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The Graphics
Performance Characterization Project Group Rules
Version 3.1
Last Updated: 9/8/2015
- Overview
- Rules
Inheritance
- All rules declared in "The
Graphics and Workstation Performance Group (SPEC/GWPG): Rules
For Project Groups" document (known hereinafter as the GWPG Project Groups Ruleset)
shall apply, unless specifically overruled by a rule in this
document.
- Rules
declared in this document shall apply in addition to the rules
declared in the GWPG Project Groups Ruleset.
- General
Philosophy
- The Graphics Performance
Characterization Project of SPEC/GWPG (henceforth abbreviated
as SPECgpcSM) believes the user community will
benefit from an objective series of tests, which can serve as
common reference and be considered as part of an evaluation
process.
- The
SPECgpc seeks to develop benchmarks for generating accurate
graphics performance measures in an open, accessible and
well-publicized manner.
- The
SPECgpc wishes to contribute to the coherence of the field of
graphics performance measurement and evaluation so that vendors
will be better able to present well-defined performance
measures; and customers will be better able to compare and
evaluate vendors' products and environments. .
- The
SPECgpc will provide formal beta software to members and final
software releases to the public in a timely fashion.
- Hardware
and software used to run the SPECgpc benchmarks must provide a
suitable environment for running typical graphics programs.
- SPECgpc
reserves the right to adapt its benchmarks as it deems
necessary to preserve its goal of fair and useful benchmarking
(e.g. remove benchmark, modify benchmark code or data, etc). If
a change is made to the suite, SPECgpc will notify the
appropriate parties (i.e. SPECgpc members and users of the
benchmark) and SPECgpc will re-designate the metrics (e.g.
changing the metric from SNX-01 composite to SNX-02 composite).
In the case that a benchmark is removed in whole or in part,
SPECgpc reserves the right to republish in summary form
"adapted" results for previously published systems,
converted to the new metric. In the case of other changes, such
a republication may necessitate re-testing and may require
support from the original test sponsor.
- Overview of
Optimizations
- SPECgpc
is aware of the importance of optimizations in producing the
best system performance. SPECgpc is also aware that it is
sometimes hard to draw an exact line between legitimate
optimizations that happen to benefit SPECgpc benchmarks and
optimizations that specifically target SPECgpc benchmarks.
However, with the list below, SPECgpc wants to increase
awareness of implementers and end-users to issues of unwanted
benchmark-specific optimizations that would be incompatible
with SPECgpc's goal of fair benchmarking.
- To
ensure that results are relevant to end-users, SPECgpc expects
that the hardware and software implementations used for running
SPECgpc benchmarks adhere to a set of general rules for
optimizations.
- General Rules
for Optimization
- Optimizations
must generate correct images. Correct images are those deemed
by the SPECgpc committee to be sufficiently adherent to the
respective graphics API specification for the targeted end-user
community.
- Optimizations
must not have an adverse effect on system stability. A
published SPEC GPC result carries an implicit claim that the
performance methods employed are more than just "prototype"
or "experimental" or "research" methods. It
is a claim that there is a certain level of maturity and
general applicability in its methods.
- Optimizations
affecting Viewperf must also improve performance for at least
one commonly-available application.
- It
is not permitted to detect Viewperf in order to invoke an
optimization.
- The
Graphics API stream from the Viewperf binary must not be
modified.
- Graphics
Subsystem implementations must fully process Viewperf's
Graphics and related API streams affecting the frame buffer and
Graphics state.
- Optimizations
must be generally available and supported by the providing
vendor.
- In
the case where it appears the guidelines in this document have
not been followed, SPECgpc may investigate such a claim and
request that the optimization in question (e.g. one using
SPECgpc benchmark-specific pattern matching) be removed and the
results resubmitted. Or, SPECgpc may request that the vendor
correct the deficiency (e.g. make the optimization more general
purpose or correct problems with image generation) before
submitting results based on the optimization.
