The benchmark demo tests the performance in various cases. For example rectangle, border, shadow, text, image blending, image transformation, blending modes, etc. All tests are repeated with 50% opacity.
The size and position of the objects during testing are set with a pseudo random number to make the benchmark repeatable.
On to top of the screen the title of the current test step, and the result of the previous step is displayed.
- In
lv_conf.h
or equivalent places setLV_USE_DEMO_BENCHMARK 1
- After
lv_init()
and initializing the drivers calllv_demo_benchmark()
- If you only want to run a specific scene for any purpose (e.g. debug, performance optimization etc.), you can call
lv_demo_benchmark_run_scene()
instead oflv_demo_benchmark()
and pass the scene number. - If you enabled trace output by setting macro
LV_USE_LOG
to1
and trace levelLV_LOG_LEVEL
toLV_LOG_LEVEL_USER
or higher, benchmark results are printed out incsv
format. - If you want to know when the testing is finished, you can register a callback function via
lv_demo_benchmark_register_finished_handler()
before callinglv_demo_benchmark()
orlv_demo_benchmark_run_scene()
. - If you want to know the maximum rendering performance of the system, call
lv_demo_benchmark_set_max_speed(true)
beforelv_demo_benchmark()
.
The FPS is measured like this:
- load the next step
- in the display driver's
monitor_cb
accumulate the time-to-render and the number of cycles - measure for 1 second
- calculate
FPS = time_sum / render_cnt
Note that it can result in very high FPS results for simple cases.
E.g. if some simple rectangles are drawn in 5 ms, the benchmark will tell it's 200 FPS.
So it ignores LV_DISP_REFR_PERIOD
which tells LVGL how often it should refresh the screen.
In other words, the benchmark shows the FPS from the pure rendering time.
By default, only the changed areas are refreshed. It means if only a few pixels are changed in 1 ms the benchmark will show 1000 FPS. To measure the performance with full screen refresh uncomment lv_obj_invalidate(lv_scr_act())
in monitor_cb()
in lv_demo_benchmark.c
.
If you are doing performance analysis for 2D image processing optimization, LCD latency (flushing data to LCD) introduced by disp_flush()
might dilute the performance results of the LVGL drawing process, hence make it harder to see your optimization results (gain or loss). To avoid such problem, please:
- Use a flag to control the LCD flushing inside
disp_flush()
. For example:
volatile bool disp_flush_enabled = true;
/* Enable updating the screen (the flushing process) when disp_flush() is called by LVGL
*/
void disp_enable_update(void)
{
disp_flush_enabled = true;
}
/* Disable updating the screen (the flushing process) when disp_flush() is called by LVGL
*/
void disp_disable_update(void)
{
disp_flush_enabled = false;
}
static void disp_flush(lv_disp_drv_t * disp_drv, const lv_area_t * area, lv_color_t * color_p)
{
if(disp_flush_enabled) {
GLCD_DrawBitmap(area->x1, //!< x
area->y1, //!< y
area->x2 - area->x1 + 1, //!< width
area->y2 - area->y1 + 1, //!< height
(const uint8_t *)color_p);
}
/*IMPORTANT!!!
*Inform the graphics library that you are ready with the flushing*/
lv_disp_flush_ready(disp_drv);
}
- Disable flushing before calling
lv_demo_benchmark()
orlv_demo_benchmark_run_scene()
, for example:
extern void disp_enable_update(void);
extern void disp_disable_update(void);
static void on_benchmark_finished(void)
{
disp_enable_update();
}
int main(void)
{
lv_init();
lv_port_disp_init();
lv_port_indev_init();
LV_LOG("Running LVGL Benchmark...");
LV_LOG("Please stand by...");
LV_LOG("NOTE: You will NOT see anything until the end.");
disp_disable_update();
lv_demo_benchmark_set_finished_cb(&on_benchmark_finished);
lv_demo_benchmark_set_max_speed(true);
lv_demo_benchmark();
//lv_demo_benchmark_run_scene(43); // run scene no 31
...
while(1){
lv_timer_handler(); //! run lv task at the max speed
}
}
- Alternatively, you can use trace output to get the benchmark results in csv format by:
- Setting macro
LV_USE_LOG
to1
- Setting trace level
LV_LOG_LEVEL
toLV_LOG_LEVEL_USER
or higher.
- Setting macro
In the end, a table is created to display measured FPS values.
On top of the summary screen, the "Weighted FPS" value is shown. In this, the result of the more common cases are taken into account with a higher weight.
"Opa. speed" shows the speed of the measurements with opacity compared to full opacity. E.g. "Opa. speed = 90%" means that rendering with opacity is 10% slower.
In the first section of the table, "Slow but common cases", those cases are displayed which are considered common but were slower than 20 FPS.
Below this in the "All cases section" all the results are shown. The < 10 FPS results are shown with red, the >= 10 but < 20 FPS values are displayed with orange.