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1 | \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- |
2 | @setfilename gprof.info | |
0e9517a9 | 3 | @c Copyright 1988, 1992, 1993, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, |
793c5807 | 4 | @c 2004, 2007, 2008 |
37503931 | 5 | @c Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
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6 | @settitle GNU gprof |
7 | @setchapternewpage odd | |
8 | ||
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9 | @c man begin INCLUDE |
10 | @include bfdver.texi | |
11 | @c man end | |
12 | ||
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13 | @ifinfo |
14 | @c This is a dir.info fragment to support semi-automated addition of | |
15 | @c manuals to an info tree. zoo@cygnus.com is developing this facility. | |
16 | @format | |
17 | START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY | |
18 | * gprof: (gprof). Profiling your program's execution | |
19 | END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY | |
20 | @end format | |
21 | @end ifinfo | |
22 | ||
0e9517a9 | 23 | @copying |
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24 | This file documents the gprof profiler of the GNU system. |
25 | ||
40f90528 | 26 | @c man begin COPYRIGHT |
793c5807 | 27 | Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 92, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
252b5132 | 28 | |
40f90528 | 29 | Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document |
793c5807 | 30 | under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 |
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31 | or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; |
32 | with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no | |
33 | Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the | |
afb17569 | 34 | section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. |
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35 | |
36 | @c man end | |
0e9517a9 | 37 | @end copying |
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38 | |
39 | @finalout | |
40 | @smallbook | |
41 | ||
42 | @titlepage | |
43 | @title GNU gprof | |
44 | @subtitle The @sc{gnu} Profiler | |
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45 | @ifset VERSION_PACKAGE |
46 | @subtitle @value{VERSION_PACKAGE} | |
47 | @end ifset | |
48 | @subtitle Version @value{VERSION} | |
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49 | @author Jay Fenlason and Richard Stallman |
50 | ||
51 | @page | |
52 | ||
53 | This manual describes the @sc{gnu} profiler, @code{gprof}, and how you | |
54 | can use it to determine which parts of a program are taking most of the | |
55 | execution time. We assume that you know how to write, compile, and | |
56 | execute programs. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} was written by Jay Fenlason. | |
83aeabb6 | 57 | Eric S. Raymond made some minor corrections and additions in 2003. |
252b5132 | 58 | |
252b5132 | 59 | @vskip 0pt plus 1filll |
793c5807 | 60 | Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 92, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 2003, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
252b5132 | 61 | |
cf055d54 | 62 | Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document |
793c5807 | 63 | under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 |
cf055d54 NC |
64 | or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; |
65 | with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no | |
66 | Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the | |
afb17569 | 67 | section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. |
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68 | |
69 | @end titlepage | |
4ecceb71 | 70 | @contents |
252b5132 | 71 | |
913b4d4b | 72 | @ifnottex |
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73 | @node Top |
74 | @top Profiling a Program: Where Does It Spend Its Time? | |
75 | ||
76 | This manual describes the @sc{gnu} profiler, @code{gprof}, and how you | |
77 | can use it to determine which parts of a program are taking most of the | |
78 | execution time. We assume that you know how to write, compile, and | |
79 | execute programs. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} was written by Jay Fenlason. | |
80 | ||
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81 | This manual is for @code{gprof} |
82 | @ifset VERSION_PACKAGE | |
83 | @value{VERSION_PACKAGE} | |
84 | @end ifset | |
85 | version @value{VERSION}. | |
86 | ||
cf055d54 | 87 | This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU Free |
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88 | Documentation License version 1.3. A copy of the license is included |
89 | in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. | |
cf055d54 | 90 | |
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91 | @menu |
92 | * Introduction:: What profiling means, and why it is useful. | |
93 | ||
94 | * Compiling:: How to compile your program for profiling. | |
95 | * Executing:: Executing your program to generate profile data | |
96 | * Invoking:: How to run @code{gprof}, and its options | |
97 | ||
afb17569 | 98 | * Output:: Interpreting @code{gprof}'s output |
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99 | |
100 | * Inaccuracy:: Potential problems you should be aware of | |
101 | * How do I?:: Answers to common questions | |
102 | * Incompatibilities:: (between @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} and Unix @code{gprof}.) | |
103 | * Details:: Details of how profiling is done | |
cf055d54 | 104 | * GNU Free Documentation License:: GNU Free Documentation License |
252b5132 | 105 | @end menu |
913b4d4b | 106 | @end ifnottex |
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107 | |
108 | @node Introduction | |
109 | @chapter Introduction to Profiling | |
110 | ||
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111 | @ifset man |
112 | @c man title gprof display call graph profile data | |
113 | ||
114 | @smallexample | |
115 | @c man begin SYNOPSIS | |
a1c21132 | 116 | gprof [ -[abcDhilLrsTvwxyz] ] [ -[ACeEfFJnNOpPqQZ][@var{name}] ] |
40f90528 | 117 | [ -I @var{dirs} ] [ -d[@var{num}] ] [ -k @var{from/to} ] |
a1c21132 | 118 | [ -m @var{min-count} ] [ -R @var{map_file} ] [ -t @var{table-length} ] |
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119 | [ --[no-]annotated-source[=@var{name}] ] |
120 | [ --[no-]exec-counts[=@var{name}] ] | |
121 | [ --[no-]flat-profile[=@var{name}] ] [ --[no-]graph[=@var{name}] ] | |
122 | [ --[no-]time=@var{name}] [ --all-lines ] [ --brief ] | |
123 | [ --debug[=@var{level}] ] [ --function-ordering ] | |
afb17569 | 124 | [ --file-ordering @var{map_file} ] [ --directory-path=@var{dirs} ] |
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125 | [ --display-unused-functions ] [ --file-format=@var{name} ] |
126 | [ --file-info ] [ --help ] [ --line ] [ --min-count=@var{n} ] | |
127 | [ --no-static ] [ --print-path ] [ --separate-files ] | |
128 | [ --static-call-graph ] [ --sum ] [ --table-length=@var{len} ] | |
129 | [ --traditional ] [ --version ] [ --width=@var{n} ] | |
130 | [ --ignore-non-functions ] [ --demangle[=@var{STYLE}] ] | |
131 | [ --no-demangle ] [ @var{image-file} ] [ @var{profile-file} @dots{} ] | |
132 | @c man end | |
133 | @end smallexample | |
134 | ||
135 | @c man begin DESCRIPTION | |
136 | @code{gprof} produces an execution profile of C, Pascal, or Fortran77 | |
137 | programs. The effect of called routines is incorporated in the profile | |
138 | of each caller. The profile data is taken from the call graph profile file | |
139 | (@file{gmon.out} default) which is created by programs | |
140 | that are compiled with the @samp{-pg} option of | |
141 | @code{cc}, @code{pc}, and @code{f77}. | |
142 | The @samp{-pg} option also links in versions of the library routines | |
143 | that are compiled for profiling. @code{Gprof} reads the given object | |
144 | file (the default is @code{a.out}) and establishes the relation between | |
145 | its symbol table and the call graph profile from @file{gmon.out}. | |
146 | If more than one profile file is specified, the @code{gprof} | |
147 | output shows the sum of the profile information in the given profile files. | |
148 | ||
149 | @code{Gprof} calculates the amount of time spent in each routine. | |
150 | Next, these times are propagated along the edges of the call graph. | |
151 | Cycles are discovered, and calls into a cycle are made to share the time | |
152 | of the cycle. | |
153 | ||
154 | @c man end | |
155 | ||
156 | @c man begin BUGS | |
157 | The granularity of the sampling is shown, but remains | |
158 | statistical at best. | |
159 | We assume that the time for each execution of a function | |
160 | can be expressed by the total time for the function divided | |
161 | by the number of times the function is called. | |
162 | Thus the time propagated along the call graph arcs to the function's | |
163 | parents is directly proportional to the number of times that | |
164 | arc is traversed. | |
165 | ||
166 | Parents that are not themselves profiled will have the time of | |
167 | their profiled children propagated to them, but they will appear | |
168 | to be spontaneously invoked in the call graph listing, and will | |
169 | not have their time propagated further. | |
170 | Similarly, signal catchers, even though profiled, will appear | |
171 | to be spontaneous (although for more obscure reasons). | |
172 | Any profiled children of signal catchers should have their times | |
173 | propagated properly, unless the signal catcher was invoked during | |
174 | the execution of the profiling routine, in which case all is lost. | |
175 | ||
176 | The profiled program must call @code{exit}(2) | |
177 | or return normally for the profiling information to be saved | |
178 | in the @file{gmon.out} file. | |
179 | @c man end | |
180 | ||
181 | @c man begin FILES | |
182 | @table @code | |
183 | @item @file{a.out} | |
184 | the namelist and text space. | |
185 | @item @file{gmon.out} | |
186 | dynamic call graph and profile. | |
187 | @item @file{gmon.sum} | |
188 | summarized dynamic call graph and profile. | |
189 | @end table | |
190 | @c man end | |
191 | ||
192 | @c man begin SEEALSO | |
193 | monitor(3), profil(2), cc(1), prof(1), and the Info entry for @file{gprof}. | |
194 | ||
195 | ``An Execution Profiler for Modular Programs'', | |
196 | by S. Graham, P. Kessler, M. McKusick; | |
197 | Software - Practice and Experience, | |
198 | Vol. 13, pp. 671-685, 1983. | |
199 | ||
200 | ``gprof: A Call Graph Execution Profiler'', | |
201 | by S. Graham, P. Kessler, M. McKusick; | |
202 | Proceedings of the SIGPLAN '82 Symposium on Compiler Construction, | |
203 | SIGPLAN Notices, Vol. 17, No 6, pp. 120-126, June 1982. | |
204 | @c man end | |
205 | @end ifset | |
206 | ||
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207 | Profiling allows you to learn where your program spent its time and which |
208 | functions called which other functions while it was executing. This | |
209 | information can show you which pieces of your program are slower than you | |
210 | expected, and might be candidates for rewriting to make your program | |
211 | execute faster. It can also tell you which functions are being called more | |
212 | or less often than you expected. This may help you spot bugs that had | |
213 | otherwise been unnoticed. | |
214 | ||
215 | Since the profiler uses information collected during the actual execution | |
216 | of your program, it can be used on programs that are too large or too | |
217 | complex to analyze by reading the source. However, how your program is run | |
218 | will affect the information that shows up in the profile data. If you | |
219 | don't use some feature of your program while it is being profiled, no | |
220 | profile information will be generated for that feature. | |
221 | ||
222 | Profiling has several steps: | |
223 | ||
224 | @itemize @bullet | |
225 | @item | |
226 | You must compile and link your program with profiling enabled. | |
afb17569 | 227 | @xref{Compiling, ,Compiling a Program for Profiling}. |
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228 | |
229 | @item | |
230 | You must execute your program to generate a profile data file. | |
afb17569 | 231 | @xref{Executing, ,Executing the Program}. |
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232 | |
233 | @item | |
234 | You must run @code{gprof} to analyze the profile data. | |
afb17569 | 235 | @xref{Invoking, ,@code{gprof} Command Summary}. |
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236 | @end itemize |
237 | ||
238 | The next three chapters explain these steps in greater detail. | |
239 | ||
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240 | @c man begin DESCRIPTION |
241 | ||
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242 | Several forms of output are available from the analysis. |
243 | ||
244 | The @dfn{flat profile} shows how much time your program spent in each function, | |
245 | and how many times that function was called. If you simply want to know | |
246 | which functions burn most of the cycles, it is stated concisely here. | |
afb17569 | 247 | @xref{Flat Profile, ,The Flat Profile}. |
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248 | |
249 | The @dfn{call graph} shows, for each function, which functions called it, which | |
250 | other functions it called, and how many times. There is also an estimate | |
251 | of how much time was spent in the subroutines of each function. This can | |
252 | suggest places where you might try to eliminate function calls that use a | |
afb17569 | 253 | lot of time. @xref{Call Graph, ,The Call Graph}. |
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254 | |
255 | The @dfn{annotated source} listing is a copy of the program's | |
256 | source code, labeled with the number of times each line of the | |
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257 | program was executed. @xref{Annotated Source, ,The Annotated Source |
258 | Listing}. | |
40f90528 | 259 | @c man end |
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260 | |
261 | To better understand how profiling works, you may wish to read | |
262 | a description of its implementation. | |
afb17569 | 263 | @xref{Implementation, ,Implementation of Profiling}. |
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264 | |
265 | @node Compiling | |
266 | @chapter Compiling a Program for Profiling | |
267 | ||
268 | The first step in generating profile information for your program is | |
