Smith, Kevin B
2015-May-28 18:22 UTC
[LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives
OK, there is interest from at least a couple of people. What should next steps be? Kevin From: Chris Matthews [mailto:chris.matthews at apple.com] Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 10:57 AM To: Philip Reames Cc: Smith, Kevin B; Sean Silva; LLVM Developers Mailing List Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives I agree. I think there are a lot of exciting uses for this tool. A stage 3 build bot would be another one. On May 28, 2015, at 10:14 AM, Philip Reames <listmail at philipreames.com<mailto:listmail at philipreames.com>> wrote: I'd love to see this tool contributed, even it isn't used for regression detection work. I've got a couple of hacked up scripts which do similar things and having a robust tool available for this would be very useful. Philip On 05/26/2015 09:53 AM, Smith, Kevin B wrote: Intel has a binary comparator tool that we have been using for several years for comparing output binaries to see if the code within them is considered identical. We use it to eliminate runs (and therefore some performance noise) from our own performance tracking tools. We are willing to contribute the source code for this to the LLVM community if there is interest. There are two programs involved: getdep, which displays the list of DLL/.so dependencies of the image in question, and cmpimage itself, which does the comparison ignoring the parts not contributed by the compiler. The cmpimage program is also almost completely derived from the published object format descriptions. Let me know if there is interest in these pieces of tooling, and if so, what you think next steps should be. Kevin B. Smith From: llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu> [mailto:llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu] On Behalf Of Sean Silva Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2015 2:14 PM To: Chris Matthews Cc: LLVM Developers Mailing List Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives On Thu, May 21, 2015 at 11:24 AM, Chris Matthews <chris.matthews at apple.com<mailto:chris.matthews at apple.com>> wrote: I agree this is a great idea. I think it needs to be fleshed out a little though. It would still be wise to run the regression detection algorithm, because the test suite changes and the machines change, and the algorithm is not perfect yet. It would be a valuable source of information though. How would running it as part of regular testing change anything? Presumably the only purpose it would serve is retrospectively going back and seeing false-positives in the aggregate. But if we are already doing offline analysis, we can run the regression detection algorithm (or any prospective ones) offline on the raw data; it doesn't take that long. This is not a small change to how LNT works, so I think some due diligence is necessary. Is clang *really* that deterministic, especially over successive revs? Yes. Actually, google's build system depends on this for its caching strategy to work and so the google guys are usually on top of any issues in this respect (thanks google guys!). I know it is supposed to be. Does anyone have any data to show this is going to be an effective approach? It seems like there are benchmarks in the test-suite which use __DATE__ and __TIME__ in them. I assume that will be a problem? __DATE__ and __TIME__ should be easy to solve by modifying the benchmark, or teaching clang to always return a fixed value for them (maybe we already have this? IIRC google's build system does something like this; or maybe the do it at the OS level). -- Sean Silva> On May 21, 2015, at 1:43 AM, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org<mailto:renato.golin at linaro.org>> wrote: > > On 20 May 2015 at 23:31, Sean Silva <chisophugis at gmail.com<mailto:chisophugis at gmail.com>> wrote: >> In the last 10,000 revisions of LLVM+Clang, only 10 revisions actually >> caused the binary of MultiSource/Benchmarks/BitBench/five11 to change. So if >> just store a hash of the binary in the database, we should be able to pool >> all samples we have collected while the binary is the the same as it >> currently is, which will let us use significantly more datapoints for the >> reference. > > +1 > > >> Also, we can trivially eliminate running the regression detection algorithm >> if the binary hasn't changed. > > +2! > > --renato > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu<http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/> > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev_______________________________________________ LLVM Developers mailing list LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> http://llvm.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/20150528/cf60eaac/attachment.html>
Chris Matthews
2015-May-28 20:01 UTC
[LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives
