084e17cebd424b8e8ced674bc810eef4e6ee5d3b Remove unused includes (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
As requested by MarcoFalke in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/16273#issuecomment-521332089:
This PR removes unused includes.
Please note that in contrast to #16273 I'm limiting the scope to the trivial cases of pure removals (i.e. no includes added) to make reviewing easier.
I'm seeking "Concept ACK":s for this obviously non-urgent minor cleanup.
Rationale:
* Avoids unnecessary re-compiles in case of header changes.
* Makes reasoning about code dependencies easier.
* Reduces compile-time memory usage.
* Reduces compilation time.
* Warm fuzzy feeling of being lean :-)
ACKs for top commit:
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 084e17cebd424b8e8ced674bc810eef4e6ee5d3b. PR only removes include lines and it still compiles. In the worst case someone might have to explicitly add an include later for something now included implicitly. But maybe some effort was taken to avoid this, and it wouldn't be a tragedy anyway.
Tree-SHA512: 89de56edc6ceea4696e9579bccff10c80080821685b9fb4e8c5ef593b6e43cf662f358788701bb09f84867693f66b2e4db035b92b522a0a775f50b7ecffd6a6d
60ebc7da4c trivial: Mark overrides as such. (Daniel Kraft)
Pull request description:
This trivial change adds the `override` keyword to some methods that override virtual base class / interface methods. This ensures that any future changes to the interface's method signatures which are not correctly mirrored in the subclasses will break at compile time with a clear error message, rather than at runtime.
Tree-SHA512: cc1bfa5f03b5e29d20e3eab07b0b5fa2f77b47f79e08263dbff43e4f463e9dd8f4f537e2c8c9b6cb3663220dcf40cfd77723cd9fcbd623c9efc90a4cd44facfc
* Merge #11517: Tests: Improve benchmark precision
760af84 Removed CCheckQueueSpeed benchmark (Martin Ankerl)
00721e6 Improved microbenchmarking with multiple features. (Martin Ankerl)
Pull request description:
The benchmark's KeepRunning() used to make a function call for each call, inflating measurement times for short running code. This change inlines the critical code that is executed each run and moves the slow timer updates into a new function.
This change increases the average runtime for Trig from 0.000000082339208 sec to 0.000000080948591.
Tree-SHA512: 36b3bc55fc9b1d4cbf526b7103af6af18e9783e6b8f3ad3adbd09fac0bf9401cfefad58fd1e6fa2615d3c4e677998f912f3323d61d7b00b1c660d581c257d577
Signed-off-by: pasta <pasta@dashboost.org>
# Conflicts:
# src/bench/bench.cpp
# src/bench/bench_dash.cpp
# src/bench/crypto_hash.cpp
# src/bench/prevector_destructor.cpp
# src/bench/verify_script.cpp
* More of 11517
Co-authored-by: Wladimir J. van der Laan <laanwj@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: UdjinM6 <UdjinM6@users.noreply.github.com>
069215e Initialize recently introduced non-static class member lastCycles to zero in constructor (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
Initialize recently introduced non-static class member `lastCycles` to zero in constructor.
`lastCycles` was introduced in 3532818746 which was merged into master yesterday.
Friendly ping @laanwj :-)
Tree-SHA512: cb93b6a8f6e2e3b06cd05a635da95c84f3df64c21fc23fe82f98306ea571badc32040315b563e46ddb5203128226bc334269acd497beead5a5777c434060fd85
620bae3 Require a steady clock for bench with at least micro precision (Matt Corallo)
Pull request description:
Using a non-steady high_precision_clock by default is definitely not what we want, and in practice steady_clock has more than enough precision. Should double-check that travis passes on this one to make sure we actually have at least microsecond precision on all platforms.
Tree-SHA512: 54a4af3b6addca9897e8ab04694f9461343691b475ca3ed2368595c37520612e284969be94a8ee3d7c66d16532f7bb16b6ad80284cbc153653e8ef2d56696e9d
24a0bdd bench: prefer a steady clock if the resolution is no worse (Cory Fields)
c515d26 bench: switch to std::chrono for time measurements (Cory Fields)
Pull request description:
gettimeofday has portability issues, see for example #11558.
Regardless of large-scale clock refactors in the future, I think it's fine for bench to just use std::chrono itself.
Note that this may slightly improve bench accuracy and changes the display from tiny floats to nanosecond counts instead.
Tree-SHA512: 122355456d01ec6cfcf6867991715cf3a95eabbf5a4f2adc26a059b50382ffb318b7639cdd575197fc4ee5be8b967c0404f1f920d6f5bd4ddd0bd63b5e5c5632
1789e4675 Force explicit double -> int conversion for CFeeRate constructor (Matt Corallo)
53a6590f4 Make float <-> int casts explicit outside of test, qt, CFeeRate (Matt Corallo)
0b1b9148c Remove countMaskInv caching in bench framework (Matt Corallo)
Pull request description:
This fixes an issue where estimatesmartfee which matches at the min relay fee will return 999 sat/byte instead of 1000 sat/byte due to a float rounding issue. I went ahead and made all float <-> int conversion outside of test/qt explicit (test only had one or two more, Qt had quite a few, including many in the Qt headers themselves) and added overloads to CFeeRate to force callers to do an explicit round themselves. Easy to test with -Wfloat-conversion.
Tree-SHA512: 66087b08e5dfca67506da54ae057c2f9d86184415e8fa4fa0199e38839e06a3ce96c836fcb7593b7d960065f5240c594ff3a0cfa14333ac528421f5aeac835c9
Avoid calling gettimeofday every time through the benchmarking loop, by keeping
track of how long each loop takes and doubling the number of iterations done
between time checks when they take less than 1/16'th of the total elapsed time.
Benchmarking framework, loosely based on google's micro-benchmarking
library (https://github.com/google/benchmark)
Wny not use the Google Benchmark framework? Because adding Even More Dependencies
isn't worth it. If we get a dozen or three benchmarks and need nanosecond-accurate
timings of threaded code then switching to the full-blown Google Benchmark library
should be considered.
The benchmark framework is hard-coded to run each benchmark for one wall-clock second,
and then spits out .csv-format timing information to stdout. It is left as an
exercise for later (or maybe never) to add command-line arguments to specify which
benchmark(s) to run, how long to run them for, how to format results, etc etc etc.
Again, see the Google Benchmark framework for where that might end up.
See src/bench/MilliSleep.cpp for a sanity-test benchmark that just benchmarks
'sleep 100 milliseconds.'
To compile and run benchmarks:
cd src; make bench
Sample output:
Benchmark,count,min,max,average
Sleep100ms,10,0.101854,0.105059,0.103881