269 | to compile and link it with profiling enabled. | |
270 | ||
271 | To compile a source file for profiling, specify the @samp{-pg} option when | |
272 | you run the compiler. (This is in addition to the options you normally | |
273 | use.) | |
274 | ||
275 | To link the program for profiling, if you use a compiler such as @code{cc} | |
276 | to do the linking, simply specify @samp{-pg} in addition to your usual | |
277 | options. The same option, @samp{-pg}, alters either compilation or linking | |
278 | to do what is necessary for profiling. Here are examples: | |
279 | ||
280 | @example | |
281 | cc -g -c myprog.c utils.c -pg | |
282 | cc -o myprog myprog.o utils.o -pg | |
283 | @end example | |
284 | ||
285 | The @samp{-pg} option also works with a command that both compiles and links: | |
286 | ||
287 | @example | |
288 | cc -o myprog myprog.c utils.c -g -pg | |
289 | @end example | |
290 | ||
83aeabb6 | 291 | Note: The @samp{-pg} option must be part of your compilation options |
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292 | as well as your link options. If it is not then no call-graph data |
293 | will be gathered and when you run @code{gprof} you will get an error | |
294 | message like this: | |
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295 | |
296 | @example | |
297 | gprof: gmon.out file is missing call-graph data | |
298 | @end example | |
299 | ||
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300 | If you add the @samp{-Q} switch to suppress the printing of the call |
301 | graph data you will still be able to see the time samples: | |
302 | ||
303 | @example | |
304 | Flat profile: | |
305 | ||
306 | Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds. | |
307 | % cumulative self self total | |
308 | time seconds seconds calls Ts/call Ts/call name | |
309 | 44.12 0.07 0.07 zazLoop | |
310 | 35.29 0.14 0.06 main | |
311 | 20.59 0.17 0.04 bazMillion | |
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312 | @end example |
313 | ||
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314 | If you run the linker @code{ld} directly instead of through a compiler |
315 | such as @code{cc}, you may have to specify a profiling startup file | |
316 | @file{gcrt0.o} as the first input file instead of the usual startup | |
317 | file @file{crt0.o}. In addition, you would probably want to | |
318 | specify the profiling C library, @file{libc_p.a}, by writing | |
319 | @samp{-lc_p} instead of the usual @samp{-lc}. This is not absolutely | |
320 | necessary, but doing this gives you number-of-calls information for | |
321 | standard library functions such as @code{read} and @code{open}. For | |
322 | example: | |
323 | ||
324 | @example | |
325 | ld -o myprog /lib/gcrt0.o myprog.o utils.o -lc_p | |
326 | @end example | |
327 | ||
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328 | If you are running the program on a system which supports shared |
329 | libraries you may run into problems with the profiling support code in | |
330 | a shared library being called before that library has been fully | |
331 | initialised. This is usually detected by the program encountering a | |
332 | segmentation fault as soon as it is run. The solution is to link | |
333 | against a static version of the library containing the profiling | |
334 | support code, which for @code{gcc} users can be done via the | |
335 | @samp{-static} or @samp{-static-libgcc} command line option. For | |
336 | example: | |
337 | ||
338 | @example | |
339 | gcc -g -pg -static-libgcc myprog.c utils.c -o myprog | |
340 | @end example | |
341 | ||
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342 | If you compile only some of the modules of the program with @samp{-pg}, you |
343 | can still profile the program, but you won't get complete information about | |
344 | the modules that were compiled without @samp{-pg}. The only information | |
345 | you get for the functions in those modules is the total time spent in them; | |
346 | there is no record of how many times they were called, or from where. This | |
347 | will not affect the flat profile (except that the @code{calls} field for | |
348 | the functions will be blank), but will greatly reduce the usefulness of the | |
349 | call graph. | |
350 | ||
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351 | If you wish to perform line-by-line profiling you should use the |
352 | @code{gcov} tool instead of @code{gprof}. See that tool's manual or | |
353 | info pages for more details of how to do this. | |
354 | ||
355 | Note, older versions of @code{gcc} produce line-by-line profiling | |
356 | information that works with @code{gprof} rather than @code{gcov} so | |
357 | there is still support for displaying this kind of information in | |
358 | @code{gprof}. @xref{Line-by-line, ,Line-by-line Profiling}. | |
359 | ||
360 | It also worth noting that @code{gcc} implements a | |
361 | @samp{-finstrument-functions} command line option which will insert | |
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362 | calls to special user supplied instrumentation routines at the entry |
363 | and exit of every function in their program. This can be used to | |
364 | implement an alternative profiling scheme. | |
365 | ||
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366 | @node Executing |
367 | @chapter Executing the Program | |
368 | ||
369 | Once the program is compiled for profiling, you must run it in order to | |
370 | generate the information that @code{gprof} needs. Simply run the program | |
371 | as usual, using the normal arguments, file names, etc. The program should | |
372 | run normally, producing the same output as usual. It will, however, run | |
afb17569 | 373 | somewhat slower than normal because of the time spent collecting and |
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374 | writing the profile data. |
375 | ||
376 | The way you run the program---the arguments and input that you give | |
377 | it---may have a dramatic effect on what the profile information shows. The | |
378 | profile data will describe the parts of the program that were activated for | |
379 | the particular input you use. For example, if the first command you give | |
380 | to your program is to quit, the profile data will show the time used in | |
381 | initialization and in cleanup, but not much else. | |
382 | ||
383 | Your program will write the profile data into a file called @file{gmon.out} | |
384 | just before exiting. If there is already a file called @file{gmon.out}, | |
385 | its contents are overwritten. There is currently no way to tell the | |
386 | program to write the profile data under a different name, but you can rename | |
83aeabb6 | 387 | the file afterwards if you are concerned that it may be overwritten. |
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388 | |
389 | In order to write the @file{gmon.out} file properly, your program must exit | |
390 | normally: by returning from @code{main} or by calling @code{exit}. Calling | |
391 | the low-level function @code{_exit} does not write the profile data, and | |
392 | neither does abnormal termination due to an unhandled signal. | |
393 | ||
394 | The @file{gmon.out} file is written in the program's @emph{current working | |
395 | directory} at the time it exits. This means that if your program calls | |
396 | @code{chdir}, the @file{gmon.out} file will be left in the last directory | |
397 | your program @code{chdir}'d to. If you don't have permission to write in | |
398 | this directory, the file is not written, and you will get an error message. | |
399 | ||
400 | Older versions of the @sc{gnu} profiling library may also write a file | |
401 | called @file{bb.out}. This file, if present, contains an human-readable | |
402 | listing of the basic-block execution counts. Unfortunately, the | |
403 | appearance of a human-readable @file{bb.out} means the basic-block | |
404 | counts didn't get written into @file{gmon.out}. | |
405 | The Perl script @code{bbconv.pl}, included with the @code{gprof} | |
406 | source distribution, will convert a @file{bb.out} file into | |
0c24a63f UD |
407 | a format readable by @code{gprof}. Invoke it like this: |
408 | ||
409 | @smallexample | |
410 | bbconv.pl < bb.out > @var{bh-data} | |
411 | @end smallexample | |
412 | ||
413 | This translates the information in @file{bb.out} into a form that | |
414 | @code{gprof} can understand. But you still need to tell @code{gprof} | |
415 | about the existence of this translated information. To do that, include | |
416 | @var{bb-data} on the @code{gprof} command line, @emph{along with | |
417 | @file{gmon.out}}, like this: | |
418 | ||
419 | @smallexample | |
420 | gprof @var{options} @var{executable-file} gmon.out @var{bb-data} [@var{yet-more-profile-data-files}@dots{}] [> @var{outfile}] | |
421 | @end smallexample | |
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422 | |
423 | @node Invoking | |
424 | @chapter @code{gprof} Command Summary | |
425 | ||
426 | After you have a profile data file @file{gmon.out}, you can run @code{gprof} | |
427 | to interpret the information in it. The @code{gprof} program prints a | |
428 | flat profile and a call graph on standard output. Typically you would | |
429 | redirect the output of @code{gprof} into a file with @samp{>}. | |
430 | ||
431 | You run @code{gprof} like this: | |
432 | ||
433 | @smallexample | |
434 | gprof @var{options} [@var{executable-file} [@var{profile-data-files}@dots{}]] [> @var{outfile}] | |
435 | @end smallexample | |
436 | ||
437 | @noindent | |
438 | Here square-brackets indicate optional arguments. | |
439 | ||
440 | If you omit the executable file name, the file @file{a.out} is used. If | |
441 | you give no profile data file name, the file @file{gmon.out} is used. If | |
442 | any file is not in the proper format, or if the profile data file does not | |
443 | appear to belong to the executable file, an error message is printed. | |
444 | ||
445 | You can give more than one profile data file by entering all their names | |
446 | after the executable file name; then the statistics in all the data files | |
447 | are summed together. | |
448 | ||
449 | The order of these options does not matter. | |
450 | ||
451 | @menu | |
452 | * Output Options:: Controlling @code{gprof}'s output style | |
b45619c0 | 453 | * Analysis Options:: Controlling how @code{gprof} analyzes its data |
252b5132 | 454 | * Miscellaneous Options:: |
5af11cab | 455 | * Deprecated Options:: Options you no longer need to use, but which |
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456 | have been retained for compatibility |
457 | * Symspecs:: Specifying functions to include or exclude | |
458 | @end menu | |
459 | ||
afb17569 | 460 | @node Output Options |
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461 | @section Output Options |
462 | ||
40f90528 | 463 | @c man begin OPTIONS |
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464 | These options specify which of several output formats |
465 | @code{gprof} should produce. | |
466 | ||
467 | Many of these options take an optional @dfn{symspec} to specify | |
468 | functions to be included or excluded. These options can be | |
469 | specified multiple times, with different symspecs, to include | |
afb17569 | 470 | or exclude sets of symbols. @xref{Symspecs, ,Symspecs}. |
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471 | |
472 | Specifying any of these options overrides the default (@samp{-p -q}), | |
473 | which prints a flat profile and call graph analysis | |
474 | for all functions. | |
475 | ||
476 | @table @code | |
477 | ||
478 | @item -A[@var{symspec}] | |
479 | @itemx --annotated-source[=@var{symspec}] | |
480 | The @samp{-A} option causes @code{gprof} to print annotated source code. | |
481 | If @var{symspec} is specified, print output only for matching symbols. | |
afb17569 | 482 | @xref{Annotated Source, ,The Annotated Source Listing}. |
252b5132 RH |
483 | |
484 | @item -b | |
485 | @itemx --brief | |
486 | If the @samp{-b} option is given, @code{gprof} doesn't print the | |
487 | verbose blurbs that try to explain the meaning of all of the fields in | |
488 | the tables. This is useful if you intend to print out the output, or | |
489 | are tired of seeing the blurbs. | |
490 | ||
491 | @item -C[@var{symspec}] | |
492 | @itemx --exec-counts[=@var{symspec}] | |
493 | The @samp{-C} option causes @code{gprof} to | |
494 | print a tally of functions and the number of times each was called. | |
495 | If @var{symspec} is specified, print tally only for matching symbols. | |
496 | ||
5af11cab | 497 | If the profile data file contains basic-block count records, specifying |
252b5132 RH |
498 | the @samp{-l} option, along with @samp{-C}, will cause basic-block |
499 | execution counts to be tallied and displayed. | |
500 | ||
501 | @item -i | |
502 | @itemx --file-info | |
503 | The @samp{-i} option causes @code{gprof} to display summary information | |
504 | about the profile data file(s) and then exit. The number of histogram, | |
505 | call graph, and basic-block count records is displayed. | |
506 | ||
507 | @item -I @var{dirs} | |
508 | @itemx --directory-path=@var{dirs} | |
509 | The @samp{-I} option specifies a list of search directories in | |
510 | which to find source files. Environment variable @var{GPROF_PATH} | |
5af11cab | 511 | can also be used to convey this information. |
252b5132 RH |
512 | Used mostly for annotated source output. |
513 | ||
514 | @item -J[@var{symspec}] | |
515 | @itemx --no-annotated-source[=@var{symspec}] | |
516 | The @samp{-J} option causes @code{gprof} not to | |
517 | print annotated source code. | |
518 | If @var{symspec} is specified, @code{gprof} prints annotated source, | |
519 | but excludes matching symbols. | |
520 | ||
521 | @item -L | |
522 | @itemx --print-path | |
523 | Normally, source filenames are printed with the path | |
524 | component suppressed. The @samp{-L} option causes @code{gprof} | |
525 | to print the full pathname of | |
526 | source filenames, which is determined | |
527 | from symbolic debugging information in the image file | |
528 | and is relative to the directory in which the compiler | |
529 | was invoked. | |
530 | ||
531 | @item -p[@var{symspec}] | |
532 | @itemx --flat-profile[=@var{symspec}] | |
533 | The @samp{-p} option causes @code{gprof} to print a flat profile. | |
534 | If @var{symspec} is specified, print flat profile only for matching symbols. | |
afb17569 | 535 | @xref{Flat Profile, ,The Flat Profile}. |
252b5132 RH |
536 | |
537 | @item -P[@var{symspec}] | |
