Provided by: git-annex_8.20210223-2ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       git-annex-benchmark - benchmark git-annex commands

SYNOPSIS

       git annex benchmark [criterionopts] ( -- commmand [; command] | --databases=N )

DESCRIPTION

       When  git-annex  is built with benchmarking support, this command can be used to benchmark
       any other git-annex command. For example "git annex benchmark -- get  ."   will  benchmark
       "git annex get".

       The command being benchmarked is run in the current git-annex repository.  It does not run
       just once; the benchmarking process will run it  several  times  to  get  a  statistically
       meaningful result.

       When  benchmarking  an  action like "git annex get", the first run will often do much more
       than subseqent runs. To make the benchmark repeat an action like getting a file each time,
       additional  commands  can  be listed, separated by ';'. (Note that ';' needs to be escaped
       from the shell.)  The combined script will be run repeatedly by the benchmark. An  example
       of using this:

        git annex benchmark -- get . ';' drop .

       Note  that git-annex benchmark does not fork new git-annex processes when benchmarking; it
       calls the command to benchmark internally, and so avoids git-annex's startup overhead. (So
       don't try to use it to optimise git-annex startup.)

OPTIONS

       Before the "--" any of the criterion library's command-line options can be used.

       Any options that git-annex usually accepts can be included after the command to benchmark.

       The  --databases=N  option  benchmark's  git-annex's use of sqlite databases, instead of a
       command. N is the number of items to benchmark.

OUTPUT

       The output of the commands being benchmarked goes to standard output and standard error as
       usual.  It's  often  a  good  idea  to  use --quiet to avoid unncessary output, unless the
       generation of that output is part of what you want to benchmark.

       The benchmark report is output to standard output by default, although  criterion  options
       can be used to redirect it to a file. For example:

        git annex benchmark -o bench -- find >/dev/null

SEE ALSO

       git-annex(1)

AUTHOR

       Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>

                                                                           git-annex-benchmark(1)