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Testing and benchmarking tool for logic-related programs.

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Benchpress build

Tool to run one or more logic programs, on a set of files, and collect the results.

License: BSD.

Basic usage

$ benchpress run -c foo.sexp dir_a/ dir_b/ -p z3
…

this tells benchpress to run the prover z3 on directories dir_a and dir_b. foo.sexp contains additional configuration parameters as described below.

System dependencies

Logitest relies on a bunch of utilities, besides OCaml libraries:

  • sqlite3 (with development headers)
  • time, ulimit, etc
  • gzip/zcat for compressing files
  • (optional) grep + access to /proc/cpuinfo for guessing number of cores
  • (optional) git for tagging solvers from their repository

TODO use cgroups or similar for CPU affinity

Options

CLI options

Most of the commands accept -c <config file> to specify which config files to use.

  • benchpress --help to list options

  • benchpress run:

    • -t <time> timeout (in seconds) for each run
    • -m <memory> memory limit in MB
    • -F <file> read list of problems from given file
    • -p <prover1,prover2> list of provers to use
    • --task <profile> specify which task to use
    • -o <file> specify an output database file
  • benchpress slurm:

    • -t <time> timeout (in seconds) for each run
    • -m <memory> memory limit in MB
    • -F <file> read list of problems from given file
    • -p <prover1,prover2> list of provers to use
    • --task <profile> specify which task to use
    • --nodes: max number of nodes to allocate for the workers (one worker by node)
    • --partition: the partition to which the allocated nodes need to belong
    • --ntasks: number of tasks to give the workers at a time
    • --addr: IP of the server with which the workers communicate
    • --port: port of the server
  • benchpress dir config shows the configuration directory

  • benchpress dir state shows the directory where the state (benchmark results) is stored

  • benchpress check-config <file> to check that the file is valid configuration

  • benchpress prover-list to list available provers

  • benchpress prover-show <prover> to show the definition of a prover

  • benchpress list-files to list the results

  • benchpress show <result> to show the content of the result file

  • -v and -vv can be used to get more verbose output.

  • if the environment variable LOGS_FILE is set to a filename, logs will be written to that file.

ENV var options

Some internal parameters of benchpress can be set using environment variables:

  • "BENCHPRESS_BUSY_TIMEOUT" controls the busy timeout of the sql database used by benchpress, in miliseconds. Default is 3000.

  • "XDG_CONFIG_HOME" override the default value $HOME/.config.

Web interface

  • benchpress-server is a daemon listening on a local port (default 8080), which provides a basic web UI.

Config File

Benchpress ships with a builtin config, which is imported by default unless (import-prelude false) is specified. It contains, roughly:

Builtin config

; read smtlib status
(prover
  (name smtlib-read-status)
  (cmd "grep :status $file")
  (unknown ":status unknown")
  (sat ":status sat")
  (unsat ":status unsat"))

(prover
  (name minisat)
  (unsat "UNSATISFIABLE")
  (sat "^SATISFIABLE")
  (cmd "minisat -cpu-lim=$timeout $file"))

(prover
  (name z3)
  (cmd "z3 $file")
  (version "cmd:z3 --version")
  (unsat "unsat")
  (sat "^sat"))

The configuration is based on stanzas that define available provers, available sets of benchmarks (based on directories that contain them), and tasks. For now the only kind of supported task is to run provers on problems, but it should get richer as we go (e.g. run proof checkers, do some basic CI, run a task daily, etc.).

In this default file we also define a pseudo-prover, "smtlib-read-status", which is used to parse SMTLIB benchmarks and find an annotation (set-info :status <…>). This is useful when running provers later because it makes it easy to find bugs (if a prover reports a wrong answer).

We also define provers minisat and z3 as common reference points, providing info on how to run them (with cmd …) and how to parse their results using regexes.

Example of config file

A more complete example, taken from mc2:

; from https://github.com/c-cube/mc2

(prover
  (name mc2)
  (cmd "ulimit -t $timeout; mc2 --time $timeout $file")
  (unsat "^Unsat")
  (sat "^Sat")
  (unknown "Unknown")
  (timeout "Timeout"))

(dir
  (path "$HOME/workspace/smtlib")
  (pattern ".*.smt2")
  (expect (run smtlib-read-status)))

(task
  (name glob-all-smtlib)
  (synopsis "run all SMT solvers on smtlib")
  (action
   (run_provers
    (dirs ("$HOME/workspace/smtlib"))
    (provers (mc2 z3))
    ;(memory 100000000)  ; TODO: parse "10G"
    (timeout 10))))

(task
  (name glob-all-smtlib-QF_UF)
  (synopsis "run all SMT solvers on QF_UF")
  (action
    (run_provers
      (dirs ("$HOME/workspace/smtlib/QF_UF"))
      (provers (mc2 z3))
      (timeout 10))))

Such a configuration file can be validated using:

$ benchpress check-config the_file.sexp

Then one can run a task, like so:

$ benchpress run -c the_file.sexp --task glob-all-smtlib-QF_UF -t 30

to run mc2 and z3 on the QF_UF problems in the SMTLIB directory. The task stanza defines a pre-packaged task that can be launched easily from the command line or the embedded web server (a bit like a makefile target).

