$ npm install tinybench
Benchmark your code easily with Tinybench, a simple, tiny and light-weight 10KB
(2KB
minified and gzipped) benchmarking library!
You can run your benchmarks in multiple JavaScript runtimes, Tinybench is completely based on the Web APIs with proper timing using
process.hrtime
or performance.now
.
Event
and EventTarget
compatible eventsIn case you need more tiny libraries like tinypool or tinyspy, please consider submitting an RFC
$ npm install -D tinybench
You can start benchmarking by instantiating the Bench
class and adding benchmark tasks to it.
import { Bench } from 'tinybench';
const bench = new Bench({ name: 'simple benchmark', time: 100 });
bench
.add('faster task', () => {
console.log('I am faster');
})
.add('slower task', async () => {
await new Promise((r) => setTimeout(r, 1)); // we wait 1ms :)
console.log('I am slower');
});
await bench.run();
console.log(bench.name);
console.table(bench.table());
// Output:
// simple benchmark
// ┌─────────┬───────────────┬────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┬──────────────────────┬─────────────────────┬─────────┐
// │ (index) │ Task name │ Throughput average (ops/s) │ Throughput median (ops/s) │ Latency average (ns) │ Latency median (ns) │ Samples │
// ├─────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼─────────────────────┼─────────┤
// │ 0 │ 'faster task' │ '102906 ± 0.89%' │ '82217 ± 14' │ '11909.14 ± 3.95%' │ '12163.00 ± 2.00' │ 8398 │
// │ 1 │ 'slower task' │ '988 ± 26.26%' │ '710' │ '1379560.47 ± 6.72%' │ '1408552.00' │ 73 │
// └─────────┴───────────────┴────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┴──────────────────────┴─────────────────────┴─────────┘
The add
method accepts a task name and a task function, so it can benchmark
it! This method returns a reference to the Bench instance, so it's possible to
use it to create an another task for that instance.
Note that the task name should always be unique in an instance, because Tinybench stores the tasks based
on their names in a Map
.
Also note that tinybench
does not log any result by default. You can extract the relevant stats
from bench.tasks
or any other API after running the benchmark, and process them however you want.
More usage examples can be found in the examples directory.
Bench
The Benchmark instance for keeping track of the benchmark tasks and controlling them.
Options:
export interface Options {
/**
* benchmark name
*/
name?: string;
/**
* time needed for running a benchmark task (milliseconds) @default 500
*/
time?: number;
/**
* number of times that a task should run if even the time option is finished @default 10
*/
iterations?: number;
/**
* function to get the current timestamp in milliseconds
*/
now?: () => number;
/**
* An AbortSignal for aborting the benchmark
*/
signal?: AbortSignal;
/**
* Throws if a task fails @default false
*/
throws?: boolean;
/**
* warmup benchmark @default true
*/
warmup?: boolean;
/**
* warmup time (milliseconds) @default 100
*/
warmupTime?: number;
/**
* warmup iterations @default 5
*/
warmupIterations?: number;
/**
* setup function to run before each benchmark task (cycle)
*/
setup?: Hook;
/**
* teardown function to run after each benchmark task (cycle)
*/
teardown?: Hook;
}
export type Hook = (task: Task, mode: 'warmup' | 'run') => void | Promise<void>;
async run()
: run the added tasks that were registered using the add
methodreset()
: reset each task and remove its resultadd(name: string, fn: Fn, opts?: FnOpts)
: add a benchmark task to the task map
Fn
: () => unknown | Promise<unknown>
FnOpts
: {}
: a set of optional functions run during the benchmark lifecycle that can be used to set up or tear down test data or fixtures without affecting the timing of each task
beforeAll?: () => void | Promise<void>
: invoked once before iterations of fn
beginbeforeEach?: () => void | Promise<void>
: invoked before each time fn
is executedafterEach?: () => void | Promise<void>
: invoked after each time fn
is executedafterAll?: () => void | Promise<void>
: invoked once after all iterations of fn
have finishedremove(name: string)
: remove a benchmark task from the task maptable()
: table of the tasks resultsget results(): (Readonly<TaskResult> | undefined)[]
: (getter) tasks results as an arrayget tasks(): Task[]
: (getter) tasks as an arraygetTask(name: string): Task | undefined
: get a task based on the nameTask
A class that represents each benchmark task in Tinybench. It keeps track of the results, name, Bench instance, the task function and the number of times the task function has been executed.
