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+# Memory Benchmarks |
+ |
+This document describes benchmarks available to track Chrome's and |
+WebView's memory usage, where they live, what they measure, how to run them, |
+and on how to diagnose regressions. |
+ |
+[TOC] |
+ |
+## Glossary |
+ |
+* **User story:** a set of actions to perform on a browser or device (e.g. |
+ open google homepage, type "foo", click search, scroll down, visit first |
+ result, etc.). |
+* **Metric:** a data aggregation process that takes a Chrome trace as input |
+ (produced by a [Telemetry][] run) and produces a set of summary numbers as |
+ output (e.g. total GPU memory used). |
+* **Benchmark:** a combination of (one or more) user stories and (one or |
+ more) metrics. |
+ |
+[Telemetry]: https://github.com/catapult-project/catapult/blob/master/telemetry/README.md |
+ |
+## System Health |
+ |
+*System health* is an effort to unify top-level benchmarks (as opposite to |
+micro-benchmarks and regression tests) that are suitable to capture |
+representative user stories. |
+ |
+### Benchmarks |
+ |
+System health memory benchmarks are: |
+ |
+* [system_health.memory_mobile][system_health] - |
+ user stories running on Android devices. |
+* [system_health.memory_desktop][system_health] - |
+ user stories running on desktop platforms. |
+ |
+These benchmarks are run continuously on the [chromium.perf][] waterfall, |
+collecting and reporting results on the |
+[Chrome Performance Dashboard][chromeperf]. |
+ |
+Other benchmarks maintained by the memory-infra team are discussed in the |
+[appendix](#Other-benchmarks). |
+ |
+[system_health]: https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/master/tools/perf/page_sets/system_health/ |
+[chromium.perf]: https://build.chromium.org/p/chromium.perf/waterfall |
+[chromeperf]: https://chromeperf.appspot.com/report |
+ |
+### User stories |
+ |
+System health user stories are classified by the kind of interactions they |
+perform with the browser: |
+ |
+* `browse` stories navigate to a URL and interact with the page; e.g. |
+ scroll, click on elements, navigate to subpages, navigate back. |
+* `load` stories just navigate to a URL and wait for the page to |
+ load. |
+* `background` stories navigate to a URL, possibly interact with the |
+ page, and then bring another app to the foreground (thus pushing the |
+ browser to the background). |
+* `long_running` stories interact with a page for a longer period |
+ of time (~5 mins). |
+* `blank` has a single story that just navigates to **about:blank**. |
+ |
+The full name of a story has the form `{interaction}:{category}:{site}` where: |
+ |
+* `interaction` is one the labels given above; |
+* `category` is used to group together sites with a similar purpose, |
+ e.g. `news`, `social`, `tools`; |
+* `site` is a short name identifying the website in which the story mostly |
+ takes place, e.g. `cnn`, `facebook`, `gmail`. |
+ |
+For example `browse:news:cnn` and `background:social:facebook` are two system |
+health user stories. |
+ |
+Today, for most stories a garbage collection is forced at the end of the |
+story and a memory dump is then triggered. Metrics report the values |
+obtained from this single measurement. |
+ |
+## Continuous monitoring |
+ |
+ |
+ |
+To view data from one of the benchmarks on the |
+[Chrome Performance Dashboard][chromeperf] you should select: |
+ |
+* **Test suite:** The name of a *[benchmark](#Benchmarks)*. |
+* **Bot:** The name of a *platform or device configuration*. Sign in to also |
+ see internal bots. |
+* **Subtest (1):** The name of a *[metric](#Understanding-memory-metrics)*. |
+* **Subtest (2):** The name of a *story group*; these have the form |
+ `{interaction}_{category}` for system health stories. |
+* **Subtest (3):** The name of a *[user story](#User-stories)* |
+ (with `:` replaced by `_`). |
+ |
+## How to run the benchmarks |
+ |
+Benchmarks may be run on a local platform/device or remotely on a try job. |
+ |
+### How to run locally |
+ |
+After building, e.g. `ChromePublic.apk`, you can run a specific system health |
+story with the command: |
+ |
+``` |
+$SRC/tools/perf/run_benchmark run system_health.memory_mobile \ |
+ --browser android-chromium --story-filter load:search:google |
+``` |
+ |