Note that tasks are not necessary, they're just shortcuts. You can also pass directly the prover list and directory:

$ benchpress run -c the_file.sexp -p mc2 some/path/ -t 30

List of stanzas

The variable $cur_dir evaluates to the config file's directory. This allows the config file to refer to provers that are installed locally (e.g. in the same repository).

  • (prover …) defines a new prover. The name should be unique.
    • name: unique name, used to refer to this prover in results, on the command line, etc
    • cmd: how to run the prover. Variables $timeout, $file, $memory are available and will refer to parameters used to run the prover on a file. Variable $binary refers to the binary field if set, see below.
    • binary: path to the prover binary. If not provided, will be inferred as the first argument of the cmd.
    • sat, unsat, unknown, timeout, memory are (perl) regex used to recognize the result (or reason for failure by timeout or memory exhaustion) of the prover.
    • custom tags can be used with (tag foo regex): a tag named foo will be used when regex matches the prover's output.
  • (dir …) defines a directory:
    • (name …): unique name used to refer to this directory in the config. You can refer to previously defined directories using ${dir:…}.
    • (path …) defines the path. The rules below apply to any file within this directory.
    • (pattern ".*.smt2") means only files matching the (perl) regex will be considered.
    • (expect …) defines how to find the expected result of each file (which will be compared to the actual result to detect bugs).
  • (custom-tag (name t)) makes a custom tag t available
  • (task …) defines a task that can be run from the command line.
    • name should be unique (used to refer to the task)
    • action defines what the task should do, see the action section For now there's only (run_provers …) to run provers on files locally.
  • (set-options…) defines global options:
    • j integer for number of parallel tasks in run
    • progress boolean for progress bar in run

Actions

  • (run_provers fields) to run some provers on some benchmarks. Fields are:
    • (provers (p1 … pn)) list of (names of) provers defined in other stanzas
    • (dirs (p1 … pn)) paths containing benchmarks. The paths must be subdirectories of already defined directories (see the dir stanza above)
    • (dir_files (p1 … pn)) paths to files containing problem paths, one problem path per line. Each line can also be a directory, in which case all the problems in the directory will be added. The same restrictions as for dirs apply. This has the same behavior as option -F.
    • (timeout n) (optional) defines a timeout in seconds
    • (memory n) (optional) defines a memory limit in MB
    • (pattern regex) (optional) an additional regex for files to consider in dirs
    • (j n) (optional) defines the number of concurrent threads to use when running the provers
  • (run_provers_slurm fields) to run some provers on some benchmarks using the computing power of a cluster managed by slurm. Most of the fields are the same as those of the run_provers except that they apply to every worker running on the allocated compute nodes. There are also additional fields:
    • (j n) (optional) the number of concurrent threads to be used by each worker deployed on an allocated compute node. (default is 4).
    • (partition s): (optional) the name of the partition to which the allocated compute nodes need to belong.
    • (nodes n): (optional) the number of nodes to allocate to the action (default is 1).
    • (addr s): (optional) the IP address on which the server which will be deployed on the control node should listen on.
    • (port n): (optional) the port on which the server should listen on.
    • (ntasks n): (optional) the number of tasks that will be sent to the workers at a time.
  • (progn a1 … an) runs actions in sequence. Fails if any action fails.
  • (run_cmd "the command") runs the given command.
  • (git_checkout (dir d) (ref r) [(fetch_first fetch|pull)]) specifies a directory in which to go ((dir d)), a git reference to checkout ((ref r)) and optionally a tag to indicate whether to fetch/pull the repo first.

An example of a task running with slurm

(task
  (name testrun-slurm)
  (action
    (run_provers_slurm
      (dirs ($PATHS))
      (provers (z3 cvc4))
      (timeout 2)
      (j 4)
      (nodes 2)
      (addr "xxx.xxx.xx.xxx")
      (port 8080)
      (ntasks 20)
      )))

assuming that "PATHS" are paths to directories containing benchmarks which were previously defined in the config file.

Note: Running a task with slurm should be done on a control node. The nodes of the cluster should have at least a shared directory and "XDG_DATA_HOME" should be a path to it or one of its subdirectories. It will be used to store the config file which will be used by the benchpress worker instances which run on the compute nodes of the cluster.

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