Files
Pac-Man/tests/profiling.rs

41 lines
1.4 KiB
Rust

use pacman::systems::profiling::{SystemId, SystemTimings};
use std::time::Duration;
#[test]
fn test_timing_statistics() {
let timings = SystemTimings::default();
// Add some test data
timings.add_timing(SystemId::PlayerControls, Duration::from_millis(10));
timings.add_timing(SystemId::PlayerControls, Duration::from_millis(12));
timings.add_timing(SystemId::PlayerControls, Duration::from_millis(8));
let stats = timings.get_stats();
let (avg, std_dev) = stats.get(&SystemId::PlayerControls).unwrap();
// Average should be 10ms, standard deviation should be small
assert!((avg.as_millis() as f64 - 10.0).abs() < 1.0);
assert!(std_dev.as_millis() > 0);
let (total_avg, total_std) = timings.get_total_stats();
assert!((total_avg.as_millis() as f64 - 10.0).abs() < 1.0);
assert!(total_std.as_millis() > 0);
}
// #[test]
// fn test_window_size_limit() {
// let timings = SystemTimings::default();
// // Add more than 90 timings to test window size limit
// for i in 0..100 {
// timings.add_timing("test_system", Duration::from_millis(i));
// }
// let stats = timings.get_stats();
// let (avg, _) = stats.get("test_system").unwrap();
// // Should only keep the last 90 values, so average should be around 55ms
// // (average of 10-99)
// assert!((avg.as_millis() as f64 - 55.0).abs() < 5.0);
// }