constructor(bench: Bench, name: string, fn: Fn, opts: FnOptions = {})
bench: Bench
name: string
: task namefn: Fn
: the task functionopts: FnOptions
: Task optionsruns: number
: the number of times the task function has been executedresult?: Readonly<TaskResult>
: the result objectasync run()
: run the current task and write the results in Task.result
object property (internal)async warmup()
: warmup the current task (internal)reset()
: reset the task to make the Task.runs
a zero-value and remove the Task.result
object property (internal)FnOptions:
export interface FnOptions {
/**
* An optional function that is run before iterations of this task begin
*/
beforeAll?: (this: Task) => void | Promise<void>;
/**
* An optional function that is run before each iteration of this task
*/
beforeEach?: (this: Task) => void | Promise<void>;
/**
* An optional function that is run after each iteration of this task
*/
afterEach?: (this: Task) => void | Promise<void>;
/**
* An optional function that is run after all iterations of this task end
*/
afterAll?: (this: Task) => void | Promise<void>;
}
TaskResult
The benchmark task result object:
export interface TaskResult {
/*
* the last task error that was thrown
*/
error?: Error;
/**
* the time to run the task benchmark cycle (ms)
*/
totalTime: number;
/**
* how long each operation takes (ms)
*/
period: number;
/**
* the task latency statistics
*/
latency: Statistics;
/**
* the task throughput statistics
*/
throughput: Statistics;
/**
* the number of operations per second
* @deprecated use `.throughput.mean` instead
*/
hz: number;
/**
* latency samples (ms)
* @deprecated use `.latency.samples` instead
*/
samples: number[];
/**
* the minimum latency samples value
* @deprecated use `.latency.min` instead
*/
min: number;
/**
* the maximum latency samples value
* @deprecated use `.latency.max` instead
*/
max: number;
/**
* the latency samples mean/average (estimate of the population mean/average)
* @deprecated use `.latency.mean` instead
*/
mean: number;
/**
* the latency samples variance (estimate of the population variance)
* @deprecated use `.latency.variance` instead
*/
variance: number;
/**
* the latency samples standard deviation (estimate of the population standard deviation)
* @deprecated use `.latency.sd` instead
*/
sd: number;
/**
* the latency standard error of the mean (a.k.a. the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of the sample mean/average)
* @deprecated use `.latency.sem` instead
*/
sem: number;
/**
* the latency samples degrees of freedom
* @deprecated use `.latency.df` instead
*/
df: number;
/**
* the latency samples critical value
* @deprecated use `.latency.critical` instead
*/
critical: number;
/**
* the latency samples margin of error
* @deprecated use `.latency.moe` instead
*/
moe: number;
/**
* the latency samples relative margin of error
* @deprecated use `.latency.rme` instead
*/
rme: number;
/**
* the latency samples p75 percentile
* @deprecated use `.latency.p75` instead
*/
p75: number;
/**
* the latency samples p99 percentile
* @deprecated use `.latency.p99` instead
*/
p99: number;
/**
* the latency samples p995 percentile
* @deprecated use `.latency.p995` instead
*/
p995: number;
/**
* the latency samples p999 percentile
* @deprecated use `.latency.p999` instead
*/
p999: number;
}
Statistics type definition.
Events
Both the Task
and Bench
objects extend the EventTarget
object, so you can attach listeners to different types of events
in each class instance using the universal addEventListener
and
removeEventListener
.
/**
* Bench events
*/
export type BenchEvents =
| 'abort' // when a signal aborts
| 'complete' // when running a benchmark finishes
| 'error' // when the benchmark task throws
| 'reset' // when the reset function gets called
| 'start' // when running the benchmarks gets started
| 'warmup' // when the benchmarks start getting warmed up (before start)
| 'cycle' // when running each benchmark task gets done (cycle)
| 'add' // when a Task gets added to the Bench
| 'remove'; // when a Task gets removed of the Bench
/**
* task events
*/
export type TaskEvents = 'abort' | 'complete' | 'error' | 'reset' | 'start' | 'warmup' | 'cycle';
For instance:
// runs on each benchmark task's cycle
bench.addEventListener('cycle', (evt) => {
const task = evt.task!;
});
// runs only on this benchmark task's cycle
task.addEventListener('cycle', (evt) => {
const task = evt.task!;
});
BenchEvent
export type BenchEvent = Event & { error?: Error; task?: Task };
process.hrtime
if you want more accurate results for nodejs with process.hrtime
, then import
the hrtimeNow
function from the library and pass it to the Bench
options.
import { hrtimeNow } from 'tinybench';
It may make your benchmarks slower, check #42.
mode
is set to null
(default), concurrency is disabled.mode
is set to 'task', each task's iterations (calls of a task function) run concurrently.mode
is set to 'bench', different tasks within the bench run concurrently. Concurrent cycles.bench.threshold = 10; // The maximum number of concurrent tasks to run. Defaults to Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY.
bench.concurrency = 'task'; // The concurrency mode to determine how tasks are run.
await bench.run();
Mohammad Bagher |
---|
Uzlopak |
poyoho |
---|
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