2007-06-13 Markus Deuling <deuling@de.ibm.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gprof / gprof.texi
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1\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2@setfilename gprof.info
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3@c Copyright 1988, 1992, 1993, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,
4@c 2004, 2007
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
17START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
18* gprof: (gprof). Profiling your program's execution
19END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
20@end format
21@end ifinfo
22
0e9517a9 23@copying
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24This file documents the gprof profiler of the GNU system.
25
40f90528 26@c man begin COPYRIGHT
0e9517a9 27Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 92, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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29Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
30under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
31or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
32with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no
33Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the
afb17569 34section 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
53This manual describes the @sc{gnu} profiler, @code{gprof}, and how you
54can use it to determine which parts of a program are taking most of the
55execution time. We assume that you know how to write, compile, and
56execute programs. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} was written by Jay Fenlason.
83aeabb6 57Eric S. Raymond made some minor corrections and additions in 2003.
252b5132 58
252b5132 59@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
83aeabb6 60Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 92, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
252b5132 61
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62 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
63 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
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
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913b4d4b 72@ifnottex
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73@node Top
74@top Profiling a Program: Where Does It Spend Its Time?
75
76This manual describes the @sc{gnu} profiler, @code{gprof}, and how you
77can use it to determine which parts of a program are taking most of the
78execution time. We assume that you know how to write, compile, and
79execute programs. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} was written by Jay Fenlason.
80
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81This manual is for @code{gprof}
82@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE
83@value{VERSION_PACKAGE}
84@end ifset
85version @value{VERSION}.
86
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87This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU Free
88Documentation License. A copy of the license is included in the
afb17569 89section 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 116gprof [ -[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
137programs. The effect of called routines is incorporated in the profile
138of each caller. The profile data is taken from the call graph profile file
139(@file{gmon.out} default) which is created by programs
140that are compiled with the @samp{-pg} option of
141@code{cc}, @code{pc}, and @code{f77}.
142The @samp{-pg} option also links in versions of the library routines
143that are compiled for profiling. @code{Gprof} reads the given object
144file (the default is @code{a.out}) and establishes the relation between
145its symbol table and the call graph profile from @file{gmon.out}.
146If more than one profile file is specified, the @code{gprof}
147output 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.
150Next, these times are propagated along the edges of the call graph.
151Cycles are discovered, and calls into a cycle are made to share the time
152of the cycle.
153
154@c man end
155
156@c man begin BUGS
157The granularity of the sampling is shown, but remains
158statistical at best.
159We assume that the time for each execution of a function
160can be expressed by the total time for the function divided
161by the number of times the function is called.
162Thus the time propagated along the call graph arcs to the function's
163parents is directly proportional to the number of times that
164arc is traversed.
165
166Parents that are not themselves profiled will have the time of
167their profiled children propagated to them, but they will appear
168to be spontaneously invoked in the call graph listing, and will
169not have their time propagated further.
170Similarly, signal catchers, even though profiled, will appear
171to be spontaneous (although for more obscure reasons).
172Any profiled children of signal catchers should have their times
173propagated properly, unless the signal catcher was invoked during
174the execution of the profiling routine, in which case all is lost.
175
176The profiled program must call @code{exit}(2)
177or return normally for the profiling information to be saved
178in the @file{gmon.out} file.
179@c man end
180
181@c man begin FILES
182@table @code
183@item @file{a.out}
184the namelist and text space.
185@item @file{gmon.out}
186dynamic call graph and profile.
187@item @file{gmon.sum}
188summarized dynamic call graph and profile.
189@end table
190@c man end
191
192@c man begin SEEALSO
193monitor(3), profil(2), cc(1), prof(1), and the Info entry for @file{gprof}.
194
195``An Execution Profiler for Modular Programs'',
196by S. Graham, P. Kessler, M. McKusick;
197Software - Practice and Experience,
198Vol. 13, pp. 671-685, 1983.
