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benchmark: allow no duration in benchmark tests #13110
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refack approved these changes May 18, 2017
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Makes sense
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| I think this should probably be prefixed with |
Imprecision in process.hrtime() in some situations can result in a zero duration being used as a denominator in benchmark tests. This would almost certainly never happen in real benchmarks. It is only likely in very short benchmarks like the type we run in our test suite to just make sure that the benchmark code is runnable. So, if the environment variable that we use in tests to indicate "allow ludicrously short benchmarks" is set, convert a zero duration for a benchmark to 1 nano-second. Fixes: nodejs#13102
8bf68d5 to fb352ae Compare Member Author
@mscdex Sure thing. Updated the PR title and the first line of the commit message as requested. |
bnoordhuis approved these changes May 19, 2017
joyeecheung approved these changes May 19, 2017
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Trott added a commit to Trott/io.js that referenced this pull request May 22, 2017
Imprecision in process.hrtime() in some situations can result in a zero duration being used as a denominator in benchmark tests. This would almost certainly never happen in real benchmarks. It is only likely in very short benchmarks like the type we run in our test suite to just make sure that the benchmark code is runnable. So, if the environment variable that we use in tests to indicate "allow ludicrously short benchmarks" is set, convert a zero duration for a benchmark to 1 nano-second. PR-URL: nodejs#13110 Fixes: nodejs#13102 Fixes: nodejs#12433 Reviewed-By: Refael Ackermann <refack@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl> Reviewed-By: Joyee Cheung <joyeec9h3@gmail.com>
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| Landed in c3067b5 |
jasnell pushed a commit that referenced this pull request May 23, 2017
Imprecision in process.hrtime() in some situations can result in a zero duration being used as a denominator in benchmark tests. This would almost certainly never happen in real benchmarks. It is only likely in very short benchmarks like the type we run in our test suite to just make sure that the benchmark code is runnable. So, if the environment variable that we use in tests to indicate "allow ludicrously short benchmarks" is set, convert a zero duration for a benchmark to 1 nano-second. PR-URL: #13110 Fixes: #13102 Fixes: #12433 Reviewed-By: Refael Ackermann <refack@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl> Reviewed-By: Joyee Cheung <joyeec9h3@gmail.com>
jasnell pushed a commit that referenced this pull request May 23, 2017
Imprecision in process.hrtime() in some situations can result in a zero duration being used as a denominator in benchmark tests. This would almost certainly never happen in real benchmarks. It is only likely in very short benchmarks like the type we run in our test suite to just make sure that the benchmark code is runnable. So, if the environment variable that we use in tests to indicate "allow ludicrously short benchmarks" is set, convert a zero duration for a benchmark to 1 nano-second. PR-URL: #13110 Fixes: #13102 Fixes: #12433 Reviewed-By: Refael Ackermann <refack@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl> Reviewed-By: Joyee Cheung <joyeec9h3@gmail.com>
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Imprecision in process.hrtime() in some situations can result in a zero
duration being used as a denominator in benchmark tests. This would
almost certainly never happen in real benchmarks. It is only likely in
very short benchmarks like the type we run in our test suite to just
make sure that the benchmark code is runnable.
So, if the environment variable that we use in tests to indicate "allow
ludicrously short benchmarks" is set, convert a zero duration for
a benchmark to 1 nano-second.
Fixes: #13102
Checklist
make -j4 test(UNIX), orvcbuild test(Windows) passesAffected core subsystem(s)
test benchmark http