Originally posted by tarceri
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Originally posted by Michael View Post
No plans to... The actual graphing part of the process is very minimal. Much heavier is all of the XML parsing, merging of result files, and other data-related processes. The pts_Graph code is already quite efficient.
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Originally posted by dsx724 View PostAre you ever going to take advantage of any javascript frameworks for dynamically assembling graphs? It would probably reduce your server load by a lot.
But beyond that no real plans to utilize any JS frameworks due to also needing to render PNG/GD images for older browsers not handling SVG and also PTS supports generating PDFs and as part of that relies on pts_Graph for embedding graphs into the PDF files. There's also a few other reasons that make using a JS framework for graphs not a good fit.
Originally posted by M@yeulC View Post+1 for above. Moreover, wouldn't it be a way to solve a lot of screen size related problems?
Michael, I was wondering... Your last benchmark was about filesystems. While I understand these automated benchmarks are here mostly for keeping track of regressions, are they using different filesystems? (that's the case, IIRC). This would forbid direct comparison of some benchmark results, such as SQLite, wouldn't it?
Yes some of the trackers are using different file-systems. These graphs aren't meant for comparing performance between systems but rather looking at each system's performance over time.
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+1 for above. Moreover, wouldn't it be a way to solve a lot of screen size related problems?
Michael, I was wondering... Your last benchmark was about filesystems. While I understand these automated benchmarks are here mostly for keeping track of regressions, are they using different filesystems? (that's the case, IIRC). This would forbid direct comparison of some benchmark results, such as SQLite, wouldn't it?
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Are you ever going to take advantage of any javascript frameworks for dynamically assembling graphs? It would probably reduce your server load by a lot.
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Faster Rendering Of Our Hundreds Of Thousands Of Benchmark Results
Phoronix: Faster Rendering Of Our Hundreds Of Thousands Of Benchmark Results
If visiting LinuxBenchmarking.com to view the daily performance benchmark tracker results on the Linux kernel, GCC, LLVM Clang, or Mesa and opting to view the results for a very long duration, you may have noticed some results were slow to appear or the page would time-out before hand. I've now landed some improvements into the Phoronix Test Suite's rendering code that should dramatically speed-up the process...
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