blob: 1b2db57c8cfe5ce909f852d744c4768879d547f1 [file] [log] [blame]
#!/bin/bash
# Copyright (c) 2022, the Dart project authors. Please see the AUTHORS file
# for details. All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a
# BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
#
# Usage: szcmp files
#
# Compare sizes of files as percentages in a table. Column header is the
# baseline (i.e. all sizes in the column are in terms of the file in the column
# header).
#
# Example with dart2js workflow:
#
# $ dart2js ... --out=v1/m.js
# # change dart2js
# $ dart2js ... --out=v2/m.js
# # change dart2js again
# $ dart2js ... --out=v3/m.js
#
# $ szcmp v?/m.js
# v1/m.js v2/m.js v3/m.js
# 5793879 v1/m.js = -4.499% +4.461%
# 6066812 v2/m.js +4.711% = +9.382%
# 5546433 v3/m.js -4.271% -8.577% =
#
# The first column of the matrix is usually the most relevant - `v2` is 4.7%
# larger than `v1` and `v3` is 4.2% smaller than `v1`. The other columns can be
# useful for understanding the differential changes. Sizes relative to `v2` are
# in the next column, e.g. the step from `v2` to `v3` was a reduction of
# 8.6%. Above-diagonal values show the percentage change in the 'undo'
# direction. While changing from `v2` to `v3` reduces by 8.6%, reverting that
# change would be an increase of 9.4%.
wc -c "$@" |
awk '
$2 == "total" { next; }
{
N++
r[N,0] = $1;
r[N,1] = $2;
}
END {
r[0,0] = "" # header col 0
r[0,1] = "" # header col 1
for (i = 1; i <= N; i++) { #skips "total" line
r[0, i+1] = r[i,1] # name header
for (j = 1; j <= N; j++) {
s1 = r[i,0]
s2 = r[j,0];
if (s1 == s2) {
r[i, j+1] = "="
} else {
x = sprintf("%.3f%%", (s1 - s2) / s2 * 100)
if (s1 > s2) x = "+" x
r[i, j+1] = x
}
}
}
# find column widths
for (cc = 0; cc <= N+1; cc++) {
w[cc] = 0;
for (rr = 0; rr <= N; rr++) {
if (length(r[rr,cc]) > w[cc]) w[cc] = length(r[rr,cc])
}
}
for (rr = 0; rr <= N; rr++) {
line = ""
sep = ""
for (cc = 0; cc <= N+1; cc++) {
line = line sep sprintf("%*s", w[cc], r[rr, cc])
sep = " "
}
print line
}
}
'