File psl-1983/3-1/tests/interlisp.tim artifact 24c538d0ab part of check-in 5f584e9b52


15-Apr-83 17:10:22-MST,2596;000000000001
Return-path: <marti@rand-unix>
Received: from RAND-UNIX by UTAH-20; Fri 15 Apr 83 17:10:03-MST
Date: Friday, 15 Apr 1983 16:02-PST
To: Masinter at PARC-MAXC, hearn at RAND-RELAY, griss at UTAH-20,
    kessler at UTAH-20
Cc: marti at rand-unix, henry at rand-unix
Subject: New Dolphin timinings.
From: marti at rand-unix

Larry Masinter at Xerox as kindly suggested a number of changes in the
Griss timing suite which resulted in the tests running more than 1.4
times faster than previously. Significant speedups resulted from the
use of NLISTP rather than ATOM, and APPLY* rather than APPLY. This 
brings the Dolphin to not quite 1/4 the speed of the Rand Vax 780 
running PSL 3.1c. 

The following are timings for the Griss test suite under various
conditions. All times are in milliseconds.



Machine: Dolphin, 1.5 megabytes, InterLisp-D


			Block		Standard	Improved


EmptyTest 10000		360		360		360
SlowEmptyTest 10000	360		360		361
Cdr1Test 100		6497		6497		3884*
Cdr2Test 100		2919		2919		2917
CddrTest 100		2411		2410		2404
ListOnlyCdrTest1        20525		20519		20524
ListOnlyCddrTest1       31736		31733		31713
ListOnlyCdrTest2        38786		38778		26295*
ListOnlyCddrTest2	49978		49949		37489*
ReverseTest 10		4095		6360		6465
MyReverse1Test 10	5087		5405		5023
MyReverse2Test 10	4417		5390		5493
LengthTest 100		8570		8568		8562
ArithmeticTest 10000	12759		14542		14228
EvalTest 10000		15782		15837		15491
tak 18 12 6		4817		4817		4814
gtak 18 12 6		4737		4737		4729
gtsta g0		79000		80874		26708+
gtsta g1		93854		94149		40291+
MKVECT 1000             52630		51850		51047
GETV 10000              432		432		431
PUTV 10000              3807		3808		3807

Total:			443559		450294		313036

Block Compilation: Used (bcompl ...) on standard test file with 
   declarations of local variables and block apply.
Standard Compilation: Used (tcompl ...) on standard test file.
Improved: * means use of NLISTP rather than ATOM. + means use of
   APPLY* rather than APPLY.


Machine: VAX 11/780, 4 megabytes, PSL V3.1c



EmptyTest 10000		34
SlowEmptyTest 10000	646
Cdr1Test 100		1649
Cdr2Test 100		1173
CddrTest 100		1003
ListOnlyCdrTest1	7174
ListOnlyCddrTest1	12869
ListOnlyCdrTest2	9622
ListOnlyCddrTest2	15878
ReverseTest 10		680
MyReverse1Test 10	612
MyReverse2Test 10	697
LengthTest 100		1615
ArithmeticTest 10000	850
EvalTest 10000		5967
tak 18 12 6		714
gtak 18 12 6		4165
gtsta g0		2244
gtsta g1		2397
MKVECT 1000             119
GETV 10000              425
PUTV 10000              442

Total			70975
24-Apr-83 14:13:22-MDT,3391;000000000001
Return-path: <Masinter.PA@PARC-MAXC>
Received: from PARC-MAXC by UTAH-20; Sun 24 Apr 83 14:10:12-MDT
Date: 24 Apr 83 13:08:50 PDT (Sunday)
From: Masinter.PA@PARC-MAXC.ARPA
Subject: Re: New Dolphin timinings.
In-reply-to: marti's message of Fri, 15 Apr 83 16:02 PST
To: marti@rand-unix.ARPA
cc: Masinter.PA@PARC-MAXC.ARPA, hearn@RAND-RELAY.ARPA,
 griss@UTAH-20.ARPA, kessler@UTAH-20.ARPA, henry@rand-unix.ARPA

I haven't had a lot of time to spend on this, and I am going to be out
of town for the next two weeks. I will comment on your revised figures,
and hope that I can get through. To summarize: Averaging the figures for
a set of simple benchmarks is nonsense. If you are planning to write a
summary of performance of Lisp systems, I suggest you read the paper
Dick Gabriel and I put together for the last Lisp conference, and then
attempt to measure some of the more important dimensions at the various
levels to get an accurate picture of total system performance. You
should be careful (by analyzing the compiled code of your benchmarks) to
use examples that scale appropriately. Thus, the series of CDR1TEST and
CDDRTEST is incomplete until you complete the suite with enough
instances to exceed the available register space.