538 | @itemx --no-flat-profile[=@var{symspec}] | |
539 | The @samp{-P} option causes @code{gprof} to suppress printing a flat profile. | |
540 | If @var{symspec} is specified, @code{gprof} prints a flat profile, | |
541 | but excludes matching symbols. | |
542 | ||
543 | @item -q[@var{symspec}] | |
544 | @itemx --graph[=@var{symspec}] | |
545 | The @samp{-q} option causes @code{gprof} to print the call graph analysis. | |
546 | If @var{symspec} is specified, print call graph only for matching symbols | |
547 | and their children. | |
afb17569 | 548 | @xref{Call Graph, ,The Call Graph}. |
252b5132 RH |
549 | |
550 | @item -Q[@var{symspec}] | |
551 | @itemx --no-graph[=@var{symspec}] | |
552 | The @samp{-Q} option causes @code{gprof} to suppress printing the | |
553 | call graph. | |
554 | If @var{symspec} is specified, @code{gprof} prints a call graph, | |
555 | but excludes matching symbols. | |
556 | ||
a1c21132 BE |
557 | @item -t |
558 | @itemx --table-length=@var{num} | |
559 | The @samp{-t} option causes the @var{num} most active source lines in | |
560 | each source file to be listed when source annotation is enabled. The | |
561 | default is 10. | |
562 | ||
252b5132 RH |
563 | @item -y |
564 | @itemx --separate-files | |
565 | This option affects annotated source output only. | |
5af11cab | 566 | Normally, @code{gprof} prints annotated source files |
252b5132 | 567 | to standard-output. If this option is specified, |
5af11cab AM |
568 | annotated source for a file named @file{path/@var{filename}} |
569 | is generated in the file @file{@var{filename}-ann}. If the underlying | |
b45619c0 | 570 | file system would truncate @file{@var{filename}-ann} so that it |
5af11cab AM |
571 | overwrites the original @file{@var{filename}}, @code{gprof} generates |
572 | annotated source in the file @file{@var{filename}.ann} instead (if the | |
573 | original file name has an extension, that extension is @emph{replaced} | |
574 | with @file{.ann}). | |
252b5132 RH |
575 | |
576 | @item -Z[@var{symspec}] | |
577 | @itemx --no-exec-counts[=@var{symspec}] | |
578 | The @samp{-Z} option causes @code{gprof} not to | |
579 | print a tally of functions and the number of times each was called. | |
580 | If @var{symspec} is specified, print tally, but exclude matching symbols. | |
581 | ||
a1c21132 | 582 | @item -r |
242b2571 | 583 | @itemx --function-ordering |
252b5132 RH |
584 | The @samp{--function-ordering} option causes @code{gprof} to print a |
585 | suggested function ordering for the program based on profiling data. | |
586 | This option suggests an ordering which may improve paging, tlb and | |
587 | cache behavior for the program on systems which support arbitrary | |
588 | ordering of functions in an executable. | |
589 | ||
590 | The exact details of how to force the linker to place functions | |
591 | in a particular order is system dependent and out of the scope of this | |
592 | manual. | |
593 | ||
a1c21132 | 594 | @item -R @var{map_file} |
242b2571 | 595 | @itemx --file-ordering @var{map_file} |
252b5132 RH |
596 | The @samp{--file-ordering} option causes @code{gprof} to print a |
597 | suggested .o link line ordering for the program based on profiling data. | |
598 | This option suggests an ordering which may improve paging, tlb and | |
599 | cache behavior for the program on systems which do not support arbitrary | |
600 | ordering of functions in an executable. | |
601 | ||
602 | Use of the @samp{-a} argument is highly recommended with this option. | |
603 | ||
604 | The @var{map_file} argument is a pathname to a file which provides | |
605 | function name to object file mappings. The format of the file is similar to | |
606 | the output of the program @code{nm}. | |
607 | ||
608 | @smallexample | |
609 | @group | |
610 | c-parse.o:00000000 T yyparse | |
611 | c-parse.o:00000004 C yyerrflag | |
612 | c-lang.o:00000000 T maybe_objc_method_name | |
613 | c-lang.o:00000000 T print_lang_statistics | |
614 | c-lang.o:00000000 T recognize_objc_keyword | |
615 | c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_identifier | |
616 | c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_type | |
617 | @dots{} | |
618 | ||
619 | @end group | |
620 | @end smallexample | |
621 | ||
5af11cab AM |
622 | To create a @var{map_file} with @sc{gnu} @code{nm}, type a command like |
623 | @kbd{nm --extern-only --defined-only -v --print-file-name program-name}. | |
252b5132 RH |
624 | |
625 | @item -T | |
626 | @itemx --traditional | |
627 | The @samp{-T} option causes @code{gprof} to print its output in | |
628 | ``traditional'' BSD style. | |
629 | ||
630 | @item -w @var{width} | |
631 | @itemx --width=@var{width} | |
632 | Sets width of output lines to @var{width}. | |
633 | Currently only used when printing the function index at the bottom | |
634 | of the call graph. | |
635 | ||
636 | @item -x | |
637 | @itemx --all-lines | |
638 | This option affects annotated source output only. | |
639 | By default, only the lines at the beginning of a basic-block | |
640 | are annotated. If this option is specified, every line in | |
641 | a basic-block is annotated by repeating the annotation for the | |
642 | first line. This behavior is similar to @code{tcov}'s @samp{-a}. | |
643 | ||
28c309a2 | 644 | @item --demangle[=@var{style}] |
252b5132 RH |
645 | @itemx --no-demangle |
646 | These options control whether C++ symbol names should be demangled when | |
647 | printing output. The default is to demangle symbols. The | |
28c309a2 NC |
648 | @code{--no-demangle} option may be used to turn off demangling. Different |
649 | compilers have different mangling styles. The optional demangling style | |
650 | argument can be used to choose an appropriate demangling style for your | |
651 | compiler. | |
252b5132 RH |
652 | @end table |
653 | ||
afb17569 | 654 | @node Analysis Options |
252b5132 RH |
655 | @section Analysis Options |
656 | ||
657 | @table @code | |
658 | ||
659 | @item -a | |
660 | @itemx --no-static | |
661 | The @samp{-a} option causes @code{gprof} to suppress the printing of | |
662 | statically declared (private) functions. (These are functions whose | |
663 | names are not listed as global, and which are not visible outside the | |
664 | file/function/block where they were defined.) Time spent in these | |
b45619c0 | 665 | functions, calls to/from them, etc., will all be attributed to the |
252b5132 RH |
666 | function that was loaded directly before it in the executable file. |
667 | @c This is compatible with Unix @code{gprof}, but a bad idea. | |
668 | This option affects both the flat profile and the call graph. | |
669 | ||
670 | @item -c | |
671 | @itemx --static-call-graph | |
672 | The @samp{-c} option causes the call graph of the program to be | |
673 | augmented by a heuristic which examines the text space of the object | |
674 | file and identifies function calls in the binary machine code. | |
675 | Since normal call graph records are only generated when functions are | |
676 | entered, this option identifies children that could have been called, | |
677 | but never were. Calls to functions that were not compiled with | |
678 | profiling enabled are also identified, but only if symbol table | |
679 | entries are present for them. | |
680 | Calls to dynamic library routines are typically @emph{not} found | |
681 | by this option. | |
682 | Parents or children identified via this heuristic | |
683 | are indicated in the call graph with call counts of @samp{0}. | |
684 | ||
685 | @item -D | |
686 | @itemx --ignore-non-functions | |
687 | The @samp{-D} option causes @code{gprof} to ignore symbols which | |
688 | are not known to be functions. This option will give more accurate | |
689 | profile data on systems where it is supported (Solaris and HPUX for | |
690 | example). | |
691 | ||
692 | @item -k @var{from}/@var{to} | |
693 | The @samp{-k} option allows you to delete from the call graph any arcs from | |
694 | symbols matching symspec @var{from} to those matching symspec @var{to}. | |
695 | ||
696 | @item -l | |
697 | @itemx --line | |
698 | The @samp{-l} option enables line-by-line profiling, which causes | |
699 | histogram hits to be charged to individual source code lines, | |
25c909f1 NC |
700 | instead of functions. This feature only works with programs compiled |
701 | by older versions of the @code{gcc} compiler. Newer versions of | |
702 | @code{gcc} are designed to work with the @code{gcov} tool instead. | |
703 | ||
252b5132 RH |
704 | If the program was compiled with basic-block counting enabled, |
705 | this option will also identify how many times each line of | |
706 | code was executed. | |
707 | While line-by-line profiling can help isolate where in a large function | |
708 | a program is spending its time, it also significantly increases | |
709 | the running time of @code{gprof}, and magnifies statistical | |
710 | inaccuracies. | |
afb17569 | 711 | @xref{Sampling Error, ,Statistical Sampling Error}. |
252b5132 RH |
712 | |
713 | @item -m @var{num} | |
714 | @itemx --min-count=@var{num} | |
715 | This option affects execution count output only. | |
716 | Symbols that are executed less than @var{num} times are suppressed. | |
717 | ||
6bacc34d BW |
718 | @item -n@var{symspec} |
719 | @itemx --time=@var{symspec} | |
252b5132 RH |
720 | The @samp{-n} option causes @code{gprof}, in its call graph analysis, |
721 | to only propagate times for symbols matching @var{symspec}. | |
722 | ||
6bacc34d BW |
723 | @item -N@var{symspec} |
724 | @itemx --no-time=@var{symspec} | |
252b5132 RH |
725 | The @samp{-n} option causes @code{gprof}, in its call graph analysis, |
726 | not to propagate times for symbols matching @var{symspec}. | |
727 | ||
728 | @item -z | |
729 | @itemx --display-unused-functions | |
730 | If you give the @samp{-z} option, @code{gprof} will mention all | |
731 | functions in the flat profile, even those that were never called, and | |
732 | that had no time spent in them. This is useful in conjunction with the | |
733 | @samp{-c} option for discovering which routines were never called. | |
734 | ||
735 | @end table | |
736 | ||
afb17569 | 737 | @node Miscellaneous Options |
252b5132 RH |
738 | @section Miscellaneous Options |
739 | ||
740 | @table @code | |
741 | ||
742 | @item -d[@var{num}] | |
743 | @itemx --debug[=@var{num}] | |
744 | The @samp{-d @var{num}} option specifies debugging options. | |
745 | If @var{num} is not specified, enable all debugging. | |
afb17569 | 746 | @xref{Debugging, ,Debugging @code{gprof}}. |
252b5132 | 747 | |
a1c21132 BE |
748 | @item -h |
749 | @itemx --help | |
750 | The @samp{-h} option prints command line usage. | |
751 | ||
252b5132 RH |
752 | @item -O@var{name} |
753 | @itemx --file-format=@var{name} | |
754 | Selects the format of the profile data files. Recognized formats are | |
755 | @samp{auto} (the default), @samp{bsd}, @samp{4.4bsd}, @samp{magic}, and | |
756 | @samp{prof} (not yet supported). | |
757 | ||
758 | @item -s | |
759 | @itemx --sum | |
760 | The @samp{-s} option causes @code{gprof} to summarize the information | |
761 | in the profile data files it read in, and write out a profile data | |
762 | file called @file{gmon.sum}, which contains all the information from | |
763 | the profile data files that @code{gprof} read in. The file @file{gmon.sum} | |
764 | may be one of the specified input files; the effect of this is to | |
765 | merge the data in the other input files into @file{gmon.sum}. | |
766 | ||
767 | Eventually you can run @code{gprof} again without @samp{-s} to analyze the | |
768 | cumulative data in the file @file{gmon.sum}. | |
769 | ||
770 | @item -v | |
771 | @itemx --version | |
772 | The @samp{-v} flag causes @code{gprof} to print the current version | |
773 | number, and then exit. | |
774 | ||
775 | @end table | |
776 | ||
afb17569 | 777 | @node Deprecated Options |
5af11cab | 778 | @section Deprecated Options |
252b5132 RH |
779 | |
780 | @table @code | |
781 | ||
782 | These options have been replaced with newer versions that use symspecs. | |
783 | ||
784 | @item -e @var{function_name} | |
785 | The @samp{-e @var{function}} option tells @code{gprof} to not print | |
786 | information about the function @var{function_name} (and its | |
787 | children@dots{}) in the call graph. The function will still be listed | |
788 | as a child of any functions that call it, but its index number will be | |
789 | shown as @samp{[not printed]}. More than one @samp{-e} option may be | |
790 | given; only one @var{function_name} may be indicated with each @samp{-e} | |
791 | option. | |
792 | ||
793 | @item -E @var{function_name} | |
794 | The @code{-E @var{function}} option works like the @code{-e} option, but | |
795 | time spent in the function (and children who were not called from | |
796 | anywhere else), will not be used to compute the percentages-of-time for | |
797 | the call graph. More than one @samp{-E} option may be given; only one | |
798 | @var{function_name} may be indicated with each @samp{-E} option. | |
799 | ||
800 | @item -f @var{function_name} | |
801 | The @samp{-f @var{function}} option causes @code{gprof} to limit the | |
802 | call graph to the function @var{function_name} and its children (and | |
803 | their children@dots{}). More than one @samp{-f} option may be given; | |
804 | only one @var{function_name} may be indicated with each @samp{-f} | |
805 | option. | |
806 | ||
807 | @item -F @var{function_name} | |
808 | The @samp{-F @var{function}} option works like the @code{-f} option, but | |
809 | only time spent in the function and its children (and their | |
810 | children@dots{}) will be used to determine total-time and | |
811 | percentages-of-time for the call graph. More than one @samp{-F} option | |
812 | may be given; only one @var{function_name} may be indicated with each | |
813 | @samp{-F} option. The @samp{-F} option overrides the @samp{-E} option. | |
814 | ||
815 | @end table | |
816 | ||
40f90528 AM |
817 | @c man end |
818 | ||
252b5132 RH |
819 | Note that only one function can be specified with each @code{-e}, |
820 | @code{-E}, @code{-f} or @code{-F} option. To specify more than one | |
821 | function, use multiple options. For example, this command: | |
822 | ||
823 | @example | |
824 | gprof -e boring -f foo -f bar myprogram > gprof.output | |
825 | @end example | |
826 | ||
827 | @noindent | |
828 | lists in the call graph all functions that were reached from either | |
829 | @code{foo} or @code{bar} and were not reachable from @code{boring}. | |
830 | ||
afb17569 | 831 | @node Symspecs |
252b5132 RH |
832 | @section Symspecs |
833 | ||
