NBench 0.3.0
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package NBench --version 0.3.0
NuGet\Install-Package NBench -Version 0.3.0
<PackageReference Include="NBench" Version="0.3.0" />
paket add NBench --version 0.3.0
#r "nuget: NBench, 0.3.0"
// Install NBench as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=NBench&version=0.3.0 // Install NBench as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=NBench&version=0.3.0
NBench is a cross-platform automated performance profiling and testing framework for.NET applications.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET Framework | net45 is compatible. net451 was computed. net452 was computed. net46 was computed. net461 was computed. net462 was computed. net463 was computed. net47 was computed. net471 was computed. net472 was computed. net48 was computed. net481 was computed. |
This package has no dependencies.
NuGet packages (4)
Showing the top 4 NuGet packages that depend on NBench:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
Pro.NBench.xUnit
Allows NBench tests to be discovered, executed, reported, and debugged using xUnit in ReSharper, and Visual Studio Test Explorer. Please refer to the project Url for usage information: https://github.com/Pro-Coded/Pro.NBench.xUnit |
|
NBench.PerformanceCounters
Windows only. Adds performance counter support to NBench measurements. |
|
NBench.Runner.DotNetCli
Cross-platform performance benchmarking and testing framework for .NET applications. |
|
NBench-PerfAssert
Package Description |
GitHub repositories (8)
Showing the top 5 popular GitHub repositories that depend on NBench:
Repository | Stars |
---|---|
akkadotnet/akka.net
Canonical actor model implementation for .NET with local + distributed actors in C# and F#.
|
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Azure/DotNetty
DotNetty project – a port of netty, event-driven asynchronous network application framework
|
|
RicoSuter/NJsonSchema
JSON Schema reader, generator and validator for .NET
|
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SonarSource/sonar-dotnet
Code analyzer for C# and VB.NET projects
|
|
helios-io/helios
reactive socket middleware for .NET
|
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
2.0.1 | 293,426 | 2/25/2020 |
2.0.0 | 683 | 2/24/2020 |
1.2.2 | 229,956 | 7/24/2018 |
1.2.1 | 2,614 | 7/11/2018 |
1.2.0 | 1,226 | 7/10/2018 |
1.1.0 | 7,073 | 7/2/2018 |
1.0.4 | 124,764 | 6/16/2017 |
1.0.3 | 1,373 | 6/11/2017 |
1.0.2 | 1,535 | 6/2/2017 |
1.0.1 | 25,853 | 3/31/2017 |
1.0.0 | 4,143 | 3/15/2017 |
0.3.4 | 44,714 | 12/16/2016 |
0.3.3 | 1,704 | 12/8/2016 |
0.3.2 | 1,381 | 12/8/2016 |
0.3.1 | 11,342 | 8/16/2016 |
0.3.0 | 8,312 | 5/24/2016 |
0.2.2 | 2,563 | 5/3/2016 |
0.2.1 | 2,654 | 4/7/2016 |
0.2.0 | 1,387 | 4/6/2016 |
0.1.6 | 1,782 | 2/15/2016 |
0.1.5 | 15,106 | 12/10/2015 |
0.1.4 | 1,172 | 12/10/2015 |
0.1.3 | 1,173 | 12/8/2015 |
0.1.2 | 1,143 | 12/8/2015 |
0.1.1 | 1,128 | 12/7/2015 |
0.1.0 | 1,393 | 12/4/2015 |
0.0.2 | 1,470 | 12/4/2015 |
This release introduces some breaking changes to NBench:
Tracing**
The biggest feature included in this release is the addition of tracing support, which is exposed directly to end-users so they can capture trace events and include them in the output produced by NBench.
You can access the `IBenchmarkTrace` object through the `BenchmarkContext` passed into any of your `PerfSetup`, `PerfBenchmark`, or `PerfCleanup` methods like such:
```csharp
public class TracingBenchmark
{
[PerfSetup]
public void Setup(BenchmarkContext context)
{
context.Trace.Debug(SetupTrace);
}
[PerfBenchmark(TestMode = TestMode.Test, NumberOfIterations = IterationCount, RunTimeMilliseconds = 1000)]
[MemoryMeasurement(MemoryMetric.TotalBytesAllocated)]
[MemoryAssertion(MemoryMetric.TotalBytesAllocated, MustBe.LessThan, ByteConstants.EightKb)]
public void Run1(BenchmarkContext context)
{
context.Trace.Debug(RunTrace);
}
[PerfCleanup]
public void Cleanup(BenchmarkContext context)
{
context.Trace.Info(CleanupTrace);
}
}
```
`NBench.Runner.exe` now takes a `trace=true|false` commandline argument, which will enable the new tracing feature introduced in this release.
Tracing is disabled by default**.
Skippable Warmups**
You can now elect to skip warmups altogether for your specs. This feature is particularly useful for long-running iteration benchmarks, which are often used for stress tests. Warmups don't add any value here.
Here's how you can skip warmups:
```csharp
[PerfBenchmark(TestMode = TestMode.Test, NumberOfIterations = IterationCount, RunTimeMilliseconds = 1000, SkipWarmups = true)]
[MemoryMeasurement(MemoryMetric.TotalBytesAllocated)]
[MemoryAssertion(MemoryMetric.TotalBytesAllocated, MustBe.LessThan, ByteConstants.EightKb)]
public void Run1(BenchmarkContext context)
{
context.Trace.Debug(RunTrace);
}
```
Just set `SkipWarmups = true` on your `PerfBenchmark` attribute wherever you wish to skip a warmup.
Foreground thread is no longer given high priority when concurrent mode is on**.
If you are running the `NBench.Runner` with `concurrent=true`, we no longer give the main foreground thread high priority as this resulted in some unfair scheduling during concurrent tests. All threads within the `NBench.Runner` process all share the same priority now.
Markdown reports include additional data**
All markdown reports now include:
The concurrency setting for NBench
The tracing setting for NBench
A flag indicating if warmups were skipped or not
All of these were added in order to make it easy for end-users reading the reports to know what the NBench settings were at the time the report was produced.