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I see the claims that Go is supposed to be almost comparable in speed to C, but are there any benchmarks available yet?

6 Answers 6

31

Go is added to the Computer Language Benchmarks Game. In comparison to C++ it has still a way to go.

November 2009:

Nov 2009
(source: debian.org)

October 2011:

Oct 2011
(source: debian.org)

4
  • 1
    You're a programmer! Don't you think how we write a program matters? reddit.com/r/programming/comments/a3yaq/…
    – igouy
    Nov 13, 2009 at 18:32
  • You're right, the last sentence should have been "in comparison ... go and the implementation of the benchmarks still have a way to go". So I'm looking forward to learn ways how to speed up the benchmarks and go programs in general. Nov 14, 2009 at 3:27
  • 2
    Wow, that is quite an increase in performance over just one year!
    – Xeoncross
    Sep 24, 2012 at 15:48
  • Site's dead as of 2022
    – ggorlen
    Oct 7, 2022 at 5:27
15

There is a benchmark folder in the distribution. Check out $GOROOT/test/bench.

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7

The documentation is light and filled with "maybe someday we'll X" and "watch this space for more information." The Go page lists the language reference as the best single source for information, which to me says infant language. I doubt there are any published benchmarks yet.

6

I wrote a Go port of GenPrime (which is available at my fork of the project here). I published the results I received (compared to the C version) on this topic at Ferrous Moon. Despite the fact that my Go port used floating-point math versus integer math, the results are impressive.

2

Profiling Go Programs discusses Robert Hundt's C++/Scala/Go benchmarks and also clearly explains how to performance tune Go applications. It's a single program benchmark but is worth reading to get an idea of the level of tool support for performance tuning and the results show that it is competitive with C++ on this particular problem chosen by Hundt.

1

Keep in mind that the GC is a simple mark-sweep implementation. What I don't understand is why isn't Go utilizing the LLVM compiler tool chain?

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    I have no idea how valid this is but the FAQ says: "We also considered using LLVM for 6g but we felt it was too large and slow to meet our performance goals."
    – mjs
    Nov 14, 2009 at 19:17
  • @Alexei From what I know, that "too slow" was targeted at compilation speed which is one of the primary goal of Go.
    – fuz
    Feb 27, 2013 at 22:14

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