834 | Many of the output options allow functions to be included or excluded | |
835 | using @dfn{symspecs} (symbol specifications), which observe the | |
836 | following syntax: | |
837 | ||
838 | @example | |
839 | filename_containing_a_dot | |
840 | | funcname_not_containing_a_dot | |
841 | | linenumber | |
842 | | ( [ any_filename ] `:' ( any_funcname | linenumber ) ) | |
843 | @end example | |
844 | ||
845 | Here are some sample symspecs: | |
846 | ||
847 | @table @samp | |
848 | @item main.c | |
849 | Selects everything in file @file{main.c}---the | |
5af11cab | 850 | dot in the string tells @code{gprof} to interpret |
252b5132 RH |
851 | the string as a filename, rather than as |
852 | a function name. To select a file whose | |
853 | name does not contain a dot, a trailing colon | |
854 | should be specified. For example, @samp{odd:} is | |
855 | interpreted as the file named @file{odd}. | |
856 | ||
857 | @item main | |
858 | Selects all functions named @samp{main}. | |
859 | ||
860 | Note that there may be multiple instances of the same function name | |
861 | because some of the definitions may be local (i.e., static). Unless a | |
862 | function name is unique in a program, you must use the colon notation | |
863 | explained below to specify a function from a specific source file. | |
864 | ||
a53f781e | 865 | Sometimes, function names contain dots. In such cases, it is necessary |
252b5132 RH |
866 | to add a leading colon to the name. For example, @samp{:.mul} selects |
867 | function @samp{.mul}. | |
868 | ||
5af11cab AM |
869 | In some object file formats, symbols have a leading underscore. |
870 | @code{gprof} will normally not print these underscores. When you name a | |
871 | symbol in a symspec, you should type it exactly as @code{gprof} prints | |
872 | it in its output. For example, if the compiler produces a symbol | |
873 | @samp{_main} from your @code{main} function, @code{gprof} still prints | |
874 | it as @samp{main} in its output, so you should use @samp{main} in | |
875 | symspecs. | |
252b5132 RH |
876 | |
877 | @item main.c:main | |
878 | Selects function @samp{main} in file @file{main.c}. | |
879 | ||
880 | @item main.c:134 | |
881 | Selects line 134 in file @file{main.c}. | |
882 | @end table | |
883 | ||
884 | @node Output | |
885 | @chapter Interpreting @code{gprof}'s Output | |
886 | ||
887 | @code{gprof} can produce several different output styles, the | |
888 | most important of which are described below. The simplest output | |
889 | styles (file information, execution count, and function and file ordering) | |
890 | are not described here, but are documented with the respective options | |
891 | that trigger them. | |
afb17569 | 892 | @xref{Output Options, ,Output Options}. |
252b5132 RH |
893 | |
894 | @menu | |
895 | * Flat Profile:: The flat profile shows how much time was spent | |
896 | executing directly in each function. | |
897 | * Call Graph:: The call graph shows which functions called which | |
898 | others, and how much time each function used | |
899 | when its subroutine calls are included. | |
900 | * Line-by-line:: @code{gprof} can analyze individual source code lines | |
901 | * Annotated Source:: The annotated source listing displays source code | |
902 | labeled with execution counts | |
903 | @end menu | |
904 | ||
905 | ||
afb17569 | 906 | @node Flat Profile |
252b5132 RH |
907 | @section The Flat Profile |
908 | @cindex flat profile | |
909 | ||
910 | The @dfn{flat profile} shows the total amount of time your program | |
911 | spent executing each function. Unless the @samp{-z} option is given, | |
912 | functions with no apparent time spent in them, and no apparent calls | |
913 | to them, are not mentioned. Note that if a function was not compiled | |
914 | for profiling, and didn't run long enough to show up on the program | |
915 | counter histogram, it will be indistinguishable from a function that | |
916 | was never called. | |
917 | ||
918 | This is part of a flat profile for a small program: | |
919 | ||
920 | @smallexample | |
921 | @group | |
922 | Flat profile: | |
923 | ||
924 | Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds. | |
925 | % cumulative self self total | |
926 | time seconds seconds calls ms/call ms/call name | |
927 | 33.34 0.02 0.02 7208 0.00 0.00 open | |
928 | 16.67 0.03 0.01 244 0.04 0.12 offtime | |
929 | 16.67 0.04 0.01 8 1.25 1.25 memccpy | |
930 | 16.67 0.05 0.01 7 1.43 1.43 write | |
931 | 16.67 0.06 0.01 mcount | |
932 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 236 0.00 0.00 tzset | |
933 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 192 0.00 0.00 tolower | |
934 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 47 0.00 0.00 strlen | |
935 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 45 0.00 0.00 strchr | |
936 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 50.00 main | |
937 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 0.00 memcpy | |
938 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 10.11 print | |
939 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 0.00 profil | |
940 | 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 50.00 report | |
941 | @dots{} | |
942 | @end group | |
943 | @end smallexample | |
944 | ||
945 | @noindent | |
afb17569 | 946 | The functions are sorted first by decreasing run-time spent in them, |
252b5132 RH |
947 | then by decreasing number of calls, then alphabetically by name. The |
948 | functions @samp{mcount} and @samp{profil} are part of the profiling | |
5af11cab | 949 | apparatus and appear in every flat profile; their time gives a measure of |
252b5132 RH |
950 | the amount of overhead due to profiling. |
951 | ||
952 | Just before the column headers, a statement appears indicating | |
953 | how much time each sample counted as. | |
954 | This @dfn{sampling period} estimates the margin of error in each of the time | |
955 | figures. A time figure that is not much larger than this is not | |
956 | reliable. In this example, each sample counted as 0.01 seconds, | |
957 | suggesting a 100 Hz sampling rate. | |
958 | The program's total execution time was 0.06 | |
959 | seconds, as indicated by the @samp{cumulative seconds} field. Since | |
960 | each sample counted for 0.01 seconds, this means only six samples | |
5af11cab | 961 | were taken during the run. Two of the samples occurred while the |
252b5132 RH |
962 | program was in the @samp{open} function, as indicated by the |
963 | @samp{self seconds} field. Each of the other four samples | |
5af11cab | 964 | occurred one each in @samp{offtime}, @samp{memccpy}, @samp{write}, |
252b5132 RH |
965 | and @samp{mcount}. |
966 | Since only six samples were taken, none of these values can | |
967 | be regarded as particularly reliable. | |
968 | In another run, | |
969 | the @samp{self seconds} field for | |
970 | @samp{mcount} might well be @samp{0.00} or @samp{0.02}. | |
afb17569 BW |
971 | @xref{Sampling Error, ,Statistical Sampling Error}, |
972 | for a complete discussion. | |
252b5132 RH |
973 | |
974 | The remaining functions in the listing (those whose | |
975 | @samp{self seconds} field is @samp{0.00}) didn't appear | |
976 | in the histogram samples at all. However, the call graph | |
977 | indicated that they were called, so therefore they are listed, | |
978 | sorted in decreasing order by the @samp{calls} field. | |
979 | Clearly some time was spent executing these functions, | |
980 | but the paucity of histogram samples prevents any | |
981 | determination of how much time each took. | |
982 | ||
983 | Here is what the fields in each line mean: | |
984 | ||
985 | @table @code | |
986 | @item % time | |
987 | This is the percentage of the total execution time your program spent | |
988 | in this function. These should all add up to 100%. | |
989 | ||
990 | @item cumulative seconds | |
991 | This is the cumulative total number of seconds the computer spent | |
992 | executing this functions, plus the time spent in all the functions | |
993 | above this one in this table. | |
994 | ||
995 | @item self seconds | |
996 | This is the number of seconds accounted for by this function alone. | |
997 | The flat profile listing is sorted first by this number. | |
998 | ||
999 | @item calls | |
1000 | This is the total number of times the function was called. If the | |
1001 | function was never called, or the number of times it was called cannot | |
1002 | be determined (probably because the function was not compiled with | |
1003 | profiling enabled), the @dfn{calls} field is blank. | |
1004 | ||
1005 | @item self ms/call | |
1006 | This represents the average number of milliseconds spent in this | |
1007 | function per call, if this function is profiled. Otherwise, this field | |
1008 | is blank for this function. | |
1009 | ||
1010 | @item total ms/call | |
1011 | This represents the average number of milliseconds spent in this | |
1012 | function and its descendants per call, if this function is profiled. | |
1013 | Otherwise, this field is blank for this function. | |
1014 | This is the only field in the flat profile that uses call graph analysis. | |
1015 | ||
1016 | @item name | |
1017 | This is the name of the function. The flat profile is sorted by this | |
1018 | field alphabetically after the @dfn{self seconds} and @dfn{calls} | |
1019 | fields are sorted. | |
1020 | @end table | |
1021 | ||
afb17569 | 1022 | @node Call Graph |
252b5132 RH |
1023 | @section The Call Graph |
1024 | @cindex call graph | |
1025 | ||
1026 | The @dfn{call graph} shows how much time was spent in each function | |
1027 | and its children. From this information, you can find functions that, | |
1028 | while they themselves may not have used much time, called other | |
1029 | functions that did use unusual amounts of time. | |
1030 | ||
1031 | Here is a sample call from a small program. This call came from the | |
1032 | same @code{gprof} run as the flat profile example in the previous | |
afb17569 | 1033 | section. |
252b5132 RH |
1034 | |
1035 | @smallexample | |
1036 | @group | |
1037 | granularity: each sample hit covers 2 byte(s) for 20.00% of 0.05 seconds | |
1038 | ||
1039 | index % time self children called name | |
1040 | <spontaneous> | |
1041 | [1] 100.0 0.00 0.05 start [1] | |
1042 | 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2] | |
1043 | 0.00 0.00 1/2 on_exit [28] | |
1044 | 0.00 0.00 1/1 exit [59] | |
1045 | ----------------------------------------------- | |
1046 | 0.00 0.05 1/1 start [1] | |
1047 | [2] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 main [2] | |
1048 | 0.00 0.05 1/1 report [3] | |
1049 | ----------------------------------------------- | |
1050 | 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2] | |
1051 | [3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3] | |
1052 | 0.00 0.03 8/8 timelocal [6] | |
1053 | 0.00 0.01 1/1 print [9] | |
1054 | 0.00 0.01 9/9 fgets [12] | |
1055 | 0.00 0.00 12/34 strncmp <cycle 1> [40] | |
1056 | 0.00 0.00 8/8 lookup [20] | |
1057 | 0.00 0.00 1/1 fopen [21] | |
1058 | 0.00 0.00 8/8 chewtime [24] | |
1059 | 0.00 0.00 8/16 skipspace [44] | |
1060 | ----------------------------------------------- | |
afb17569 | 1061 | [4] 59.8 0.01 0.02 8+472 <cycle 2 as a whole> [4] |
252b5132 RH |
1062 | 0.01 0.02 244+260 offtime <cycle 2> [7] |
1063 | 0.00 0.00 236+1 tzset <cycle 2> [26] | |
1064 | ----------------------------------------------- | |
1065 | @end group | |
1066 | @end smallexample | |
1067 | ||
1068 | The lines full of dashes divide this table into @dfn{entries}, one for each | |
1069 | function. Each entry has one or more lines. | |
1070 | ||
1071 | In each entry, the primary line is the one that starts with an index number | |
1072 | in square brackets. The end of this line says which function the entry is | |
1073 | for. The preceding lines in the entry describe the callers of this | |
1074 | function and the following lines describe its subroutines (also called | |
1075 | @dfn{children} when we speak of the call graph). | |
1076 | ||
1077 | The entries are sorted by time spent in the function and its subroutines. | |
1078 | ||
afb17569 BW |
1079 | The internal profiling function @code{mcount} (@pxref{Flat Profile, ,The |
1080 | Flat Profile}) is never mentioned in the call graph. | |
252b5132 RH |
1081 | |
1082 | @menu | |
1083 | * Primary:: Details of the primary line's contents. | |
1084 | * Callers:: Details of caller-lines' contents. | |
1085 | * Subroutines:: Details of subroutine-lines' contents. | |
1086 | * Cycles:: When there are cycles of recursion, | |
1087 | such as @code{a} calls @code{b} calls @code{a}@dots{} | |
1088 | @end menu | |
1089 | ||
1090 | @node Primary | |
1091 | @subsection The Primary Line | |
1092 | ||
1093 | The @dfn{primary line} in a call graph entry is the line that | |
1094 | describes the function which the entry is about and gives the overall | |
1095 | statistics for this function. | |
1096 | ||
1097 | For reference, we repeat the primary line from the entry for function | |
1098 | @code{report} in our main example, together with the heading line that | |
1099 | shows the names of the fields: | |
1100 | ||
1101 | @smallexample | |
1102 | @group | |
1103 | index % time self children called name | |
1104 | @dots{} | |
1105 | [3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3] | |
1106 | @end group | |
1107 | @end smallexample | |
1108 | ||
1109 | Here is what the fields in the primary line mean: | |
1110 | ||
1111 | @table @code | |
1112 | @item index | |
1113 | Entries are numbered with consecutive integers. Each function | |
1114 | therefore has an index number, which appears at the beginning of its | |
1115 | primary line. | |
1116 | ||
1117 | Each cross-reference to a function, as a caller or subroutine of | |
1118 | another, gives its index number as well as its name. The index number | |
1119 | guides you if you wish to look for the entry for that function. | |
1120 | ||
1121 | @item % time | |
1122 | This is the percentage of the total time that was spent in this | |
1123 | function, including time spent in subroutines called from this | |
1124 | function. | |
1125 | ||
1126 | The time spent in this function is counted again for the callers of | |
1127 | this function. Therefore, adding up these percentages is meaningless. | |
1128 | ||
1129 | @item self | |
1130 | This is the total amount of time spent in this function. This | |
1131 | should be identical to the number printed in the @code{seconds} field | |
1132 | for this function in the flat profile. | |
1133 | ||
1134 | @item children | |
1135 | This is the total amount of time spent in the subroutine calls made by | |
