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.NET Performance Tip – Benchmarking

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21 Jul 2018CPOL3 min read 11.1K   16  
Micro-Benchmarking Your C# - Pitfalls and A Tool To Help You Mitigate Them

Micro-Benchmarking

Micro-optimising has a bad reputation although I’d argue that knowledge of such things can help you write better code. We should also make the distinction clear between this and micro-benchmarking, on the other hand, which is a little risky but a lot safer if you know how to do it right.

Now, if you're making that mental link with premature optimization right now, off the back of a 44 year old (mis)quote from Donald Knuth, there are lots of good, more recent and balanced arguments on the subject out there now; and plenty of tools that help you do it better. I think some of the confusion comes from a misunderstanding of where it sits within a much broader range of knowledge and tools for performance. Remember, he did say that 'we should not pass up our opportunities in that critical 3%', which sounds about right in my experience.

Common Pitfalls

There’s loads of pitfalls going old-school with System.Diagnostics.Stopwatch such as:

  • not enough iterations of operations that take a negligible amount of time
  • forgetting to disable compiler optimizations
  • inadvertently measuring code not connected to what you are testing
  • failing to 'warm-up' for account for JIT costs and processor caching
  • forgetting to separate setup code from code under test
  • and so on...

Enter Adam Sitniks’ BenchmarkDotNet. This deals with all the problems above and more.

BenchmarkDotNet

It’s available as a NuGet package:

And has some excellent documentation:

You have a choice of configuration methods via objects, attributes or fluent. Things you can configure include:

  • Compare RyuJIT (default since .NET46 for x64 and since Core 2.0 for x86) and Legacy JIT
  • Compare x86 with x64
  • Compare Core with full framework (aka Clr)
  • JIT inlining (and tail calls, which can be confusingly similar to inlining in 64-bit applications in my experience)
  • You can even test the difference between Server GC and Workstation GC from my last tip

A Very Simple Example

For many scenarios, it is fine to just fire it up with the standard settings. Here's an example of where I used it to get some comparisons between DateTime, DateTimeOffset and NodaTime.

  • [ClrJob, CoreJob] - I used the attribute approach to configuration, decorating the class to make BenchmarkDotNet run the tests on .NET full framework and also Core.
  • [Benchmark] - used to decorate each method I wanted to benchmark
C#
[ClrJob, CoreJob]
public class DateTimeBenchmark
{
    private DateTime dateNow;
    private DateTimeOffset dateOffset;
    private ZonedDateTime nowInIsoUtc;

    [Benchmark]
    public void DateTime_Now()
    {
        dateNow = DateTime.Now;
    }

    [Benchmark]
    public void DateTime_Utc()
    {
        dateNow = DateTime.UtcNow;
    }

    [Benchmark]
    public void DateTimeOffset_Now()
    {
        dateOffset = DateTimeOffset.Now;
    }

    [Benchmark]
    public void DateTimeOffset_Utc()
    {
        dateOffset = DateTimeOffset.UtcNow;
    }

    [Benchmark]
    public void NodaTime_ZonedDateTime()
    {
        nowInIsoUtc = SystemClock.Instance.GetCurrentInstant().InUtc();
    }
}

A call to get things started:

C#
static void Main(string[] args)
{
    var summary = BenchmarkRunner.Run<DateTimeBenchmark>();
}

Note if you want to try this code, you'll need to install the NuGet packages for BenchmarkDotNet and NodaTime.

Output:

Image 1

Obviously, not a substitute for understanding the underlying implementation details of the DateTime class in the Base Class Library (BCL); but a quick and easy to initially identify problem areas. In fact, this was just a small part of a larger explanation I gave to a colleague around ISO 8601, time zones, daylight saving and the pitfalls of DateTime.Now.

One Thing That Caught Me Out

One gotcha is, if you are testing Core and full framework, make sure you create a new Core console application and edit your csproj file, switching out <TargetFramework> for e.g.

XML
<TargetFrameworks>netcoreapp2.1;net46</TargetFrameworks>

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


Written By
Software Developer (Senior)
United Kingdom United Kingdom
Ben is the Principal Developer at a gov.uk and .NET Foundation foundation member. He previously worked for over 9 years as a school teacher, teaching programming and Computer Science. He enjoys making complex topics accessible and practical for busy developers.


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