Showing 3 open source projects for "test memory"

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    Coverage.jl

    Coverage.jl

    Take Julia code coverage and memory allocation results, do useful thin

    Julia can track how many times, if any, each line of your code is run. This is useful for measuring how much of your code base your tests actually test, and can reveal the parts of your code that are not tested and might be hiding a bug. You can use Coverage.jl to summarize the results of this tracking or to send them to a service like Coveralls.io or Codecov.io. Julia can track how much memory is allocated by each line of your code. This can reveal problems like type instability, or operations that you might have thought were cheap (in terms of memory allocated) but aren't (i.e. accidental copying).
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 2

    PDP-OmniSim

    PDP-OmniSim simulating parallel and distributed processing systems

    PDP-OmniSim 🧬 Scientific Overview PDP-OmniSim is an advanced computational framework for simulating parallel and distributed processing systems, with cutting-edge applications in computational neuroscience, distributed computing, and complex systems modeling. The framework provides researchers with robust tools for large-scale simulations of networked systems and their emergent behaviors. 🎯 Key Scientific Contributions 🔬 Interdisciplinary Research Domains Computational...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 3
    CSAPP-Labs

    CSAPP-Labs

    Solutions and Notes for Labs of Computer Systems

    CSAPP-Labs is a repository that organizes and provides practical lab exercises corresponding to the famous textbook Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective (CS:APP), helping students deepen their understanding of how computer systems work at the machine level. The exercises cover core topics such as data representation, assembly language, processor architecture, cache behavior, memory hierarchy, linking, and concurrency, contextualizing abstract concepts from the book in real code and experiments. Each lab is structured to include test programs, Makefiles, harnesses, and step-by-step instructions that guide students through hands-on interaction with low-level programming and system behavior. By actually building and debugging code that runs close to hardware, learners acquire intuition about performance trade-offs, bit-level manipulation, stack frame layout, and how compilers and OS features influence execution.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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