1136 | this function. This should be equal to the sum of all the @code{self} | |
1137 | and @code{children} entries of the children listed directly below this | |
1138 | function. | |
1139 | ||
1140 | @item called | |
1141 | This is the number of times the function was called. | |
1142 | ||
1143 | If the function called itself recursively, there are two numbers, | |
1144 | separated by a @samp{+}. The first number counts non-recursive calls, | |
1145 | and the second counts recursive calls. | |
1146 | ||
1147 | In the example above, the function @code{report} was called once from | |
1148 | @code{main}. | |
1149 | ||
1150 | @item name | |
1151 | This is the name of the current function. The index number is | |
1152 | repeated after it. | |
1153 | ||
1154 | If the function is part of a cycle of recursion, the cycle number is | |
1155 | printed between the function's name and the index number | |
afb17569 BW |
1156 | (@pxref{Cycles, ,How Mutually Recursive Functions Are Described}). |
1157 | For example, if function @code{gnurr} is part of | |
252b5132 RH |
1158 | cycle number one, and has index number twelve, its primary line would |
1159 | be end like this: | |
1160 | ||
1161 | @example | |
1162 | gnurr <cycle 1> [12] | |
1163 | @end example | |
1164 | @end table | |
1165 | ||
afb17569 | 1166 | @node Callers |
252b5132 RH |
1167 | @subsection Lines for a Function's Callers |
1168 | ||
1169 | A function's entry has a line for each function it was called by. | |
1170 | These lines' fields correspond to the fields of the primary line, but | |
1171 | their meanings are different because of the difference in context. | |
1172 | ||
1173 | For reference, we repeat two lines from the entry for the function | |
1174 | @code{report}, the primary line and one caller-line preceding it, together | |
1175 | with the heading line that shows the names of the fields: | |
1176 | ||
1177 | @smallexample | |
1178 | index % time self children called name | |
1179 | @dots{} | |
1180 | 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2] | |
1181 | [3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3] | |
1182 | @end smallexample | |
1183 | ||
1184 | Here are the meanings of the fields in the caller-line for @code{report} | |
1185 | called from @code{main}: | |
1186 | ||
1187 | @table @code | |
1188 | @item self | |
1189 | An estimate of the amount of time spent in @code{report} itself when it was | |
1190 | called from @code{main}. | |
1191 | ||
1192 | @item children | |
1193 | An estimate of the amount of time spent in subroutines of @code{report} | |
1194 | when @code{report} was called from @code{main}. | |
1195 | ||
1196 | The sum of the @code{self} and @code{children} fields is an estimate | |
1197 | of the amount of time spent within calls to @code{report} from @code{main}. | |
1198 | ||
1199 | @item called | |
1200 | Two numbers: the number of times @code{report} was called from @code{main}, | |
5af11cab | 1201 | followed by the total number of non-recursive calls to @code{report} from |
252b5132 RH |
1202 | all its callers. |
1203 | ||
1204 | @item name and index number | |
1205 | The name of the caller of @code{report} to which this line applies, | |
1206 | followed by the caller's index number. | |
1207 | ||
1208 | Not all functions have entries in the call graph; some | |
1209 | options to @code{gprof} request the omission of certain functions. | |
1210 | When a caller has no entry of its own, it still has caller-lines | |
1211 | in the entries of the functions it calls. | |
1212 | ||
1213 | If the caller is part of a recursion cycle, the cycle number is | |
1214 | printed between the name and the index number. | |
1215 | @end table | |
1216 | ||
1217 | If the identity of the callers of a function cannot be determined, a | |
1218 | dummy caller-line is printed which has @samp{<spontaneous>} as the | |
1219 | ``caller's name'' and all other fields blank. This can happen for | |
1220 | signal handlers. | |
1221 | @c What if some calls have determinable callers' names but not all? | |
1222 | @c FIXME - still relevant? | |
1223 | ||
afb17569 | 1224 | @node Subroutines |
252b5132 RH |
1225 | @subsection Lines for a Function's Subroutines |
1226 | ||
1227 | A function's entry has a line for each of its subroutines---in other | |
1228 | words, a line for each other function that it called. These lines' | |
1229 | fields correspond to the fields of the primary line, but their meanings | |
1230 | are different because of the difference in context. | |
1231 | ||
1232 | For reference, we repeat two lines from the entry for the function | |
1233 | @code{main}, the primary line and a line for a subroutine, together | |
1234 | with the heading line that shows the names of the fields: | |
1235 | ||
1236 | @smallexample | |
1237 | index % time self children called name | |
1238 | @dots{} | |
1239 | [2] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 main [2] | |
1240 | 0.00 0.05 1/1 report [3] | |
1241 | @end smallexample | |
1242 | ||
1243 | Here are the meanings of the fields in the subroutine-line for @code{main} | |
1244 | calling @code{report}: | |
1245 | ||
1246 | @table @code | |
1247 | @item self | |
1248 | An estimate of the amount of time spent directly within @code{report} | |
1249 | when @code{report} was called from @code{main}. | |
1250 | ||
1251 | @item children | |
1252 | An estimate of the amount of time spent in subroutines of @code{report} | |
1253 | when @code{report} was called from @code{main}. | |
1254 | ||
1255 | The sum of the @code{self} and @code{children} fields is an estimate | |
1256 | of the total time spent in calls to @code{report} from @code{main}. | |
1257 | ||
1258 | @item called | |
1259 | Two numbers, the number of calls to @code{report} from @code{main} | |
5af11cab | 1260 | followed by the total number of non-recursive calls to @code{report}. |
252b5132 RH |
1261 | This ratio is used to determine how much of @code{report}'s @code{self} |
1262 | and @code{children} time gets credited to @code{main}. | |
afb17569 | 1263 | @xref{Assumptions, ,Estimating @code{children} Times}. |
252b5132 RH |
1264 | |
1265 | @item name | |
1266 | The name of the subroutine of @code{main} to which this line applies, | |
1267 | followed by the subroutine's index number. | |
1268 | ||
1269 | If the caller is part of a recursion cycle, the cycle number is | |
1270 | printed between the name and the index number. | |
1271 | @end table | |
1272 | ||
afb17569 | 1273 | @node Cycles |
252b5132 RH |
1274 | @subsection How Mutually Recursive Functions Are Described |
1275 | @cindex cycle | |
1276 | @cindex recursion cycle | |
1277 | ||
1278 | The graph may be complicated by the presence of @dfn{cycles of | |
1279 | recursion} in the call graph. A cycle exists if a function calls | |
1280 | another function that (directly or indirectly) calls (or appears to | |
1281 | call) the original function. For example: if @code{a} calls @code{b}, | |
1282 | and @code{b} calls @code{a}, then @code{a} and @code{b} form a cycle. | |
1283 | ||
1284 | Whenever there are call paths both ways between a pair of functions, they | |
1285 | belong to the same cycle. If @code{a} and @code{b} call each other and | |
1286 | @code{b} and @code{c} call each other, all three make one cycle. Note that | |
1287 | even if @code{b} only calls @code{a} if it was not called from @code{a}, | |
1288 | @code{gprof} cannot determine this, so @code{a} and @code{b} are still | |
1289 | considered a cycle. | |
1290 | ||
1291 | The cycles are numbered with consecutive integers. When a function | |
1292 | belongs to a cycle, each time the function name appears in the call graph | |
1293 | it is followed by @samp{<cycle @var{number}>}. | |
1294 | ||
1295 | The reason cycles matter is that they make the time values in the call | |
1296 | graph paradoxical. The ``time spent in children'' of @code{a} should | |
1297 | include the time spent in its subroutine @code{b} and in @code{b}'s | |
1298 | subroutines---but one of @code{b}'s subroutines is @code{a}! How much of | |
1299 | @code{a}'s time should be included in the children of @code{a}, when | |
1300 | @code{a} is indirectly recursive? | |
1301 | ||
1302 | The way @code{gprof} resolves this paradox is by creating a single entry | |
1303 | for the cycle as a whole. The primary line of this entry describes the | |
1304 | total time spent directly in the functions of the cycle. The | |
1305 | ``subroutines'' of the cycle are the individual functions of the cycle, and | |
1306 | all other functions that were called directly by them. The ``callers'' of | |
1307 | the cycle are the functions, outside the cycle, that called functions in | |
1308 | the cycle. | |
1309 | ||
1310 | Here is an example portion of a call graph which shows a cycle containing | |
1311 | functions @code{a} and @code{b}. The cycle was entered by a call to | |
1312 | @code{a} from @code{main}; both @code{a} and @code{b} called @code{c}. | |
1313 | ||
1314 | @smallexample | |
1315 | index % time self children called name | |
1316 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1317 | 1.77 0 1/1 main [2] | |
1318 | [3] 91.71 1.77 0 1+5 <cycle 1 as a whole> [3] | |
1319 | 1.02 0 3 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1320 | 0.75 0 2 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1321 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1322 | 3 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1323 | [4] 52.85 1.02 0 0 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1324 | 2 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1325 | 0 0 3/6 c [6] | |
1326 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1327 | 1.77 0 1/1 main [2] | |
1328 | 2 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1329 | [5] 38.86 0.75 0 1 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1330 | 3 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1331 | 0 0 3/6 c [6] | |
1332 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1333 | @end smallexample | |
1334 | ||
1335 | @noindent | |
1336 | (The entire call graph for this program contains in addition an entry for | |
1337 | @code{main}, which calls @code{a}, and an entry for @code{c}, with callers | |
1338 | @code{a} and @code{b}.) | |
1339 | ||
1340 | @smallexample | |
1341 | index % time self children called name | |
1342 | <spontaneous> | |
1343 | [1] 100.00 0 1.93 0 start [1] | |
1344 | 0.16 1.77 1/1 main [2] | |
1345 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1346 | 0.16 1.77 1/1 start [1] | |
1347 | [2] 100.00 0.16 1.77 1 main [2] | |
1348 | 1.77 0 1/1 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1349 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1350 | 1.77 0 1/1 main [2] | |
1351 | [3] 91.71 1.77 0 1+5 <cycle 1 as a whole> [3] | |
1352 | 1.02 0 3 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1353 | 0.75 0 2 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1354 | 0 0 6/6 c [6] | |
1355 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1356 | 3 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1357 | [4] 52.85 1.02 0 0 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1358 | 2 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1359 | 0 0 3/6 c [6] | |
1360 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1361 | 1.77 0 1/1 main [2] | |
1362 | 2 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1363 | [5] 38.86 0.75 0 1 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1364 | 3 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1365 | 0 0 3/6 c [6] | |
1366 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1367 | 0 0 3/6 b <cycle 1> [4] | |
1368 | 0 0 3/6 a <cycle 1> [5] | |
1369 | [6] 0.00 0 0 6 c [6] | |
1370 | ---------------------------------------- | |
1371 | @end smallexample | |
1372 | ||
1373 | The @code{self} field of the cycle's primary line is the total time | |
1374 | spent in all the functions of the cycle. It equals the sum of the | |
1375 | @code{self} fields for the individual functions in the cycle, found | |
1376 | in the entry in the subroutine lines for these functions. | |
1377 | ||
1378 | The @code{children} fields of the cycle's primary line and subroutine lines | |
1379 | count only subroutines outside the cycle. Even though @code{a} calls | |
1380 | @code{b}, the time spent in those calls to @code{b} is not counted in | |
1381 | @code{a}'s @code{children} time. Thus, we do not encounter the problem of | |
1382 | what to do when the time in those calls to @code{b} includes indirect | |
1383 | recursive calls back to @code{a}. | |
1384 | ||
1385 | The @code{children} field of a caller-line in the cycle's entry estimates | |
1386 | the amount of time spent @emph{in the whole cycle}, and its other | |
1387 | subroutines, on the times when that caller called a function in the cycle. | |
1388 | ||
afb17569 | 1389 | The @code{called} field in the primary line for the cycle has two numbers: |
252b5132 RH |
1390 | first, the number of times functions in the cycle were called by functions |
1391 | outside the cycle; second, the number of times they were called by | |
1392 | functions in the cycle (including times when a function in the cycle calls | |
5af11cab | 1393 | itself). This is a generalization of the usual split into non-recursive and |
252b5132 RH |
1394 | recursive calls. |
1395 | ||
afb17569 | 1396 | The @code{called} field of a subroutine-line for a cycle member in the |
252b5132 RH |
1397 | cycle's entry says how many time that function was called from functions in |
1398 | the cycle. The total of all these is the second number in the primary line's | |
afb17569 | 1399 | @code{called} field. |
252b5132 RH |
1400 | |
1401 | In the individual entry for a function in a cycle, the other functions in | |
1402 | the same cycle can appear as subroutines and as callers. These lines show | |
1403 | how many times each function in the cycle called or was called from each other | |
1404 | function in the cycle. The @code{self} and @code{children} fields in these | |
1405 | lines are blank because of the difficulty of defining meanings for them | |
1406 | when recursion is going on. | |
1407 | ||
afb17569 | 1408 | @node Line-by-line |
252b5132 RH |
1409 | @section Line-by-line Profiling |
1410 | ||
1411 | @code{gprof}'s @samp{-l} option causes the program to perform | |
1412 | @dfn{line-by-line} profiling. In this mode, histogram | |
1413 | samples are assigned not to functions, but to individual | |
25c909f1 NC |
1414 | lines of source code. This only works with programs compiled with |
1415 | older versions of the @code{gcc} compiler. Newer versions of @code{gcc} | |
