There was not really code as such, just a quick and dirty series of shell commands. It went something like this:
#!/bin/bash modules="Archive::Tar Archive::Zip CGI Class::DBI DBI Data::Dumper Lin +gua::EN::Inflect Math::Trig POSIX Template XML::SAX XML::Simple YAML +diagnostics strict warnings" export TIMEFORMAT="%R" rm -f table for m in $modules; do time perl -M$m -e1; for i in `seq 1 10`; do time perl -M$m -e1; done &> $m echo -ne "$m\t" >> table awk '{t+=$1} END{print t/10}' $m >> table done sort -k2 -rn table > table.sorted
The part that computes "all" and "none" is left as an exercise to the reader. ;-)

I hope I won't be downvoted for using shell instead of Perl! ;-) Sadly, this makes the test less portable.


In reply to Re^2: Benchmarks for module compilation time by itub
in thread Benchmarks for module compilation time by itub

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