Level.java

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package org.openjdk.jmh.annotations;

/**
 * Control when to run the fixture methods.
 *
 * @see Setup
 * @see TearDown
 */
public enum Level {

    /**
     * Trial level: to be executed before/after each run of the benchmark.
     *
     * <p>Trial is the set of benchmark iterations.</p>
     */
    Trial,

    /**
     * Iteration level: to be executed before/after each iteration of the benchmark.
     *
     * <p>Iteration is the set of benchmark invocations.</p>
     */
    Iteration,

    /**
     * Invocation level: to be executed for each benchmark method execution.
     *
     * <p><b>WARNING: HERE BE DRAGONS! THIS IS A SHARP TOOL.
     * MAKE SURE YOU UNDERSTAND THE REASONING AND THE IMPLICATIONS
     * OF THE WARNINGS BELOW BEFORE EVEN CONSIDERING USING THIS LEVEL.</b></p>
     *
     * <p>This level is only usable for benchmarks taking more than a millisecond
     * per single {@link Benchmark} method invocation. It is a good idea to validate
     * the impact for your case on ad-hoc basis as well.</p>
     *
     * <p>WARNING #1: Since we have to subtract the setup/teardown costs from
     * the benchmark time, on this level, we have to timestamp *each* benchmark
     * invocation. If the benchmarked method is small, then we saturate the
     * system with timestamp requests, which introduce artificial latency,
     * throughput, and scalability bottlenecks.</p>
     *
     * <p>WARNING #2: Since we measure individual invocation timings with this
     * level, we probably set ourselves up for (coordinated) omission. That means
     * the hiccups in measurement can be hidden from timing measurement, and
     * can introduce surprising results. For example, when we use timings to
     * understand the benchmark throughput, the omitted timing measurement will
     * result in lower aggregate time, and fictionally *larger* throughput.</p>
     *
     * <p>WARNING #3: In order to maintain the same sharing behavior as other
     * Levels, we sometimes have to synchronize (arbitrage) the access to
     * {@link State} objects. Other levels do this outside the measurement,
     * but at this level, we have to synchronize on *critical path*, further
     * offsetting the measurement.</p>
     *
     * <p>WARNING #4: Current implementation allows the helper method execution
     * at this Level to overlap with the benchmark invocation itself in order
     * to simplify arbitrage. That matters in multi-threaded benchmarks, when
     * one worker thread executing {@link Benchmark} method may observe other
     * worker thread already calling {@link TearDown} for the same object.</p>
     */
    Invocation,
}