Finally, at the very least, you should report a range of performance
data, rather than an average, since averages depend so heavily on the
weighting you give to each end of the range. You should also be careful
to identify the version number of the software and the date when you ran
the test.

Some minor additional comments about the nature of the "Griss suite":

The "Arithmetic Test" is configured such that it operates in the range
which is outside of the "small number range" of Interlisp-D (+/- 2^16)
but still inside the "small number range" of PSL on the VAX and 9836
(+/- 2^31, no?).  Ether larger or smaller would have given figures which
were more comperable.

On storage allocation: Interlisp-D has two kinds of allocation, of
"fixed size" blocks (i.e., DATATYPES which you declare) and of "variable
size" blocks. While ARRAY is the allocator for variable sized blocks,
you create the fixed size ones with "create". Thus, one 'might'
translate MKVECT and PUTV for some applications into the equivalents of
(create DATATYPE) and (fetch FIELD --) and (replace FIELD --). I think
you will get dramaticly different results if you use those instead.

Is the "reverse" in REVERSETEST  handcoded? Why is ReverseTest slower on
the VAX/PSL than MyReverse?

In Interlisp-D, you cannot "turn off" the overhead for the reference
count GC: every operation, including CONS, does reference counting.
There is in addition some time associated with "RECLAIM" which is the
time to thread items onto the free list. However, we've found for most
serious programs which have resident large address space data (e.g., AI
systems which might have a "knowledge base" or a set of theorems or some
reformulation rules rather than simple benchmarks) that it was important
that GC time be proportional to the amount of garbage rather than the
size of the address space. Several of the  benchmarks you quote do
significant amounts of CONSing however, do not include GC time. Of
course, GC time can be highly variable under most GC algorithms because
it is proportional to the size of the address space.

Larry
26-Apr-83 20:58:56-MDT,1436;000000000001
Return-path: <@UTAH-CS:GRISS@HP-HULK>
Received: from UTAH-CS by UTAH-20; Tue 26 Apr 83 20:58:35-MDT
Date: 25 Apr 1983 2005-PDT
From: GRISS@HP-HULK
Subject: Marti's latest
Message-Id: <420175670.20672.hplabs@HP-VENUS>
Received: by HP-VENUS via CHAOSNET; 25 Apr 1983 20:27:49-PDT
Received: by UTAH-CS.ARPA (3.320.6/3.7.8)
	id AA03294; 26 Apr 83 20:53:59 MDT (Tue)
To: kessler@HP-VENUS, griss@HP-VENUS

NIL

RATIO FASTDOLPHIN STD20
EMPTYTEST-10000                    20.000
GEMPTYTEST-10000                    1.286
CDR1TEST-100                        7.398
CDR2TEST-100                        7.847
CDDRTEST-100                        8.799
LISTONLYCDRTEST1                   11.531
LISTONLYCDDRTEST1                   9.356
LISTONLYCDRTEST2                    9.664
LISTONLYCDDRTEST2                   9.113
REVERSETEST-10                     15.453
MYREVERSE1TEST-10                  18.813
MYREVERSE2TEST-10                  17.955
LENGTHTEST-100                     15.088
ARITHMETICTEST-10000               21.516
EVALTEST-10000                      8.224
TAK-18-12-6                         9.771
GTAK-18-12-6                        2.398
GTSTA-G0                           36.437
GTSTA-G1                           50.427
NIL
(TOTAL (RATIO FASTDOLPHIN STD20)): 
          Tot    281.075, avg     14.793, dev      11.423 ,      19.000 tests
NIL

As you see, variation tremendous.
-------




REDUCE Historical
REDUCE Sourceforge Project | Historical SVN Repository | GitHub Mirror | SourceHut Mirror | NotABug Mirror | Chisel Mirror | Chisel RSS ]