Where is the best place to keep this? - As third party tool we all use? - Contribute as new project? - Lives in test-suite/utils? - Lives in llvm/utils?> On May 28, 2015, at 11:22 AM, Smith, Kevin B <kevin.b.smith at intel.com> wrote: > > OK, there is interest from at least a couple of people. What should next steps be? > > Kevin > > From: Chris Matthews [mailto:chris.matthews at apple.com] > Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 10:57 AM > To: Philip Reames > Cc: Smith, Kevin B; Sean Silva; LLVM Developers Mailing List > Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives > > I agree. I think there are a lot of exciting uses for this tool. A stage 3 build bot would be another one. > > On May 28, 2015, at 10:14 AM, Philip Reames <listmail at philipreames.com <mailto:listmail at philipreames.com>> wrote: > > I'd love to see this tool contributed, even it isn't used for regression detection work. I've got a couple of hacked up scripts which do similar things and having a robust tool available for this would be very useful. > > Philip > > On 05/26/2015 09:53 AM, Smith, Kevin B wrote: > Intel has a binary comparator tool that we have been using for several years for comparing output binaries > to see if the code within them is considered identical. We use it to eliminate runs (and therefore some performance noise) > from our own performance tracking tools. > > We are willing to contribute the source code for this to the LLVM community if there is interest. > > There are two programs involved: getdep, which displays the list of DLL/.so dependencies of the image in question, and cmpimage itself, which does the comparison ignoring the parts not contributed by the compiler. The cmpimage program is also almost completely derived from the published object format descriptions. > > Let me know if there is interest in these pieces of tooling, and if so, what you think next steps should be. > > Kevin B. Smith > > From: llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu> [mailto:llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu>] On Behalf Of Sean Silva > Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2015 2:14 PM > To: Chris Matthews > Cc: LLVM Developers Mailing List > Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives > > > > On Thu, May 21, 2015 at 11:24 AM, Chris Matthews <chris.matthews at apple.com <mailto:chris.matthews at apple.com>> wrote: > I agree this is a great idea. I think it needs to be fleshed out a little though. > > It would still be wise to run the regression detection algorithm, because the test suite changes and the machines change, and the algorithm is not perfect yet. It would be a valuable source of information though. > > How would running it as part of regular testing change anything? Presumably the only purpose it would serve is retrospectively going back and seeing false-positives in the aggregate. But if we are already doing offline analysis, we can run the regression detection algorithm (or any prospective ones) offline on the raw data; it doesn't take that long. > > > This is not a small change to how LNT works, so I think some due diligence is necessary. Is clang *really* that deterministic, especially over successive revs? > > Yes. Actually, google's build system depends on this for its caching strategy to work and so the google guys are usually on top of any issues in this respect (thanks google guys!). > > > I know it is supposed to be. Does anyone have any data to show this is going to be an effective approach? It seems like there are benchmarks in the test-suite which use __DATE__ and __TIME__ in them. I assume that will be a problem? > > __DATE__ and __TIME__ should be easy to solve by modifying the benchmark, or teaching clang to always return a fixed value for them (maybe we already have this? IIRC google's build system does something like this; or maybe the do it at the OS level). > > -- Sean Silva > > > > On May 21, 2015, at 1:43 AM, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org <mailto:renato.golin at linaro.org>> wrote: > > > > On 20 May 2015 at 23:31, Sean Silva <chisophugis at gmail.com <mailto:chisophugis at gmail.com>> wrote: > >> In the last 10,000 revisions of LLVM+Clang, only 10 revisions actually > >> caused the binary of MultiSource/Benchmarks/BitBench/five11 to change. So if > >> just store a hash of the binary in the database, we should be able to pool > >> all samples we have collected while the binary is the the same as it > >> currently is, which will let us use significantly more datapoints for the > >> reference. > > > > +1 > > > > > >> Also, we can trivially eliminate running the regression detection algorithm > >> if the binary hasn't changed. > > > > +2! > > > > --renato > > _______________________________________________ > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu <http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/> > > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev> > > > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu <http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/> > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev> > >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20150528/3c641424/attachment.html>
Smith, Kevin B
2015-Jun-02 19:00 UTC
[LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives
The code for cmpimage and getdep consists of five source files, with the following sizes $ wc * 5912 20353 191869 cmpimage.cpp 290 1328 10668 elf.h 1496 5006 41691 getdep.cpp 233 959 7692 macho.h 403 1831 18394 pecoff.h 8334 29477 270314 total to build each of them is just a simple compilation for whatever C++ compiler you happen to be using (clang, icc, cl, g++) $(CXX) –o cmpimage –O2 cmpimage.cpp $(CXX) –o getdep –O2 getdep.cpp This seems like it would fit rather easily into test-suite/tools, which already exists and has a Makefile that the commands to build these could be integrated into. This is my best guess/opinion based on a cursory look over the test-suite directory structure. Kevin From: Chris Matthews [mailto:chris.matthews at apple.com] Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 1:02 PM To: Smith, Kevin B Cc: Philip Reames; Sean Silva; LLVM Developers Mailing List Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives Where is the best place to keep this? - As third party tool we all use? - Contribute as new project? - Lives in test-suite/utils? - Lives in llvm/utils? On May 28, 2015, at 11:22 AM, Smith, Kevin B <kevin.b.smith at intel.com<mailto:kevin.b.smith at intel.com>> wrote: OK, there is interest from at least a couple of people. What should next steps be? Kevin From: Chris Matthews [mailto:chris.matthews at apple.com] Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 10:57 AM To: Philip Reames Cc: Smith, Kevin B; Sean Silva; LLVM Developers Mailing List Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives I agree. I think there are a lot of exciting uses for this tool. A stage 3 build bot would be another one. On May 28, 2015, at 10:14 AM, Philip Reames <listmail at philipreames.com<mailto:listmail at philipreames.com>> wrote: I'd love to see this tool contributed, even it isn't used for regression detection work. I've got a couple of hacked up scripts which do similar things and having a robust tool available for this would be very useful. Philip On 05/26/2015 09:53 AM, Smith, Kevin B wrote: Intel has a binary comparator tool that we have been using for several years for comparing output binaries to see if the code within them is considered identical. We use it to eliminate runs (and therefore some performance noise) from our own performance tracking tools. We are willing to contribute the source code for this to the LLVM community if there is interest. There are two programs involved: getdep, which displays the list of DLL/.so dependencies of the image in question, and cmpimage itself, which does the comparison ignoring the parts not contributed by the compiler. The cmpimage program is also almost completely derived from the published object format descriptions. Let me know if there is interest in these pieces of tooling, and if so, what you think next steps should be. Kevin B. Smith From: llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu> [mailto:llvmdev-bounces at cs.uiuc.edu] On Behalf Of Sean Silva Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2015 2:14 PM To: Chris Matthews Cc: LLVM Developers Mailing List Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives On Thu, May 21, 2015 at 11:24 AM, Chris Matthews <chris.matthews at apple.com<mailto:chris.matthews at apple.com>> wrote: I agree this is a great idea. I think it needs to be fleshed out a little though. It would still be wise to run the regression detection algorithm, because the test suite changes and the machines change, and the algorithm is not perfect yet. It would be a valuable source of information though. How would running it as part of regular testing change anything? Presumably the only purpose it would serve is retrospectively going back and seeing false-positives in the aggregate. But if we are already doing offline analysis, we can run the regression detection algorithm (or any prospective ones) offline on the raw data; it doesn't take that long. This is not a small change to how LNT works, so I think some due diligence is necessary. Is clang *really* that deterministic, especially over successive revs? Yes. Actually, google's build system depends on this for its caching strategy to work and so the google guys are usually on top of any issues in this respect (thanks google guys!). I know it is supposed to be. Does anyone have any data to show this is going to be an effective approach? It seems like there are benchmarks in the test-suite which use __DATE__ and __TIME__ in them. I assume that will be a problem? __DATE__ and __TIME__ should be easy to solve by modifying the benchmark, or teaching clang to always return a fixed value for them (maybe we already have this? IIRC google's build system does something like this; or maybe the do it at the OS level). -- Sean Silva> On May 21, 2015, at 1:43 AM, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org<mailto:renato.golin at linaro.org>> wrote: > > On 20 May 2015 at 23:31, Sean Silva <chisophugis at gmail.com<mailto:chisophugis at gmail.com>> wrote: >> In the last 10,000 revisions of LLVM+Clang, only 10 revisions actually >> caused the binary of MultiSource/Benchmarks/BitBench/five11 to change. So if >> just store a hash of the binary in the database, we should be able to pool >> all samples we have collected while the binary is the the same as it >> currently is, which will let us use significantly more datapoints for the >> reference. > > +1 > > >> Also, we can trivially eliminate running the regression detection algorithm >> if the binary hasn't changed. > > +2! > > --renato > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu<http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/> > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev_______________________________________________ LLVM Developers mailing list LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu<mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> http://llvm.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/20150602/db553603/attachment.html>
Possibly Parallel Threads
- [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives
- [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives
- [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives
- [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives
- [LLVMdev] Proposal: change LNT’s regression detection algorithm and how it is used to reduce false positives