Running JMH Runner from inside the source code?
Julien Nicoulaud
julien.nicoulaud at gmail.com
Thu Feb 6 11:21:43 PST 2014
You can do it in Eclipse in Project Properties > Java Compiler > Annotation
Processing > Factory Path > add JMH jar.
2014-02-03 Behrooz N <nobeh5 at gmail.com>:
> Thank you. This concludes what I wanted to understand. I think I will
> continue to build an artifact from my benchmark module and run that using a
> Maven goal or as an independent executable JAR to perform the benchmarks.
>
>
> On Mon, Feb 3, 2014 at 12:20 PM, Aleksey Shipilev <
> aleksey.shipilev at oracle.com> wrote:
>
> > On 02/03/2014 03:15 PM, Behrooz N wrote:
> > > Thanks for the complete explanation.
> > >
> > > To finalize an understanding for me: so I cannot simply inside my IDE
> > > (e.g. eclipse), right-click on the following piece and say "Run as Java
> > > Application"
> > >
> > > | public static void main(String[] args) throws RunnerException {
> > > Options options = new
> > OptionsBuilder().include(".*").exclude(".*openjdk.*")
> > > .warmupIterations(1000).measurementIterations(100000)
> > > .verbosity(VerboseMode.EXTRA).build();
> > > new Runner(options).run();
> > > }
> >
> > You can, if your IDE compiles the classes and invokes the annotation
> > processors along the way -- this will generate the microbenchmark list.
> > My IntelliJ IDEA does that perfectly well. Other IDEs may require
> > calling "mvn compile" before invoking the run.
> >
> > > Based on the Maven archetype, it is required that I build an artifact
> > > from my artifact that may have the above |main| method and then run the
> > > benchmark through above that is actually a simpler version. Is this
> > correct?
> >
> > Come again? You generally need a full compile session for the project
> > holding your benchmarks, as this will generate the microbenchmark list.
> > After that, you may invoke the JMH in any way you want.
> >
> > -Aleksey.
> >
>
>
>
> --
> -- Behrooz Nobakht
>
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