How to track custom Rust benchmarks in CI

Everett Pompeii

Everett Pompeii


Now that you have learned how to build a custom benchmarking harness in Rust, let’s see how to track those benchmarks in CI. Continuous Benchmarking is the practice of running benchmarks on every changeset to ensure the changes do not introduce a performance regressions. The easiest way to implement Continuous Benchmarking with custom benchmarks is to use Bencher.

What is Bencher?

Bencher is a suite of continuous benchmarking tools. Have you ever had a performance regression impact your users? Bencher could have prevented that from happening. Bencher allows you to detect and prevent performance regressions before they make it to production.

  • Run: Run your benchmarks locally or in CI using your favorite benchmarking tools. The bencher CLI simply wraps your existing benchmark harness and stores its results.
  • Track: Track the results of your benchmarks over time. Monitor, query, and graph the results using the Bencher web console based on the source branch, testbed, benchmark, and measure.
  • Catch: Catch performance regressions in CI. Bencher uses state of the art, customizable analytics to detect performance regressions before they make it to production.

For the same reasons that unit tests are run in CI to prevent feature regressions, benchmarks should be run in CI with Bencher to prevent performance regressions. Performance bugs are bugs!

Steps for Bencher Cloud

  1. Create a Bencher Cloud account.
  2. Create an API token and add it to your CI as a secret.
  3. Create a workflow for your CI, like GitHub Actions or GitLab CI/CD.
  4. Install the Bencher CLI in your CI workflow.
  5. Run your benchmarks with the bencher run subcommand in your CI workflow using the json adapter.

Steps for Bencher Self-Hosted

  1. Create a Bencher Self-Hosted instance.
  2. Create an account on your Bencher Self-Hosted instance.
  3. Create an API token and add it to your CI as a secret.
  4. Create a workflow for your CI, like GitHub Actions or GitLab CI/CD.
  5. Install the Bencher CLI in your CI workflow. Make sure the CLI version matches the version of your Bencher Self-Hosted instance.
  6. Run your benchmarks with the bencher run subcommand in your CI workflow using the json adapter and setting the --host option to your Bencher Self-Hosted instance URL.

{…} JSON

The JSON Adapter (json) expects Bencher Metric Format (BMF) JSON. It is perfect for integrating custom benchmark harnesses with Bencher. For more details see how to track custom benchmarks and the BMF JSON reference.

Terminal window
bencher run --adapter json "cargo bench"

Track your benchmarks in CI

Have you ever had a performance regression impact your users? Bencher could have prevented that from happening with continuous benchmarking.



Published: Thu, November 21, 2024 at 7:12:00 AM UTC