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Bump serde from 1.0.185 to 1.0.188 #693

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@dependabot dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Aug 28, 2023

Bumps serde from 1.0.185 to 1.0.188.

Release notes

Sourced from serde's releases.

v1.0.188

  • Fix "failed to parse manifest" error when building serde using a Cargo version between 1.45 and 1.50 (#2603)

v1.0.187

  • Remove support for Emscripten targets on rustc older than 1.40 (#2600)

v1.0.186

  • Disallow incompatible versions of serde_derive and serde in the dependency graph (#2588, thanks @​soqb)
Commits
  • dad15b9 Release 1.0.188
  • d89c19f Revert "Adopt new Cargo feature resolver"
  • 146dc0f Release 1.0.187
  • d26852d Merge pull request #2602 from dtolnay/resolver
  • e1c2724 Adopt new Cargo feature resolver
  • dbbfe7a Merge pull request #2600 from dtolnay/oldemscripten
  • dc24d12 Clean up all usage of serde_if_integer128
  • 4e7533e Remove support for emscripten targets on rustc older than 1.40
  • 5d03651 Release 1.0.186
  • a741293 Merge pull request #2599 from dtolnay/encodeutf8
  • Additional commits viewable in compare view

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@dependabot dependabot bot added the dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file label Aug 28, 2023
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Regression Detector Results

Run ID: 86d51002-7a8e-4745-b865-b669594cdba3
Baseline: 3dade50
Comparison: 2b4a93a
Total lading-target CPUs: 4

Explanation

A regression test is an integrated performance test for lading-target in a repeatable rig, with varying configuration for lading-target. What follows is a statistical summary of a brief lading-target run for each configuration across SHAs given above. The goal of these tests are to determine quickly if lading-target performance is changed and to what degree by a pull request.

Because a target's optimization goal performance in each experiment will vary somewhat each time it is run, we can only estimate mean differences in optimization goal relative to the baseline target. We express these differences as a percentage change relative to the baseline target, denoted "Δ mean %". These estimates are made to a precision that balances accuracy and cost control. We represent this precision as a 90.00% confidence interval denoted "Δ mean % CI": there is a 90.00% chance that the true value of "Δ mean %" is in that interval.

We decide whether a change in performance is a "regression" -- a change worth investigating further -- if both of the following two criteria are true:

  1. The estimated |Δ mean %| ≥ 5.00%. This criterion intends to answer the question "Does the estimated change in mean optimization goal performance have a meaningful impact on your customers?". We assume that when |Δ mean %| < 5.00%, the impact on your customers is not meaningful. We also assume that a performance change in optimization goal is worth investigating whether it is an increase or decrease, so long as the magnitude of the change is sufficiently large.

  2. Zero is not in the 90.00% confidence interval "Δ mean % CI" about "Δ mean %". This statement is equivalent to saying that there is at least a 90.00% chance that the mean difference in optimization goal is not zero. This criterion intends to answer the question, "Is there a statistically significant difference in mean optimization goal performance?". It also means there is no more than a 10.00% chance this criterion reports a statistically significant difference when the true difference in mean optimization goal is zero -- a "false positive". We assume you are willing to accept a 10.00% chance of inaccurately detecting a change in performance when no true difference exists.

The table below, if present, lists those experiments that have experienced a statistically significant change in mean optimization goal performance between baseline and comparison SHAs with 90.00% confidence OR have been detected as newly erratic. Negative values of "Δ mean %" mean that baseline is faster, whereas positive values of "Δ mean %" mean that comparison is faster. Results that do not exhibit more than a ±5.00% change in their mean optimization goal are discarded. An experiment is erratic if its coefficient of variation is greater than 0.1. The abbreviated table will be omitted if no interesting change is observed.

No interesting changes in experiment optimization goals with confidence ≥ 90.00% and |Δ mean %| ≥ 5.00%.