1416 | use a different program - @code{gcov} - to display line-by-line | |
1417 | profiling information. | |
1418 | ||
1419 | With the older versions of @code{gcc} the program usually has to be | |
1420 | compiled with a @samp{-g} option, in addition to @samp{-pg}, in order | |
252b5132 | 1421 | to generate debugging symbols for tracking source code lines. |
25c909f1 NC |
1422 | Note, in much older versions of @code{gcc} the program had to be |
1423 | compiled with the @samp{-a} command line option as well. | |
252b5132 RH |
1424 | |
1425 | The flat profile is the most useful output table | |
1426 | in line-by-line mode. | |
1427 | The call graph isn't as useful as normal, since | |
1428 | the current version of @code{gprof} does not propagate | |
1429 | call graph arcs from source code lines to the enclosing function. | |
1430 | The call graph does, however, show each line of code | |
1431 | that called each function, along with a count. | |
1432 | ||
1433 | Here is a section of @code{gprof}'s output, without line-by-line profiling. | |
1434 | Note that @code{ct_init} accounted for four histogram hits, and | |
1435 | 13327 calls to @code{init_block}. | |
1436 | ||
1437 | @smallexample | |
1438 | Flat profile: | |
1439 | ||
1440 | Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds. | |
1441 | % cumulative self self total | |
1442 | time seconds seconds calls us/call us/call name | |
1443 | 30.77 0.13 0.04 6335 6.31 6.31 ct_init | |
1444 | ||
1445 | ||
1446 | Call graph (explanation follows) | |
1447 | ||
1448 | ||
1449 | granularity: each sample hit covers 4 byte(s) for 7.69% of 0.13 seconds | |
1450 | ||
1451 | index % time self children called name | |
1452 | ||
1453 | 0.00 0.00 1/13496 name_too_long | |
1454 | 0.00 0.00 40/13496 deflate | |
1455 | 0.00 0.00 128/13496 deflate_fast | |
1456 | 0.00 0.00 13327/13496 ct_init | |
1457 | [7] 0.0 0.00 0.00 13496 init_block | |
1458 | ||
1459 | @end smallexample | |
1460 | ||
1461 | Now let's look at some of @code{gprof}'s output from the same program run, | |
1462 | this time with line-by-line profiling enabled. Note that @code{ct_init}'s | |
afb17569 | 1463 | four histogram hits are broken down into four lines of source code---one hit |
5af11cab | 1464 | occurred on each of lines 349, 351, 382 and 385. In the call graph, |
252b5132 RH |
1465 | note how |
1466 | @code{ct_init}'s 13327 calls to @code{init_block} are broken down | |
1467 | into one call from line 396, 3071 calls from line 384, 3730 calls | |
1468 | from line 385, and 6525 calls from 387. | |
1469 | ||
1470 | @smallexample | |
1471 | Flat profile: | |
1472 | ||
1473 | Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds. | |
1474 | % cumulative self | |
1475 | time seconds seconds calls name | |
1476 | 7.69 0.10 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:349) | |
1477 | 7.69 0.11 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:351) | |
1478 | 7.69 0.12 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:382) | |
1479 | 7.69 0.13 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:385) | |
1480 | ||
1481 | ||
1482 | Call graph (explanation follows) | |
1483 | ||
1484 | ||
1485 | granularity: each sample hit covers 4 byte(s) for 7.69% of 0.13 seconds | |
1486 | ||
1487 | % time self children called name | |
1488 | ||
1489 | 0.00 0.00 1/13496 name_too_long (gzip.c:1440) | |
1490 | 0.00 0.00 1/13496 deflate (deflate.c:763) | |
1491 | 0.00 0.00 1/13496 ct_init (trees.c:396) | |
1492 | 0.00 0.00 2/13496 deflate (deflate.c:727) | |
1493 | 0.00 0.00 4/13496 deflate (deflate.c:686) | |
1494 | 0.00 0.00 5/13496 deflate (deflate.c:675) | |
1495 | 0.00 0.00 12/13496 deflate (deflate.c:679) | |
1496 | 0.00 0.00 16/13496 deflate (deflate.c:730) | |
1497 | 0.00 0.00 128/13496 deflate_fast (deflate.c:654) | |
1498 | 0.00 0.00 3071/13496 ct_init (trees.c:384) | |
1499 | 0.00 0.00 3730/13496 ct_init (trees.c:385) | |
1500 | 0.00 0.00 6525/13496 ct_init (trees.c:387) | |
1501 | [6] 0.0 0.00 0.00 13496 init_block (trees.c:408) | |
1502 | ||
1503 | @end smallexample | |
1504 | ||
1505 | ||
afb17569 | 1506 | @node Annotated Source |
252b5132 RH |
1507 | @section The Annotated Source Listing |
1508 | ||
1509 | @code{gprof}'s @samp{-A} option triggers an annotated source listing, | |
1510 | which lists the program's source code, each function labeled with the | |
1511 | number of times it was called. You may also need to specify the | |
1512 | @samp{-I} option, if @code{gprof} can't find the source code files. | |
1513 | ||
25c909f1 NC |
1514 | With older versions of @code{gcc} compiling with @samp{gcc @dots{} -g |
1515 | -pg -a} augments your program with basic-block counting code, in | |
1516 | addition to function counting code. This enables @code{gprof} to | |
1517 | determine how many times each line of code was executed. With newer | |
1518 | versions of @code{gcc} support for displaying basic-block counts is | |
1519 | provided by the @code{gcov} program. | |
1520 | ||
252b5132 RH |
1521 | For example, consider the following function, taken from gzip, |
1522 | with line numbers added: | |
1523 | ||
1524 | @smallexample | |
1525 | 1 ulg updcrc(s, n) | |
1526 | 2 uch *s; | |
1527 | 3 unsigned n; | |
1528 | 4 @{ | |
1529 | 5 register ulg c; | |
1530 | 6 | |
1531 | 7 static ulg crc = (ulg)0xffffffffL; | |
1532 | 8 | |
1533 | 9 if (s == NULL) @{ | |
1534 | 10 c = 0xffffffffL; | |
1535 | 11 @} else @{ | |
1536 | 12 c = crc; | |
1537 | 13 if (n) do @{ | |
1538 | 14 c = crc_32_tab[...]; | |
1539 | 15 @} while (--n); | |
1540 | 16 @} | |
1541 | 17 crc = c; | |
1542 | 18 return c ^ 0xffffffffL; | |
1543 | 19 @} | |
1544 | ||
1545 | @end smallexample | |
1546 | ||
1547 | @code{updcrc} has at least five basic-blocks. | |
1548 | One is the function itself. The | |
1549 | @code{if} statement on line 9 generates two more basic-blocks, one | |
1550 | for each branch of the @code{if}. A fourth basic-block results from | |
1551 | the @code{if} on line 13, and the contents of the @code{do} loop form | |
1552 | the fifth basic-block. The compiler may also generate additional | |
1553 | basic-blocks to handle various special cases. | |
1554 | ||
1555 | A program augmented for basic-block counting can be analyzed with | |
afb17569 BW |
1556 | @samp{gprof -l -A}. |
1557 | The @samp{-x} option is also helpful, | |
1558 | to ensure that each line of code is labeled at least once. | |
252b5132 RH |
1559 | Here is @code{updcrc}'s |
1560 | annotated source listing for a sample @code{gzip} run: | |
1561 | ||
1562 | @smallexample | |
1563 | ulg updcrc(s, n) | |
1564 | uch *s; | |
1565 | unsigned n; | |
1566 | 2 ->@{ | |
1567 | register ulg c; | |
1568 | ||
1569 | static ulg crc = (ulg)0xffffffffL; | |
1570 | ||
1571 | 2 -> if (s == NULL) @{ | |
afb17569 | 1572 | 1 -> c = 0xffffffffL; |
252b5132 | 1573 | 1 -> @} else @{ |
afb17569 | 1574 | 1 -> c = crc; |
252b5132 RH |
1575 | 1 -> if (n) do @{ |
1576 | 26312 -> c = crc_32_tab[...]; | |
1577 | 26312,1,26311 -> @} while (--n); | |
1578 | @} | |
1579 | 2 -> crc = c; | |
1580 | 2 -> return c ^ 0xffffffffL; | |
1581 | 2 ->@} | |
1582 | @end smallexample | |
1583 | ||
1584 | In this example, the function was called twice, passing once through | |
1585 | each branch of the @code{if} statement. The body of the @code{do} | |
1586 | loop was executed a total of 26312 times. Note how the @code{while} | |
1587 | statement is annotated. It began execution 26312 times, once for | |
1588 | each iteration through the loop. One of those times (the last time) | |
1589 | it exited, while it branched back to the beginning of the loop 26311 times. | |
1590 | ||
1591 | @node Inaccuracy | |
1592 | @chapter Inaccuracy of @code{gprof} Output | |
1593 | ||
1594 | @menu | |
1595 | * Sampling Error:: Statistical margins of error | |
1596 | * Assumptions:: Estimating children times | |
1597 | @end menu | |
1598 | ||
afb17569 | 1599 | @node Sampling Error |
252b5132 RH |
1600 | @section Statistical Sampling Error |
1601 | ||
1602 | The run-time figures that @code{gprof} gives you are based on a sampling | |
1603 | process, so they are subject to statistical inaccuracy. If a function runs | |
1604 | only a small amount of time, so that on the average the sampling process | |
1605 | ought to catch that function in the act only once, there is a pretty good | |
1606 | chance it will actually find that function zero times, or twice. | |
1607 | ||
1608 | By contrast, the number-of-calls and basic-block figures | |
1609 | are derived by counting, not | |
1610 | sampling. They are completely accurate and will not vary from run to run | |
1611 | if your program is deterministic. | |
1612 | ||
1613 | The @dfn{sampling period} that is printed at the beginning of the flat | |
1614 | profile says how often samples are taken. The rule of thumb is that a | |
1615 | run-time figure is accurate if it is considerably bigger than the sampling | |
1616 | period. | |
1617 | ||
1618 | The actual amount of error can be predicted. | |
1619 | For @var{n} samples, the @emph{expected} error | |
1620 | is the square-root of @var{n}. For example, | |
1621 | if the sampling period is 0.01 seconds and @code{foo}'s run-time is 1 second, | |
1622 | @var{n} is 100 samples (1 second/0.01 seconds), sqrt(@var{n}) is 10 samples, so | |
1623 | the expected error in @code{foo}'s run-time is 0.1 seconds (10*0.01 seconds), | |
1624 | or ten percent of the observed value. | |
1625 | Again, if the sampling period is 0.01 seconds and @code{bar}'s run-time is | |
1626 | 100 seconds, @var{n} is 10000 samples, sqrt(@var{n}) is 100 samples, so | |
1627 | the expected error in @code{bar}'s run-time is 1 second, | |
1628 | or one percent of the observed value. | |
1629 | It is likely to | |
1630 | vary this much @emph{on the average} from one profiling run to the next. | |
1631 | (@emph{Sometimes} it will vary more.) | |
1632 | ||
1633 | This does not mean that a small run-time figure is devoid of information. | |
1634 | If the program's @emph{total} run-time is large, a small run-time for one | |
1635 | function does tell you that that function used an insignificant fraction of | |
1636 | the whole program's time. Usually this means it is not worth optimizing. | |
1637 | ||
1638 | One way to get more accuracy is to give your program more (but similar) | |
1639 | input data so it will take longer. Another way is to combine the data from | |
1640 | several runs, using the @samp{-s} option of @code{gprof}. Here is how: | |
1641 | ||
1642 | @enumerate | |
1643 | @item | |
1644 | Run your program once. | |
1645 | ||
1646 | @item | |
1647 | Issue the command @samp{mv gmon.out gmon.sum}. | |
1648 | ||
1649 | @item | |
1650 | Run your program again, the same as before. | |
1651 | ||
1652 | @item | |
1653 | Merge the new data in @file{gmon.out} into @file{gmon.sum} with this command: | |
1654 | ||
1655 | @example | |
1656 | gprof -s @var{executable-file} gmon.out gmon.sum | |
1657 | @end example | |
1658 | ||
1659 | @item | |
1660 | Repeat the last two steps as often as you wish. | |
1661 | ||
1662 | @item | |
1663 | Analyze the cumulative data using this command: | |
1664 | ||
1665 | @example | |
1666 | gprof @var{executable-file} gmon.sum > @var{output-file} | |
1667 | @end example | |
1668 | @end enumerate | |
1669 | ||
afb17569 | 1670 | @node Assumptions |
252b5132 RH |
1671 | @section Estimating @code{children} Times |
1672 | ||
1673 | Some of the figures in the call graph are estimates---for example, the | |
1be59579 | 1674 | @code{children} time values and all the time figures in caller and |
252b5132 RH |
1675 | subroutine lines. |
1676 | ||
1677 | There is no direct information about these measurements in the profile | |
1678 | data itself. Instead, @code{gprof} estimates them by making an assumption | |
1679 | about your program that might or might not be true. | |
1680 | ||
1681 | The assumption made is that the average time spent in each call to any | |
1682 | function @code{foo} is not correlated with who called @code{foo}. If | |
1683 | @code{foo} used 5 seconds in all, and 2/5 of the calls to @code{foo} came | |
1684 | from @code{a}, then @code{foo} contributes 2 seconds to @code{a}'s | |
1685 | @code{children} time, by assumption. | |
1686 | ||
1687 | This assumption is usually true enough, but for some programs it is far | |
1688 | from true. Suppose that @code{foo} returns very quickly when its argument | |
1689 | is zero; suppose that @code{a} always passes zero as an argument, while | |
1690 | other callers of @code{foo} pass other arguments. In this program, all the | |
1691 | time spent in @code{foo} is in the calls from callers other than @code{a}. | |
1692 | But @code{gprof} has no way of knowing this; it will blindly and | |
1693 | incorrectly charge 2 seconds of time in @code{foo} to the children of | |
1694 | @code{a}. | |
1695 | ||
1696 | @c FIXME - has this been fixed? | |
1697 | We hope some day to put more complete data into @file{gmon.out}, so that | |
1698 | this assumption is no longer needed, if we can figure out how. For the | |
afb17569 | 1699 | novice, the estimated figures are usually more useful than misleading. |
252b5132 RH |
1700 | |
1701 | @node How do I? | |
1702 | @chapter Answers to Common Questions | |
1703 | ||
1704 | @table @asis | |
83aeabb6 NC |
1705 | @item How can I get more exact information about hot spots in my program? |
1706 | ||
1707 | Looking at the per-line call counts only tells part of the story. | |
1708 | Because @code{gprof} can only report call times and counts by function, | |
1709 | the best way to get finer-grained information on where the program | |
1710 | is spending its time is to re-factor large functions into sequences | |
83b6e7e8 | 1711 | of calls to smaller ones. Beware however that this can introduce |
b45619c0 | 1712 | artificial hot spots since compiling with @samp{-pg} adds a significant |
83b6e7e8 NC |
1713 | overhead to function calls. An alternative solution is to use a |
1714 | non-intrusive profiler, e.g.@: oprofile. | |
83aeabb6 | 1715 | |
252b5132 RH |
1716 | @item How do I find which lines in my program were executed the most times? |
1717 | ||
25c909f1 | 1718 | Use the @code{gcov} program. |
252b5132 RH |
1719 | |
1720 | @item How do I find which lines in my program called a particular function? | |
1721 | ||
5af11cab | 1722 | Use @samp{gprof -l} and lookup the function in the call graph. |
252b5132 RH |
1723 | The callers will be broken down by function and line number. |
1724 | ||
1725 | @item How do I analyze a program that runs for less than a second? | |
1726 | ||
1727 | Try using a shell script like this one: | |
1728 | ||
1729 | @example | |
1730 | for i in `seq 1 100`; do | |