- Benchmarks
- Benchmark
Definition
- Benchmark components are
defined as
- code sets (e.g. SPECviewperf®),
- designated executables where included in the downloadable package
- run rules
- launch framework/GUI and associated benchmark definition file
- Viewsets
- Benchmark
Acceptance
- New or modified benchmark
components require a 2/3-majority vote of the SPECgpc
electorate to be accepted for publication.
- A minimum 3-week review
period is required for new or significantly modified benchmark
components.
- At the end of the review
period a vote will be called to approve the proposed changes.
- An amendment to a
benchmark component during the review period must be
unanimously accepted. If not, the review period shall be
restarted.
- It is the option of any
future SPECviewperf viewset author(s) to require passing of
selected conformance tests prior to submission of results for
that viewset.
- Benchmark Code
Versioning
- Benchmark code is defined
as the set of source code required to build and run a benchmark
executable (e.g. SPECviewperf).
- SPECviewperf Benchmark
code uses the following version coding: M.m.p (e.g. 12.0.1) M is
the major release number, m is the minor release number and p
is the patch level.
- The major release number
is only incremented when large amounts of code are changed and
the scripting language is dramatically changed as a result --
backward compatibility is highly unlikely when moving scripts
or data sets between major releases (e.g. running v2 scripts
on a v3 executable would almost certainly fail).
- The minor release number
is bumped if some small set of code is replaced or removed -
but the standard, unchanged scripts and data sets, as a whole,
must run on the new version (but perhaps with different
performance).
- Patch releases can
contain additions of new properties and additions of new
attributes to existing properties, but cannot change or remove
any existing properties, attributes or functionality. These
are typically used for bug fixes, small enhancements and so
forth.
- SPECviewperf
Viewset Versioning
- The version of a
SPECviewperf viewset should be incremented if:
- changes to SPECviewperf
affect the performance of the viewset,
- or changes to the
viewset script affect performance,
- or if the viewset data
changes,
- or if rule changes
affect the acceptance criteria.
- New results for the
previous version of a viewset will no longer be published.
- SPECviewperf
Benchmark Release
- On the release date of a new benchmark,
it replaces the previous benchmark on the public website. Submissions
for the previous benchmark will no longer be accepted.
- Benchmark Run Rules
- Benchmark Run
Rules
- The system under test must perform all of the respective graphics API's functionality and other work requested by the benchmark.
- The systems under test must be OpenGL Conformant for the pixel format or visual used by the benchmark.
- Settings for environment variables, registry variables and hints must not disable compliant behavior.
- No interaction is allowed with the system under test during the benchmark, unless required by the benchmark.
- The system under test cannot skip frames during the benchmark run.
- It is not permissible to change the system configuration during the running of a given benchmark. For example, one cannot power off the system, make some changes, then power back on and run the rest of the benchmark.
- Screen grabs for SPECviewperf will be full window size.
- The color depth used must be at least 24 bits (true color), with at least 8 bits of red, 8 bits of green and 8 bits of blue.
- If a depth buffer is requested, it must have at least 24 bits of resolution.
- The display raster resolution must be at least 1920 pixels by 1080 pixels and must fully display all of the benchmark tests being submitted. Higher desktop resolutions may be used, and while the operating system may create the appearance of a higher raster resolution, the actual raster resolution remains at 1900 x 1060 and will be noted in the results file and log files. An optional feature to adjust the raster resolution to the native resolution of the display (less a ten-pixel border) may be selected, but not all viewsets will support this method of scaling. Therefore, native resolution runs shall not be accepted for publication or otherwise be considered official until such a point that all viewsets can be scaled to higher native display resolutions.
- Screen resolution must be large enough to run the individual tests at their requested window size, with no reduction or clipping of test window.
- Results to be made public must be generated by the official benchmark which may not be changed, except to correct errors in reporting by the benchmark, and these changes shall be disclosed voluntarily upon submission.
