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README.md | 4 months ago | |
metrics.h | 4 months ago | |
metrics_common.cc | 4 months ago | |
metrics_test.cc | 4 months ago | |
metrics_test.h | 4 months ago |
README.md
ART Metrics
This directory contains most of ART's metrics framework. Some portions that
rely on the runtime can be found in the runtime/metrics
directory.
Declaring Metrics
ART's internal metrics are listed in the ART_METRICS
macro in metrics.h
.
Each metric has a METRIC
entry which takes a name for the metric, a type
(such as counter or histogram), and any additional arguments that are needed.
Counters
METRIC(MyCounter, MetricsCounter)
Counters store a single value that can be added to. This is useful for counting events, counting the total amount of time spent in a section of code, and other uses.
Accumulators
METRIC(MyAccumulator, MetricsAccumulator, type, accumulator_function)
Example:
METRIC(MaximumTestMetric, MetricsAccumulator, int64_t, std::max<int64_t>)
Accumulators are a generalization of counters that takes an accumulator
function that is used to combine the new value with the old value. Common
choices are the min and max function. To be valid, the accumulator function
must be monotonic in its first argument. That is, if
x_new == accumulator_function(x_old, y)
then x_new ⪯ x_old
for some
ordering relation ⪯
(e.g. less-than-or-equal or greater-than-or-equal).
Histograms
METRIC(MyHistogram, MetricsHistogram, num_buckets, minimum_value, maximum_value)
Histograms divide a range into several buckets and count how many times a value falls within each bucket. They are useful for seeing the overall distribution for different events.
The num_buckets
parameter affects memory usage for the histogram and data
usage for exported metrics. It is recommended to keep this below 16. The
minimum_value
and maximum_value
parameters are needed because we need to
know what range the fixed number of buckets cover. We could keep track of the
observed ranges and try to rescale the buckets or allocate new buckets, but
this would make incrementing them more expensive than just some index
arithmetic and an add. Values outside the range get clamped to the nearest
bucket (basically, the two buckets on either side are infinitely long). If we
see those buckets being way taller than the others, it means we should consider
expanding the range.