[Python-Dev] Avoiding CPython performance regressions
Maciej Fijalkowski
fijall at gmail.com
Tue Dec 1 03:36:08 EST 2015
Hi
Thanks for doing the work! I'm on of the pypy devs and I'm very
interested in seeing this getting somewhere. I must say I struggle to
read the graph - is red good or is red bad for example?
I'm keen to help you getting anything you want to run it repeatedly.
PS. The intel stuff runs one benchmark in a very questionable manner,
so let's maybe not rely on it too much.
On Mon, Nov 30, 2015 at 3:52 PM, R. David Murray <rdmurray at bitdance.com> wrote:
> On Mon, 30 Nov 2015 09:02:12 -0200, Fabio Zadrozny <fabiofz at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Note that uploading the data to SpeedTin should be pretty straightforward
>> (by using https://github.com/fabioz/pyspeedtin, so, the main issue would be
>> setting up o machine to run the benchmarks).
>
> Thanks, but Zach almost has this working using codespeed (he's still
> waiting on a review from infrastructure, I think). The server was not in
> fact running; a large part of what Zach did was to get that server set up.
> I don't know what it would take to export the data to another consumer,
> but if you want to work on that I'm guessing there would be no objection.
> And I'm sure there would be no objection if you want to get involved
> in maintaining the benchmark server!
>
> There's also an Intel project posted about here recently that checks
> individual benchmarks for performance regressions and posts the results
> to python-checkins.
>
> --David
> _______________________________________________
> Python-Dev mailing list
> Python-Dev at python.org
> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev
> Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/fijall%40gmail.com
More information about the Python-Dev
mailing list