPerByte>) {
    let mut group = c.benchmark_group("fibonacci");

    for i in 0..20 {
        group.bench_function(BenchmarkId::new("slow", i), |b| b.iter(|| fibonacci_slow(i)));
        group.bench_function(BenchmarkId::new("fast", i), |b| b.iter(|| fibonacci_fast(i)));
    }

    group.finish()
}

criterion_group!(
    name = my_bench;
    config = Criterion::default().with_measurement(CyclesPerByte);
    targets = bench
);
criterion_main!(my_bench);

Maintainence status

I am not the original writer but am maintaining this crate because it is still being used in several places. I plan to do version updates and bug fixes as necessary but not to add features or attempt fix the (potentially intractable) problems with this method of measurement.

Compatibility

Criterion version Cycles Per Byte Version
0.5 0.6
0.4 0.4