1731 | fastprog | |
1732 | mv gmon.out gmon.out.$i | |
1733 | done | |
1734 | ||
1735 | gprof -s fastprog gmon.out.* | |
1736 | ||
1737 | gprof fastprog gmon.sum | |
1738 | @end example | |
1739 | ||
1740 | If your program is completely deterministic, all the call counts | |
b45619c0 | 1741 | will be simple multiples of 100 (i.e., a function called once in |
252b5132 RH |
1742 | each run will appear with a call count of 100). |
1743 | ||
1744 | @end table | |
1745 | ||
1746 | @node Incompatibilities | |
1747 | @chapter Incompatibilities with Unix @code{gprof} | |
1748 | ||
1749 | @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} and Berkeley Unix @code{gprof} use the same data | |
1750 | file @file{gmon.out}, and provide essentially the same information. But | |
1751 | there are a few differences. | |
1752 | ||
1753 | @itemize @bullet | |
1754 | @item | |
1755 | @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} uses a new, generalized file format with support | |
1756 | for basic-block execution counts and non-realtime histograms. A magic | |
1757 | cookie and version number allows @code{gprof} to easily identify | |
1758 | new style files. Old BSD-style files can still be read. | |
afb17569 | 1759 | @xref{File Format, ,Profiling Data File Format}. |
252b5132 RH |
1760 | |
1761 | @item | |
1762 | For a recursive function, Unix @code{gprof} lists the function as a | |
1763 | parent and as a child, with a @code{calls} field that lists the number | |
1764 | of recursive calls. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} omits these lines and puts | |
1765 | the number of recursive calls in the primary line. | |
1766 | ||
1767 | @item | |
1768 | When a function is suppressed from the call graph with @samp{-e}, @sc{gnu} | |
1769 | @code{gprof} still lists it as a subroutine of functions that call it. | |
1770 | ||
1771 | @item | |
1772 | @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} accepts the @samp{-k} with its argument | |
1773 | in the form @samp{from/to}, instead of @samp{from to}. | |
1774 | ||
1775 | @item | |
1776 | In the annotated source listing, | |
1777 | if there are multiple basic blocks on the same line, | |
5af11cab | 1778 | @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} prints all of their counts, separated by commas. |
252b5132 RH |
1779 | |
1780 | @ignore - it does this now | |
1781 | @item | |
1782 | The function names printed in @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} output do not include | |
1783 | the leading underscores that are added internally to the front of all | |
1784 | C identifiers on many operating systems. | |
1785 | @end ignore | |
1786 | ||
1787 | @item | |
1788 | The blurbs, field widths, and output formats are different. @sc{gnu} | |
1789 | @code{gprof} prints blurbs after the tables, so that you can see the | |
1790 | tables without skipping the blurbs. | |
1791 | @end itemize | |
1792 | ||
1793 | @node Details | |
1794 | @chapter Details of Profiling | |
1795 | ||
1796 | @menu | |
5af11cab | 1797 | * Implementation:: How a program collects profiling information |
252b5132 RH |
1798 | * File Format:: Format of @samp{gmon.out} files |
1799 | * Internals:: @code{gprof}'s internal operation | |
1800 | * Debugging:: Using @code{gprof}'s @samp{-d} option | |
1801 | @end menu | |
1802 | ||
afb17569 | 1803 | @node Implementation |
252b5132 RH |
1804 | @section Implementation of Profiling |
1805 | ||
1806 | Profiling works by changing how every function in your program is compiled | |
1807 | so that when it is called, it will stash away some information about where | |
1808 | it was called from. From this, the profiler can figure out what function | |
1809 | called it, and can count how many times it was called. This change is made | |
1810 | by the compiler when your program is compiled with the @samp{-pg} option, | |
1811 | which causes every function to call @code{mcount} | |
1812 | (or @code{_mcount}, or @code{__mcount}, depending on the OS and compiler) | |
1813 | as one of its first operations. | |
1814 | ||
1815 | The @code{mcount} routine, included in the profiling library, | |
1816 | is responsible for recording in an in-memory call graph table | |
1817 | both its parent routine (the child) and its parent's parent. This is | |
1818 | typically done by examining the stack frame to find both | |
1819 | the address of the child, and the return address in the original parent. | |
5af11cab | 1820 | Since this is a very machine-dependent operation, @code{mcount} |
252b5132 RH |
1821 | itself is typically a short assembly-language stub routine |
1822 | that extracts the required | |
1823 | information, and then calls @code{__mcount_internal} | |
afb17569 | 1824 | (a normal C function) with two arguments---@code{frompc} and @code{selfpc}. |
252b5132 RH |
1825 | @code{__mcount_internal} is responsible for maintaining |
1826 | the in-memory call graph, which records @code{frompc}, @code{selfpc}, | |
5af11cab | 1827 | and the number of times each of these call arcs was traversed. |
252b5132 RH |
1828 | |
1829 | GCC Version 2 provides a magical function (@code{__builtin_return_address}), | |
1830 | which allows a generic @code{mcount} function to extract the | |
1831 | required information from the stack frame. However, on some | |
1832 | architectures, most notably the SPARC, using this builtin can be | |
1833 | very computationally expensive, and an assembly language version | |
1834 | of @code{mcount} is used for performance reasons. | |
1835 | ||
1836 | Number-of-calls information for library routines is collected by using a | |
1837 | special version of the C library. The programs in it are the same as in | |
1838 | the usual C library, but they were compiled with @samp{-pg}. If you | |
1839 | link your program with @samp{gcc @dots{} -pg}, it automatically uses the | |
1840 | profiling version of the library. | |
1841 | ||
1842 | Profiling also involves watching your program as it runs, and keeping a | |
1843 | histogram of where the program counter happens to be every now and then. | |
1844 | Typically the program counter is looked at around 100 times per second of | |
1845 | run time, but the exact frequency may vary from system to system. | |
1846 | ||
1847 | This is done is one of two ways. Most UNIX-like operating systems | |
1848 | provide a @code{profil()} system call, which registers a memory | |
1849 | array with the kernel, along with a scale | |
1850 | factor that determines how the program's address space maps | |
1851 | into the array. | |
1852 | Typical scaling values cause every 2 to 8 bytes of address space | |
1853 | to map into a single array slot. | |
1854 | On every tick of the system clock | |
1855 | (assuming the profiled program is running), the value of the | |
1856 | program counter is examined and the corresponding slot in | |
1857 | the memory array is incremented. Since this is done in the kernel, | |
1858 | which had to interrupt the process anyway to handle the clock | |
1859 | interrupt, very little additional system overhead is required. | |
1860 | ||
1861 | However, some operating systems, most notably Linux 2.0 (and earlier), | |
1862 | do not provide a @code{profil()} system call. On such a system, | |
1863 | arrangements are made for the kernel to periodically deliver | |
1864 | a signal to the process (typically via @code{setitimer()}), | |
1865 | which then performs the same operation of examining the | |
1866 | program counter and incrementing a slot in the memory array. | |
1867 | Since this method requires a signal to be delivered to | |
1868 | user space every time a sample is taken, it uses considerably | |
1869 | more overhead than kernel-based profiling. Also, due to the | |
1870 | added delay required to deliver the signal, this method is | |
1871 | less accurate as well. | |
1872 | ||
1873 | A special startup routine allocates memory for the histogram and | |
1874 | either calls @code{profil()} or sets up | |
1875 | a clock signal handler. | |
1876 | This routine (@code{monstartup}) can be invoked in several ways. | |
1877 | On Linux systems, a special profiling startup file @code{gcrt0.o}, | |
1878 | which invokes @code{monstartup} before @code{main}, | |
1879 | is used instead of the default @code{crt0.o}. | |
1880 | Use of this special startup file is one of the effects | |
1881 | of using @samp{gcc @dots{} -pg} to link. | |
1882 | On SPARC systems, no special startup files are used. | |
1883 | Rather, the @code{mcount} routine, when it is invoked for | |
1884 | the first time (typically when @code{main} is called), | |
1885 | calls @code{monstartup}. | |
1886 | ||
1887 | If the compiler's @samp{-a} option was used, basic-block counting | |
1888 | is also enabled. Each object file is then compiled with a static array | |
1889 | of counts, initially zero. | |
1890 | In the executable code, every time a new basic-block begins | |
afb17569 | 1891 | (i.e., when an @code{if} statement appears), an extra instruction |
252b5132 RH |
1892 | is inserted to increment the corresponding count in the array. |
1893 | At compile time, a paired array was constructed that recorded | |
1894 | the starting address of each basic-block. Taken together, | |
1895 | the two arrays record the starting address of every basic-block, | |
1896 | along with the number of times it was executed. | |
1897 | ||
1898 | The profiling library also includes a function (@code{mcleanup}) which is | |
1899 | typically registered using @code{atexit()} to be called as the | |
1900 | program exits, and is responsible for writing the file @file{gmon.out}. | |
1901 | Profiling is turned off, various headers are output, and the histogram | |
1902 | is written, followed by the call-graph arcs and the basic-block counts. | |
1903 | ||
1904 | The output from @code{gprof} gives no indication of parts of your program that | |
1905 | are limited by I/O or swapping bandwidth. This is because samples of the | |
1906 | program counter are taken at fixed intervals of the program's run time. | |
1907 | Therefore, the | |
1908 | time measurements in @code{gprof} output say nothing about time that your | |
1909 | program was not running. For example, a part of the program that creates | |
1910 | so much data that it cannot all fit in physical memory at once may run very | |
1911 | slowly due to thrashing, but @code{gprof} will say it uses little time. On | |
1912 | the other hand, sampling by run time has the advantage that the amount of | |
1913 | load due to other users won't directly affect the output you get. | |
1914 | ||
afb17569 | 1915 | @node File Format |
252b5132 RH |
1916 | @section Profiling Data File Format |
1917 | ||
1918 | The old BSD-derived file format used for profile data does not contain a | |
1919 | magic cookie that allows to check whether a data file really is a | |
5af11cab | 1920 | @code{gprof} file. Furthermore, it does not provide a version number, thus |
252b5132 RH |
1921 | rendering changes to the file format almost impossible. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} |
1922 | uses a new file format that provides these features. For backward | |
1923 | compatibility, @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} continues to support the old BSD-derived | |
1924 | format, but not all features are supported with it. For example, | |
1925 | basic-block execution counts cannot be accommodated by the old file | |
1926 | format. | |
1927 | ||
1928 | The new file format is defined in header file @file{gmon_out.h}. It | |
1929 | consists of a header containing the magic cookie and a version number, | |
1930 | as well as some spare bytes available for future extensions. All data | |
dbdec02b NC |
1931 | in a profile data file is in the native format of the target for which |
1932 | the profile was collected. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} adapts automatically | |
1933 | to the byte-order in use. | |
252b5132 RH |
1934 | |
1935 | In the new file format, the header is followed by a sequence of | |
1936 | records. Currently, there are three different record types: histogram | |
1937 | records, call-graph arc records, and basic-block execution count | |
1938 | records. Each file can contain any number of each record type. When | |
1939 | reading a file, @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} will ensure records of the same type are | |
1940 | compatible with each other and compute the union of all records. For | |
1941 | example, for basic-block execution counts, the union is simply the sum | |
1942 | of all execution counts for each basic-block. | |
1943 | ||
1944 | @subsection Histogram Records | |
1945 | ||
1946 | Histogram records consist of a header that is followed by an array of | |
1947 | bins. The header contains the text-segment range that the histogram | |
1948 | spans, the size of the histogram in bytes (unlike in the old BSD | |
1949 | format, this does not include the size of the header), the rate of the | |
1950 | profiling clock, and the physical dimension that the bin counts | |
1951 | represent after being scaled by the profiling clock rate. The | |
1952 | physical dimension is specified in two parts: a long name of up to 15 | |
1953 | characters and a single character abbreviation. For example, a | |
1954 | histogram representing real-time would specify the long name as | |
afb17569 | 1955 | ``seconds'' and the abbreviation as ``s''. This feature is useful for |
252b5132 RH |
1956 | architectures that support performance monitor hardware (which, |
1957 | fortunately, is becoming increasingly common). For example, under DEC | |
afb17569 | 1958 | OSF/1, the ``uprofile'' command can be used to produce a histogram of, |
252b5132 | 1959 | say, instruction cache misses. In this case, the dimension in the |
afb17569 BW |
1960 | histogram header could be set to ``i-cache misses'' and the abbreviation |
1961 | could be set to ``1'' (because it is simply a count, not a physical | |
252b5132 RH |
1962 | dimension). Also, the profiling rate would have to be set to 1 in |
1963 | this case. | |
1964 | ||
1965 | Histogram bins are 16-bit numbers and each bin represent an equal | |
1966 | amount of text-space. For example, if the text-segment is one | |
1967 | thousand bytes long and if there are ten bins in the histogram, each | |
1968 | bin represents one hundred bytes. | |
1969 | ||
1970 | ||
1971 | @subsection Call-Graph Records | |
1972 | ||
1973 | Call-graph records have a format that is identical to the one used in | |
1974 | the BSD-derived file format. It consists of an arc in the call graph | |
1975 | and a count indicating the number of times the arc was traversed | |
