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4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Siddhesh Poyarekar 19b5525e52 benchmark inputs for exp2, log2, log and tan 2013-12-12 09:31:53 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar a357259bf8 Add more directives to benchmark input files
This patch adds some more directives to the benchmark inputs file,
moving functionality from the Makefile and making the code generation
script a bit cleaner.  The function argument and return types that
were earlier added as variables in the makefile and passed to the
script via command line arguments are now the 'args' and 'ret'
directive respectively.  'args' should be a colon separated list of
argument types (skipped if the function doesn't accept any arguments)
and 'ret' should be the return type.

Additionally, an 'includes' directive may have a comma separated list
of headers to include in the source.  For example, the pow input file
now looks like this:

42.0, 42.0
1.0000000000000020, 1.5

I did this to unclutter the benchtests Makefile a bit and eventually
eliminate dependency of the tests on the Makefile and have tests
depend on their respective include files only.
2013-10-07 11:51:25 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar f0ee064b7d Allow multiple input domains to be run in the same benchmark program
Some math functions have distinct performance characteristics in
specific domains of inputs, where some inputs return via a fast path
while other inputs require multiple precision calculations, that too
at different precision levels.  The way to implement different domains
was to have a separate source file and benchmark definition, resulting
in separate programs.

This clutters up the benchmark, so this change allows these domains to
be consolidated into the same input file.  To do this, the input file
format is now enhanced to allow comments with a preceding # and
directives with two # at the begining of a line.  A directive that
looks like:

tells the benchmark generation script that what follows is a different
domain of inputs.  The value of the 'name' directive (in this case,
foo) is used in the output.  The two input domains are then executed
sequentially and their results collated separately.  with the above
directive, there would be two lines in the result that look like:

func(): ....
func(foo): ...
2013-04-30 14:17:57 +05:30
Siddhesh Poyarekar 037714dd49 Add benchmark inputs for cos and tan 2013-04-17 17:45:55 +05:30