| commit | b6aa2976dca9523c28120731533c8bbd191c90ee | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Jonas Termansen <sortie@google.com> | Thu Feb 22 14:38:19 2024 |
| committer | Commit Queue <dart-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> | Thu Feb 22 14:38:19 2024 |
| tree | 5c3d79fb2944b07705944b87570fffef02a2f448 | |
| parent | e680eb4c4f7c52a39cd5929a5fd44c931c7c5402 [diff] |
[benchmarks] Fix benchmarks warming up incorrectly. The benchmarks were using a range of antipatterns that did not do what the authors thought they did. It seems that the authors thought the warmup method has to run for a while and do the full warmup, but the truth is that the harness will do that for you by running the warmup function in a timed loop. Instead these patterns just wasted time by making the warmup more expensive and complex than needed. This change just removes the warmup overrides since none of them do anything positive. This change prepares us for future improvements to the benchmark harness. Fixes: b/324874055 Change-Id: Ib7c282123a2151614bc95a105a30e67221f11315 Reviewed-on: https://dart-review.googlesource.com/c/sdk/+/352022 Reviewed-by: William Hesse <whesse@google.com> Commit-Queue: Jonas Termansen <sortie@google.com>
Dart is:
Approachable: Develop with a strongly typed programming language that is consistent, concise, and offers modern language features like null safety and patterns.
Portable: Compile to ARM, x64, or RISC-V machine code for mobile, desktop, and backend. Compile to JavaScript or WebAssembly for the web.
Productive: Make changes iteratively: use hot reload to see the result instantly in your running app. Diagnose app issues using DevTools.
Dart's flexible compiler technology lets you run Dart code in different ways, depending on your target platform and goals:
Dart Native: For programs targeting devices (mobile, desktop, server, and more), Dart Native includes both a Dart VM with JIT (just-in-time) compilation and an AOT (ahead-of-time) compiler for producing machine code.
Dart Web: For programs targeting the web, Dart Web includes both a development time compiler (dartdevc) and a production time compiler (dart2js).
Dart is free and open source.
See LICENSE and PATENT_GRANT.
Visit dart.dev to learn more about the language, tools, and to find codelabs.
Browse pub.dev for more packages and libraries contributed by the community and the Dart team.
Our API reference documentation is published at api.dart.dev, based on the stable release. (We also publish docs from our beta and dev channels, as well as from the primary development branch).
If you want to build Dart yourself, here is a guide to getting the source, preparing your machine to build the SDK, and building.
There are more documents on our wiki.
The easiest way to contribute to Dart is to file issues.
You can also contribute patches, as described in Contributing.