1976 | during program execution. Arcs are specified by a pair of addresses: | |
1977 | the first must be within caller's function and the second must be | |
1978 | within the callee's function. When performing profiling at the | |
1979 | function level, these addresses can point anywhere within the | |
1980 | respective function. However, when profiling at the line-level, it is | |
1981 | better if the addresses are as close to the call-site/entry-point as | |
1982 | possible. This will ensure that the line-level call-graph is able to | |
1983 | identify exactly which line of source code performed calls to a | |
1984 | function. | |
1985 | ||
1986 | @subsection Basic-Block Execution Count Records | |
1987 | ||
1988 | Basic-block execution count records consist of a header followed by a | |
1989 | sequence of address/count pairs. The header simply specifies the | |
1990 | length of the sequence. In an address/count pair, the address | |
1991 | identifies a basic-block and the count specifies the number of times | |
1992 | that basic-block was executed. Any address within the basic-address can | |
1993 | be used. | |
1994 | ||
afb17569 | 1995 | @node Internals |
252b5132 RH |
1996 | @section @code{gprof}'s Internal Operation |
1997 | ||
1998 | Like most programs, @code{gprof} begins by processing its options. | |
1999 | During this stage, it may building its symspec list | |
afb17569 | 2000 | (@code{sym_ids.c:@-sym_id_add}), if |
252b5132 RH |
2001 | options are specified which use symspecs. |
2002 | @code{gprof} maintains a single linked list of symspecs, | |
2003 | which will eventually get turned into 12 symbol tables, | |
afb17569 | 2004 | organized into six include/exclude pairs---one |
252b5132 RH |
2005 | pair each for the flat profile (INCL_FLAT/EXCL_FLAT), |
2006 | the call graph arcs (INCL_ARCS/EXCL_ARCS), | |
2007 | printing in the call graph (INCL_GRAPH/EXCL_GRAPH), | |
2008 | timing propagation in the call graph (INCL_TIME/EXCL_TIME), | |
2009 | the annotated source listing (INCL_ANNO/EXCL_ANNO), | |
2010 | and the execution count listing (INCL_EXEC/EXCL_EXEC). | |
2011 | ||
2012 | After option processing, @code{gprof} finishes | |
2013 | building the symspec list by adding all the symspecs in | |
2014 | @code{default_excluded_list} to the exclude lists | |
2015 | EXCL_TIME and EXCL_GRAPH, and if line-by-line profiling is specified, | |
2016 | EXCL_FLAT as well. | |
2017 | These default excludes are not added to EXCL_ANNO, EXCL_ARCS, and EXCL_EXEC. | |
2018 | ||
2019 | Next, the BFD library is called to open the object file, | |
2020 | verify that it is an object file, | |
afb17569 | 2021 | and read its symbol table (@code{core.c:@-core_init}), |
252b5132 | 2022 | using @code{bfd_canonicalize_symtab} after mallocing |
5af11cab | 2023 | an appropriately sized array of symbols. At this point, |
252b5132 RH |
2024 | function mappings are read (if the @samp{--file-ordering} option |
2025 | has been specified), and the core text space is read into | |
2026 | memory (if the @samp{-c} option was given). | |
2027 | ||
2028 | @code{gprof}'s own symbol table, an array of Sym structures, | |
2029 | is now built. | |
2030 | This is done in one of two ways, by one of two routines, depending | |
2031 | on whether line-by-line profiling (@samp{-l} option) has been | |
2032 | enabled. | |
2033 | For normal profiling, the BFD canonical symbol table is scanned. | |
2034 | For line-by-line profiling, every | |
2035 | text space address is examined, and a new symbol table entry | |
2036 | gets created every time the line number changes. | |
2037 | In either case, two passes are made through the symbol | |
afb17569 | 2038 | table---one to count the size of the symbol table required, |
252b5132 RH |
2039 | and the other to actually read the symbols. In between the |
2040 | two passes, a single array of type @code{Sym} is created of | |
5af11cab | 2041 | the appropriate length. |
afb17569 | 2042 | Finally, @code{symtab.c:@-symtab_finalize} |
252b5132 RH |
2043 | is called to sort the symbol table and remove duplicate entries |
2044 | (entries with the same memory address). | |
2045 | ||
2046 | The symbol table must be a contiguous array for two reasons. | |
2047 | First, the @code{qsort} library function (which sorts an array) | |
2048 | will be used to sort the symbol table. | |
afb17569 | 2049 | Also, the symbol lookup routine (@code{symtab.c:@-sym_lookup}), |
252b5132 RH |
2050 | which finds symbols |
2051 | based on memory address, uses a binary search algorithm | |
2052 | which requires the symbol table to be a sorted array. | |
2053 | Function symbols are indicated with an @code{is_func} flag. | |
2054 | Line number symbols have no special flags set. | |
2055 | Additionally, a symbol can have an @code{is_static} flag | |
2056 | to indicate that it is a local symbol. | |
2057 | ||
2058 | With the symbol table read, the symspecs can now be translated | |
afb17569 | 2059 | into Syms (@code{sym_ids.c:@-sym_id_parse}). Remember that a single |
252b5132 RH |
2060 | symspec can match multiple symbols. |
2061 | An array of symbol tables | |
2062 | (@code{syms}) is created, each entry of which is a symbol table | |
2063 | of Syms to be included or excluded from a particular listing. | |
2064 | The master symbol table and the symspecs are examined by nested | |
2065 | loops, and every symbol that matches a symspec is inserted | |
2066 | into the appropriate syms table. This is done twice, once to | |
2067 | count the size of each required symbol table, and again to build | |
2068 | the tables, which have been malloced between passes. | |
2069 | From now on, to determine whether a symbol is on an include | |
2070 | or exclude symspec list, @code{gprof} simply uses its | |
2071 | standard symbol lookup routine on the appropriate table | |
2072 | in the @code{syms} array. | |
2073 | ||
2074 | Now the profile data file(s) themselves are read | |
afb17569 | 2075 | (@code{gmon_io.c:@-gmon_out_read}), |
252b5132 RH |
2076 | first by checking for a new-style @samp{gmon.out} header, |
2077 | then assuming this is an old-style BSD @samp{gmon.out} | |
2078 | if the magic number test failed. | |
2079 | ||
afb17569 | 2080 | New-style histogram records are read by @code{hist.c:@-hist_read_rec}. |
252b5132 RH |
2081 | For the first histogram record, allocate a memory array to hold |
2082 | all the bins, and read them in. | |
2083 | When multiple profile data files (or files with multiple histogram | |
b3296dc5 VP |
2084 | records) are read, the memory ranges of each pair of histogram records |
2085 | must be either equal, or non-overlapping. For each pair of histogram | |
2086 | records, the resolution (memory region size divided by the number of | |
2087 | bins) must be the same. The time unit must be the same for all | |
2088 | histogram records. If the above containts are met, all histograms | |
2089 | for the same memory range are merged. | |
252b5132 | 2090 | |
afb17569 | 2091 | As each call graph record is read (@code{call_graph.c:@-cg_read_rec}), |
252b5132 RH |
2092 | the parent and child addresses |
2093 | are matched to symbol table entries, and a call graph arc is | |
afb17569 | 2094 | created by @code{cg_arcs.c:@-arc_add}, unless the arc fails a symspec |
252b5132 RH |
2095 | check against INCL_ARCS/EXCL_ARCS. As each arc is added, |
2096 | a linked list is maintained of the parent's child arcs, and of the child's | |
2097 | parent arcs. | |
2098 | Both the child's call count and the arc's call count are | |
2099 | incremented by the record's call count. | |
2100 | ||
afb17569 | 2101 | Basic-block records are read (@code{basic_blocks.c:@-bb_read_rec}), |
252b5132 RH |
2102 | but only if line-by-line profiling has been selected. |
2103 | Each basic-block address is matched to a corresponding line | |
2104 | symbol in the symbol table, and an entry made in the symbol's | |
2105 | bb_addr and bb_calls arrays. Again, if multiple basic-block | |
2106 | records are present for the same address, the call counts | |
2107 | are cumulative. | |
2108 | ||
afb17569 | 2109 | A gmon.sum file is dumped, if requested (@code{gmon_io.c:@-gmon_out_write}). |
252b5132 RH |
2110 | |
2111 | If histograms were present in the data files, assign them to symbols | |
afb17569 | 2112 | (@code{hist.c:@-hist_assign_samples}) by iterating over all the sample |
252b5132 RH |
2113 | bins and assigning them to symbols. Since the symbol table |
2114 | is sorted in order of ascending memory addresses, we can | |
2115 | simple follow along in the symbol table as we make our pass | |
2116 | over the sample bins. | |
2117 | This step includes a symspec check against INCL_FLAT/EXCL_FLAT. | |
2118 | Depending on the histogram | |
2119 | scale factor, a sample bin may span multiple symbols, | |
2120 | in which case a fraction of the sample count is allocated | |
2121 | to each symbol, proportional to the degree of overlap. | |
2122 | This effect is rare for normal profiling, but overlaps | |
2123 | are more common during line-by-line profiling, and can | |
2124 | cause each of two adjacent lines to be credited with half | |
2125 | a hit, for example. | |
2126 | ||
afb17569 | 2127 | If call graph data is present, @code{cg_arcs.c:@-cg_assemble} is called. |
5af11cab | 2128 | First, if @samp{-c} was specified, a machine-dependent |
252b5132 RH |
2129 | routine (@code{find_call}) scans through each symbol's machine code, |
2130 | looking for subroutine call instructions, and adding them | |
2131 | to the call graph with a zero call count. | |
2132 | A topological sort is performed by depth-first numbering | |
afb17569 | 2133 | all the symbols (@code{cg_dfn.c:@-cg_dfn}), so that |
252b5132 RH |
2134 | children are always numbered less than their parents, |
2135 | then making a array of pointers into the symbol table and sorting it into | |
2136 | numerical order, which is reverse topological | |
2137 | order (children appear before parents). | |
2138 | Cycles are also detected at this point, all members | |
2139 | of which are assigned the same topological number. | |
2140 | Two passes are now made through this sorted array of symbol pointers. | |
2141 | The first pass, from end to beginning (parents to children), | |
5af11cab | 2142 | computes the fraction of child time to propagate to each parent |
252b5132 RH |
2143 | and a print flag. |
2144 | The print flag reflects symspec handling of INCL_GRAPH/EXCL_GRAPH, | |
2145 | with a parent's include or exclude (print or no print) property | |
2146 | being propagated to its children, unless they themselves explicitly appear | |
2147 | in INCL_GRAPH or EXCL_GRAPH. | |
2148 | A second pass, from beginning to end (children to parents) actually | |
5af11cab | 2149 | propagates the timings along the call graph, subject |
252b5132 RH |
2150 | to a check against INCL_TIME/EXCL_TIME. |
2151 | With the print flag, fractions, and timings now stored in the symbol | |
2152 | structures, the topological sort array is now discarded, and a | |
2153 | new array of pointers is assembled, this time sorted by propagated time. | |
2154 | ||
2155 | Finally, print the various outputs the user requested, which is now fairly | |
afb17569 BW |
2156 | straightforward. The call graph (@code{cg_print.c:@-cg_print}) and |
2157 | flat profile (@code{hist.c:@-hist_print}) are regurgitations of values | |
252b5132 | 2158 | already computed. The annotated source listing |
afb17569 | 2159 | (@code{basic_blocks.c:@-print_annotated_source}) uses basic-block |
252b5132 RH |
2160 | information, if present, to label each line of code with call counts, |
2161 | otherwise only the function call counts are presented. | |
2162 | ||
2163 | The function ordering code is marginally well documented | |
2164 | in the source code itself (@code{cg_print.c}). Basically, | |
2165 | the functions with the most use and the most parents are | |
2166 | placed first, followed by other functions with the most use, | |
2167 | followed by lower use functions, followed by unused functions | |
2168 | at the end. | |
2169 | ||
afb17569 | 2170 | @node Debugging |
19c6af1e | 2171 | @section Debugging @code{gprof} |
252b5132 RH |
2172 | |
2173 | If @code{gprof} was compiled with debugging enabled, | |
2174 | the @samp{-d} option triggers debugging output | |
2175 | (to stdout) which can be helpful in understanding its operation. | |
2176 | The debugging number specified is interpreted as a sum of the following | |
2177 | options: | |
2178 | ||
2179 | @table @asis | |
2180 | @item 2 - Topological sort | |
2181 | Monitor depth-first numbering of symbols during call graph analysis | |
2182 | @item 4 - Cycles | |
2183 | Shows symbols as they are identified as cycle heads | |
2184 | @item 16 - Tallying | |
2185 | As the call graph arcs are read, show each arc and how | |
2186 | the total calls to each function are tallied | |
2187 | @item 32 - Call graph arc sorting | |
2188 | Details sorting individual parents/children within each call graph entry | |
2189 | @item 64 - Reading histogram and call graph records | |
2190 | Shows address ranges of histograms as they are read, and each | |
2191 | call graph arc | |
2192 | @item 128 - Symbol table | |
2193 | Reading, classifying, and sorting the symbol table from the object file. | |
2194 | For line-by-line profiling (@samp{-l} option), also shows line numbers | |
2195 | being assigned to memory addresses. | |
2196 | @item 256 - Static call graph | |
2197 | Trace operation of @samp{-c} option | |
2198 | @item 512 - Symbol table and arc table lookups | |
2199 | Detail operation of lookup routines | |
2200 | @item 1024 - Call graph propagation | |
2201 | Shows how function times are propagated along the call graph | |
2202 | @item 2048 - Basic-blocks | |
2203 | Shows basic-block records as they are read from profile data | |
2204 | (only meaningful with @samp{-l} option) | |
2205 | @item 4096 - Symspecs | |
2206 | Shows symspec-to-symbol pattern matching operation | |
2207 | @item 8192 - Annotate source | |
2208 | Tracks operation of @samp{-A} option | |
2209 | @end table | |
2210 | ||
cf055d54 | 2211 | @node GNU Free Documentation License |
afb17569 | 2212 | @appendix GNU Free Documentation License |
793c5807 | 2213 | @include fdl.texi |
cf055d54 | 2214 | |
252b5132 RH |
2215 | @bye |
2216 | ||
2217 | NEEDS AN INDEX | |
2218 | ||
2219 | -T - "traditional BSD style": How is it different? Should the | |
2220 | differences be documented? | |
2221 | ||
2222 | example flat file adds up to 100.01%... | |
2223 | ||
2224 | note: time estimates now only go out to one decimal place (0.0), where | |
2225 | they used to extend two (78.67). |