Tobias Grosser
2014-Jan-17 01:03 UTC
[LLVMdev] Why is the default LNT aggregation function min instead of mean
Hi, I am currently investigating how to ensure that LNT only shows relevant performance regressions for the -O3 performance tests I am running. One question that came up here is why the default aggregate function for LNT is 'min' instead of 'mean'. This looks a little surprising from the statistical point, but also from looking at my test results picking 'min' seems to be an inferior choice. For all test runs I have looked at, picking mean largely reduces the run-over-run changes reported due to noise. See this run e.g: If we use the median, we just get just one change reported: http://llvm.org/perf/db_default/v4/nts/20661?num_comparison_runs=10&test_filter=&test_min_value_filter=&aggregation_fn=median&compare_to=20659&submit=Update If you use min, we get eight reports one claiming over 100% performance reduction for a case that is really just pure noise. I am planning to look into using better statistical methods. However, as a start, could we switch the default to 'mean'? Cheers, Tobias
Chris Matthews
2014-Jan-17 01:05 UTC
[LLVMdev] Why is the default LNT aggregation function min instead of mean
I think the idea with min is that it would the the ideal fastest run. The other runs were ‘slowed' by system noise or something else. On Jan 16, 2014, at 5:03 PM, Tobias Grosser <tobias at grosser.es> wrote:> Hi, > > I am currently investigating how to ensure that LNT only shows relevant performance regressions for the -O3 performance tests I am running. > > One question that came up here is why the default aggregate function for LNT is 'min' instead of 'mean'. This looks a little surprising from the statistical point, but also from looking at my test results picking 'min' seems to be an inferior choice. > > For all test runs I have looked at, picking mean largely reduces the run-over-run changes reported due to noise. > > See this run e.g: > > If we use the median, we just get just one change reported: > > http://llvm.org/perf/db_default/v4/nts/20661?num_comparison_runs=10&test_filter=&test_min_value_filter=&aggregation_fn=median&compare_to=20659&submit=Update > > If you use min, we get eight reports one claiming over 100% performance > reduction for a case that is really just pure noise. I am planning to look into using better statistical methods. However, as a start, could we switch the default to 'mean'? > > Cheers, > Tobias
David Blaikie
2014-Jan-17 01:17 UTC
[LLVMdev] Why is the default LNT aggregation function min instead of mean
Right - you usually won't see a normal distribution in the noise of test results. You'll see results clustered around the lower bound with a long tail of slower and slower results. Depending on how many samples you do it might be appropriate to take the mean of the best 3, for example - but the general approach of taking the fastest N does have some basis in any case. Not necessarily the right answer, the only right answer, etc. On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 5:05 PM, Chris Matthews <chris.matthews at apple.com>wrote:> I think the idea with min is that it would the the ideal fastest run. The > other runs were ‘slowed' by system noise or something else. > > > On Jan 16, 2014, at 5:03 PM, Tobias Grosser <tobias at grosser.es> wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > I am currently investigating how to ensure that LNT only shows relevant > performance regressions for the -O3 performance tests I am running. > > > > One question that came up here is why the default aggregate function for > LNT is 'min' instead of 'mean'. This looks a little surprising from the > statistical point, but also from looking at my test results picking 'min' > seems to be an inferior choice. > > > > For all test runs I have looked at, picking mean largely reduces the > run-over-run changes reported due to noise. > > > > See this run e.g: > > > > If we use the median, we just get just one change reported: > > > > > http://llvm.org/perf/db_default/v4/nts/20661?num_comparison_runs=10&test_filter=&test_min_value_filter=&aggregation_fn=median&compare_to=20659&submit=Update > > > > If you use min, we get eight reports one claiming over 100% performance > > reduction for a case that is really just pure noise. I am planning to > look into using better statistical methods. However, as a start, could we > switch the default to 'mean'? > > > > Cheers, > > Tobias > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140116/41765d7a/attachment.html>
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