+This will run the story with a default of 3 repetitions and produce a |
+`results.html` file comparing results from this and any previous benchmark |
+runs. |
+ |
+ |
+ |
+Other useful options for this command are: |
+ |
+* `--pageset-repeat [n]` - override the default number of repetitions |
+* `--output-format html --output-format json` - select *both* output formats |
+ to get individual [trace files][memory-infra] in addition to the |
+ `results.html` file. |
+* `--reset-results` - clear results from any previous benchmark runs in the |
+ `results.html` file. |
+* `--results-label [label]` - give meaningful names to your benchmark runs, |
+ this way it is easier to compare them. |
+ |
+For WebView make sure to [replace the system WebView][webview_install] |
+on your device and use `--browser android-webview`. |
+ |
+[webview_install]: https://www.chromium.org/developers/how-tos/build-instructions-android-webview |
+ |
+### How to run a try job |
+ |
+Given a patch on a chromium checkout, try jobs provide a convenient way to |
+evaluate its memory implications on devices or platforms which |
+may not be immediately available to developers. |
+ |
+To start a try job [upload a CL][contributing] and run the command, e.g.: |
+ |
+``` |
+$SRC/tools/perf/run_benchmark try android-nexus5 system_health.memory_mobile |
+``` |
+ |
+This will run all of the system health stories for you, and conveniently |
+provide a `results.html` file comparing measurements with/without your patch. |
+Options like `--story-filter` and `--pageset-repeat` may also be passed to |
+this command. |
+ |
+To see the full list of available try bots run the command: |
+ |
+``` |
+$SRC/tools/perf/run_benchmark try list |
+``` |
+ |
+[contributing]: https://www.chromium.org/developers/contributing-code |
+ |
+## Understanding memory metrics |
+ |
+There is a large number of [memory-infra][] metrics, breaking down usage |
+attributed to different components and processes. |
+ |
+ |
+ |
+Most memory metrics have the form |
+`memory:{browser}:{processes}:{source}:{component}:{kind}` |
+where: |
+ |
+* **browser:** One of `chrome` or `webview`. |
+* **processess:** One of `browser_process`, `renderer_processess`, |
+ `gpu_process`, or `all_processess`. |
+* **source:** One of `reported_by_chrome` or `reported_by_os` |
+* **component:** May be a Chrome component, e.g. `skia` or `sqlite`; |
+ details about a specific component, e.g. `v8:heap`; or a class of memory |
+ as seen by the OS, e.g. `system_memory:native_heap` or `gpu_memory`. |
+* **kind:** The kind of memory being reported. For metrics reported by |
+ Chrome this usually is `effective_size` (others are `locked_size` |
+ and `allocated_objects_size`); for metrics by the OS this usually is |
+ `proportional_resident_size` (others are `peak_resident_size` and |
+ `private_dirty_size`). |
+ |
+[memory-infra]: /memory-infra/README.md |
+ |
+## Appendix |
+ |
+### Other benchmarks |
+ |
+Other benchmarks maintained by the memory-infra team are: |
+ |
+* [memory.dual_browser_test][memory_py] - cycle between doing Google searches |
+ on a WebView-based browser (a stand-in for the Google Search app) and |
+ loading pages on Chrome. Runs on Android devices only. |
+ |
+ Story groups are either `on_chrome` or `on_webview`, indicating the browser |
+ in foreground at the moment when the memory measurement was made. |
+ |
+* [memory.long_running_dual_browser_test][memory_py] - same as above, but the |
+ test is run for 60 iterations keeping both browsers alive for the whole |
+ duration of the test and without forcing garbage collection. Intended as a |
+ last-resort net to catch memory leaks not apparent on shorter tests. |
+ |
+* [memory.top_10_mobile][memory_py] - cycle between loading a page on Chrome, |
+ pushing the browser to the background, and then back to the foreground. |
+ *(To be deprecated in favor of system_health.memory_mobile.)* |
+ |
+ Story groups are either `foreground` or `background` indicating the state |
+ of the browser at the time of measurement. |
+ |
+* [memory.top_10_mobile_stress][memory_py] - same as above, but keeps a single |
+ instance of the browser open for 5 repetitions. *(To be deprecated.)* |
+ |
+[memory_py]: https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/master/tools/perf/benchmarks/memory.py |