A caffeine driven, simple approach to benchmarking.
Matcha allow you to design experiments that will measure the performance of your code. It is recommended that each bench focus on a specific point of impact in your application.
Matcha is available on npm.
$ npm install @fibjs/matcha
Though suites/benches are executed serially, the benches themselves can be asyncronous. Furthermore, suites ran with the matcha command line runner have a number of globals to simplify bench definitions. Take the following code, for example:
suite('Make Tea', function () {
var tea = new CupOfTea('green');
bench('boil water', function(next) {
tea.boil('85℃', function (err, h20) {
// perfect temperature!
next();
});
});
// add tea, pour, ...
bench('sip tea', function() {
tea.sip('mmmm');
});
});
Since boiling water takes time, a next
function was provided to each iteration in our bench to be called when the
async function completes. Since the consumption of tea provides instant gratification, no next
needed to be provided, even though
we still wish to measure it.
Arbitray functions may be specified for setup or teardown for each suite by using the before
and after
keywords.
These function may be sync or async.
suite('DB', function() {
before(function(next) {
db.connect('localhost:9090', next);
});
bench(function(next) {
// ...
});
after(function() {
db.close();
});
});
As not all code is equal, we need a way to change the running conditions for our benches. Options can currently be changed for any given suite, and will be retained for any nested suites or benches of that suite.
To set an option:
suite('Make Tea', function () {
set('iterations', 10000);
set('type', 'static');
// ...
Here are all available options and the default values:
set('iterations', 100); // the number of times to run a given bench
set('concurrency', 1); // the number of how many times a given bench is run concurrently
set('type', 'adaptive'); // or 'static' (see below)
set('mintime', 500); // when adaptive, the minimum time in ms a bench should run
set('delay', 100); // time in ms between each bench
There are two modes for running your benches: 'static' and 'adaptive'. Static mode will run exactly the set number of iterations. Adaptive will run the set iterations, then if a minimal time elapsed has not passed, will run more another set of iterations, then check again (and repeat) until the requirement has been satisfied.
Running of your benchmarks is provided through ./bin/matcha
. The recommended approach is to add a devDependancy in your
package.json
and then add a line to a Makefile
or build tool. The matcha
bin will accept a list of files to load or will
look in the current working directory for a folder named benchmark
and load all files.
$ matcha suite1.js suite2.js
-h, --help view matcha usage information
-v, --version view matcha version
-R, --reporter [clean] specify the reporter to use
-I, --interface [bdd] specify the interface to expect
--interfaces display available interfaces
--reporters display available reporters
The --interface option lets you specify the interface to use, defaulting to "bdd".
The --reporter option allows you to specify the reporter that will be used, defaulting to "clean".
Matcha "interface" system allows developers to choose their style of DSL. Shipping with bdd, and exports flavoured interfaces.
suite('suite name', function(){
set('iterations', 10);
bench('bench name', function(done){
some_fn(done);
});
});
exports['suite name'] = {
options: {
iterations: 10
},
bench: {
'bench name': function (doen) {
some_fn(done);
}
}
};
Matcha reporters adjust to the terminal window.
Good-looking default reporter with colors on the terminal screen.
Similar to clean reporter but without colors and other ANSI sequences.
Completely different, create csv formated rows for later processing.
Interested in contributing? Fork to get started. Contact @logicalparadox if you are interested in being regular contributor.
- Jake Luer (Github: @logicalparadox) (Twitter: @jakeluer) (Website)
- Patrick Steele-Idem (Github: @patrick-steele-idem) (Twitter: @psteeleidem)
- mocha inspired the suite/bench definition language.
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2011-2012 Jake Luer jake@alogicalparadox.com
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.