Fine details of change detection per experiment.
experiment goal Δ mean % Δ mean % CI confidence
blackhole_from_apache_common_http ingress throughput +0.08 [+0.03, +0.13] 95.91%
apache_common_http_both_directions_this_doesnt_make_sense ingress throughput -0.23 [-0.26, -0.21] 100.00%

@dependabot dependabot bot force-pushed the dependabot/cargo/serde-1.0.188 branch from 2b4a93a to cb78286 Compare August 28, 2023 14:42
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Regression Detector Results

Run ID: becd59d5-75fe-4472-9e56-df3f72e53428
Baseline: 8c14b17
Comparison: cb78286
Total lading-target CPUs: 4

Explanation

A regression test is an integrated performance test for lading-target in a repeatable rig, with varying configuration for lading-target. What follows is a statistical summary of a brief lading-target run for each configuration across SHAs given above. The goal of these tests are to determine quickly if lading-target performance is changed and to what degree by a pull request.

Because a target's optimization goal performance in each experiment will vary somewhat each time it is run, we can only estimate mean differences in optimization goal relative to the baseline target. We express these differences as a percentage change relative to the baseline target, denoted "Δ mean %". These estimates are made to a precision that balances accuracy and cost control. We represent this precision as a 90.00% confidence interval denoted "Δ mean % CI": there is a 90.00% chance that the true value of "Δ mean %" is in that interval.

We decide whether a change in performance is a "regression" -- a change worth investigating further -- if both of the following two criteria are true:

  1. The estimated |Δ mean %| ≥ 5.00%. This criterion intends to answer the question "Does the estimated change in mean optimization goal performance have a meaningful impact on your customers?". We assume that when |Δ mean %| < 5.00%, the impact on your customers is not meaningful. We also assume that a performance change in optimization goal is worth investigating whether it is an increase or decrease, so long as the magnitude of the change is sufficiently large.

  2. Zero is not in the 90.00% confidence interval "Δ mean % CI" about "Δ mean %". This statement is equivalent to saying that there is at least a 90.00% chance that the mean difference in optimization goal is not zero. This criterion intends to answer the question, "Is there a statistically significant difference in mean optimization goal performance?". It also means there is no more than a 10.00% chance this criterion reports a statistically significant difference when the true difference in mean optimization goal is zero -- a "false positive". We assume you are willing to accept a 10.00% chance of inaccurately detecting a change in performance when no true difference exists.

The table below, if present, lists those experiments that have experienced a statistically significant change in mean optimization goal performance between baseline and comparison SHAs with 90.00% confidence OR have been detected as newly erratic. Negative values of "Δ mean %" mean that baseline is faster, whereas positive values of "Δ mean %" mean that comparison is faster. Results that do not exhibit more than a ±5.00% change in their mean optimization goal are discarded. An experiment is erratic if its coefficient of variation is greater than 0.1. The abbreviated table will be omitted if no interesting change is observed.

No interesting changes in experiment optimization goals with confidence ≥ 90.00% and |Δ mean %| ≥ 5.00%.

Fine details of change detection per experiment.
experiment goal Δ mean % Δ mean % CI confidence
blackhole_from_apache_common_http ingress throughput -0.06 [-0.12, -0.01] 89.83%
apache_common_http_both_directions_this_doesnt_make_sense ingress throughput -0.57 [-0.59, -0.54] 100.00%

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blt commented Aug 28, 2023

@dependabot rebase

Bumps [serde](https://github.com/serde-rs/serde) from 1.0.185 to 1.0.188.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/releases)
- [Commits](serde-rs/serde@v1.0.185...v1.0.188)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: serde
  dependency-type: direct:production
  update-type: version-update:semver-patch
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <[email protected]>
@dependabot dependabot bot force-pushed the dependabot/cargo/serde-1.0.188 branch from cb78286 to ef88388 Compare August 28, 2023 17:37
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dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Oct 13, 2023

Superseded by #703.

@dependabot dependabot bot closed this Oct 13, 2023
@dependabot dependabot bot deleted the dependabot/cargo/serde-1.0.188 branch October 13, 2023 08:54
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