- Recompilation of the viewperf and viewset executables is permitted provided all non-default compile parameters are documented in the submission, and the binary and any dependencies are made available upon request during the review period.
- Tests may be run with or without a desktop/window manager, but must be run on some native windowing system.
- Virtualized configurations, defined as any operating system configuration running on a Hyper Visor or virtualization layer of any kind, must include the word "virtualized" in the comment field of the config.txt file. This information must be populated before the execution of the benchmark to ensure the results reflect this attribute.
- Virtualized configurations as defined above must also include a declaration of the transport layer name and version used by the virtualization software in parenthesis after the graphics accelerator listed in the Graphics Accelerator field of the Graphics Hardware Configuration section of the result file.
- Virtualized configurations as defined above must also include a declaration of the Hyper Visor name and version used by the virtualization software in parenthesis after the model listed in the Model field of the System Hardware Configuration section of the result file.
- Submission and
Review Rules
- Submission
Content Rules
- These
rules are specific to SPECgpc and shall apply in addition to
the Submission Content Rules in the GWPG Project Groups
Ruleset.
- A
SPECviewperf submission can be for one or more viewsets per
configuration.
- A
SPECviewperf submission must be run on a 64-bit operating
system.
- The
Specviewperf submission must include all directory and files
located in the results folder. The results folder is created
by the benchmark with the following naming convention:
"results_"YYYYMMDD"T"HHMM"_t1".
- Submission
Process Rules
- These
rules are specific to SPECgpc and shall apply in addition to
the Submission Process Rules in the GWPG Project Groups
Ruleset.
- The
submission file names must contain gpc_v for SPECviewperf,
contain all lower case letters and not contain '.' except
prior to the zip or tar file extension (e.g.
intel_gpc_v_jun10_v0.zip). The file version is denoted prior
to the file extension. The initial file version is v0.
Resubmitted files must increment the version number.
- Review Period
Rules
- These
rules are specific to SPECgpc and shall apply in addition to
the Review Period Rules in the GWPG Project Groups Ruleset.
- Reviewers
will decide if the image quality of the submission is
sufficiently adherent to the respective graphics API's
specification to satisfy the intended end user's expectations.
If a reviewer rejects the quality of an image for a stated
reason, the submitter can ask for a vote of the full SPECgpc
electorate. In case of a tie the submission is rejected.
- System
configurations submitted for the SPECgpc benchmark suite must
be able to run the corresponding SPECapc application
benchmarks if applicable. If this criterion is not met the
submission will be rejected.
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Adoption
Changes
for version 1.1 adopted June 10, 1999
Changes for version 1.2 adopted January 12, 2000
V1.4 changes -- 5.02 (d) added
V1.5 changes -- 4.01.i.2(2), 4.01.i.2(4), 5.02.w
V1.6 changes -- 1.03.c, 5.04.o - Adopted by the SPECopc on January 23, 2003
V1.17 Adopted by the SPECopc on August 13, 2004
V1.18 Adopted by the SPECopc on October 21, 2004
V1.19 Adopted by the SPECopc on April 19, 2005
V1.20 Adopted by the SPECopc on October 20, 2005
V2.00 Adopted by the SPECopc on January 26, 2006
V2.10: Adopted on 13 September 2007 (reflects SPECopc->SPECgpc name change and wider API charter scope)
V2.11: Adopted on 20 April 2010 - Added section II.4 and rule II.4.a.
V2.12: Adopted on 23 June 2010 - Rules updated for SPECviewperf 11
V2.13: Adopted on 16 December 2010 - Optimization rules updated (section I.4)
V3.0: Adopted on 16 October 2013 - Updated for SPEC Viewperf 12
V3.1: Updated for SPECviewperf 12.0.2 to include virtualization and memory reporting clarifications.
V3.2: Updated section II.1.j (display resolution)
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