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benchmarks-with-very-long-setup-run-faster-in-sub-benchmarks.md

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Benchmarks with very long setup run faster in sub-benchmarks
Benchmark running time can be optimized by wrapping them into trivial sub-benchmarks.

Benchmarks with very long setup run faster in sub-benchmarks

Go language has a cool feature that allows you writing Benchmarks with just the standard toolkit.

For example, you can easily benchmark how long does the time.Now() call take by writing:

func BenchmarkTest(b *testing.B) {
	for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
		time.Now() // We're benchmarking this
	}
}

And running:

$ go test -run=X -bench=. -count=5 -cpu=1 .
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/grafana/mimir
cpu: 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-11700K @ 3.60GHz
BenchmarkTest 	46728801	        25.79 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	46436253	        25.55 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	46213618	        25.67 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	46396131	        25.94 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	46949673	        25.54 ns/op
PASS
ok  	github.com/grafana/mimir	7.087s

Why benchmarks with a slow setup run so slow

However, sometimes you need to setup a heavy environment to run the benchmarks (fill a database for example). In that case you will need to call b.ResetTimer() to avoid accounting for that setup in your benchmarked call:

func BenchmarkTest(b *testing.B) {
	// Start of a very long setup
	time.Sleep(10 * time.Second)
	// End of a very long setup

	b.ResetTimer()
	for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
		time.Now() // We're benchmarking this and it needs the setup
	}
}

However, if you run that benchmark you will quickly realize that even though the results are correct (notice the samea 25 ns/op result), the time it took to run the benchmark is quite big:

$ go test -run=X -bench=. -count=5 -cpu=1 .
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/grafana/mimir
cpu: 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-11700K @ 3.60GHz
BenchmarkTest 	45376972	        25.68 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	39959161	        25.96 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	46036717	        26.07 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	44628370	        26.12 ns/op
BenchmarkTest 	46740477	        25.44 ns/op
PASS
ok  	github.com/grafana/mimir	266.654s

This happens because golang doesn't really know how the benchmarked operation will take, so it tries to estimate by running the benchmark with smaller b.N values first. This really means that the entire setup is ran multiple times, you can check that by adding some logs to the benchmark:

func BenchmarkTest(b *testing.B) {
	b.Log("Start of a very long setup")
	time.Sleep(10 * time.Second)
	b.Log("End of a very long setup")

	b.ResetTimer()
	for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
		time.Now() // We're benchmarking this, and it needs the setup
	}
}

And see how the input logs that multiple times before even reaching the results of the first run:

$ go test -run=X -bench=. -count=5 -cpu=1 .
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/grafana/mimir
cpu: 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-11700K @ 3.60GHz
BenchmarkTest 	46137392	        25.63 ns/op
--- BENCH: BenchmarkTest
    bench_test.go:9: Performing a very long setup
    bench_test.go:11: End of a very long setup
    bench_test.go:9: Performing a very long setup
    bench_test.go:11: End of a very long setup
    bench_test.go:9: Performing a very long setup
    bench_test.go:11: End of a very long setup
    bench_test.go:9: Performing a very long setup
    bench_test.go:11: End of a very long setup
    bench_test.go:9: Performing a very long setup
    bench_test.go:11: End of a very long setup
	... [output truncated]

... rest of the output omitted

How to make benchmarks with a slow setup run faster

There's a trick to make the setup run only once, which consists of wrapping the benchmarked code in a sub-benchmark b.Run(...):

func BenchmarkTest(b *testing.B) {
	b.Log("Start of a very long setup")
	time.Sleep(10 * time.Second)
	b.Log("End of a very long setup")

	b.Run("benchmark", func(b *testing.B) {
		for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
			time.Now() // We're benchmarking this, and it needs the setup
		}
	})
}

This allows Go's testing framework to re-run just the benchmark itself, running the setup only once:

$ go test -v -run=X -bench=. -count=5 -cpu=1 .
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/grafana/mimir
cpu: 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-11700K @ 3.60GHz
BenchmarkTest
    bench_test.go:9: Start of a very long setup
    bench_test.go:11: End of a very long setup
BenchmarkTest/benchmark
BenchmarkTest/benchmark         	46163953	        25.70 ns/op
BenchmarkTest/benchmark         	45692376	        25.81 ns/op
BenchmarkTest/benchmark         	46491103	        25.64 ns/op
BenchmarkTest/benchmark         	44900762	        25.61 ns/op
BenchmarkTest/benchmark         	47827808	        25.54 ns/op
PASS
ok  	github.com/grafana/mimir	16.068s

Hopefully will save you some precious time.