199
200``gprof: A Call Graph Execution Profiler'',
201by S. Graham, P. Kessler, M. McKusick;
202Proceedings of the SIGPLAN '82 Symposium on Compiler Construction,
203SIGPLAN Notices, Vol. 17, No 6, pp. 120-126, June 1982.
204@c man end
205@end ifset
206
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207Profiling allows you to learn where your program spent its time and which
208functions called which other functions while it was executing. This
209information can show you which pieces of your program are slower than you
210expected, and might be candidates for rewriting to make your program
211execute faster. It can also tell you which functions are being called more
212or less often than you expected. This may help you spot bugs that had
213otherwise been unnoticed.
214
215Since the profiler uses information collected during the actual execution
216of your program, it can be used on programs that are too large or too
217complex to analyze by reading the source. However, how your program is run
218will affect the information that shows up in the profile data. If you
219don't use some feature of your program while it is being profiled, no
220profile information will be generated for that feature.
221
222Profiling has several steps:
223
224@itemize @bullet
225@item
226You 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
230You must execute your program to generate a profile data file.
afb17569 231@xref{Executing, ,Executing the Program}.
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232
233@item
234You 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
238The next three chapters explain these steps in greater detail.
239
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240@c man begin DESCRIPTION
241
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242Several forms of output are available from the analysis.
243
244The @dfn{flat profile} shows how much time your program spent in each function,
245and how many times that function was called. If you simply want to know
246which functions burn most of the cycles, it is stated concisely here.
afb17569 247@xref{Flat Profile, ,The Flat Profile}.
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248
249The @dfn{call graph} shows, for each function, which functions called it, which
250other functions it called, and how many times. There is also an estimate
251of how much time was spent in the subroutines of each function. This can
252suggest places where you might try to eliminate function calls that use a
afb17569 253lot of time. @xref{Call Graph, ,The Call Graph}.
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254
255The @dfn{annotated source} listing is a copy of the program's
256source code, labeled with the number of times each line of the
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257program was executed. @xref{Annotated Source, ,The Annotated Source
258Listing}.
40f90528 259@c man end
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260
261To better understand how profiling works, you may wish to read
262a 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
268The first step in generating profile information for your program is
269to compile and link it with profiling enabled.
270
271To compile a source file for profiling, specify the @samp{-pg} option when
272you run the compiler. (This is in addition to the options you normally
273use.)
274
275To link the program for profiling, if you use a compiler such as @code{cc}
276to do the linking, simply specify @samp{-pg} in addition to your usual
277options. The same option, @samp{-pg}, alters either compilation or linking
278to do what is necessary for profiling. Here are examples:
279
280@example
281cc -g -c myprog.c utils.c -pg
282cc -o myprog myprog.o utils.o -pg
283@end example
284
285The @samp{-pg} option also works with a command that both compiles and links:
286
287@example
288cc -o myprog myprog.c utils.c -g -pg
289@end example
290
83aeabb6 291Note: The @samp{-pg} option must be part of your compilation options
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292as well as your link options. If it is not then no call-graph data
293will be gathered and when you run @code{gprof} you will get an error
294message like this:
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295
296@example
297gprof: gmon.out file is missing call-graph data
298@end example
299
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300If you add the @samp{-Q} switch to suppress the printing of the call
301graph data you will still be able to see the time samples:
302
303@example
304Flat profile:
305
306Each 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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314If you run the linker @code{ld} directly instead of through a compiler
315such 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
317file @file{crt0.o}. In addition, you would probably want to
318specify the profiling C library, @file{libc_p.a}, by writing
319@samp{-lc_p} instead of the usual @samp{-lc}. This is not absolutely
320necessary, but doing this gives you number-of-calls information for
321standard library functions such as @code{read} and @code{open}. For
322example:
323
324@example
325ld -o myprog /lib/gcrt0.o myprog.o utils.o -lc_p
326@end example
327
328If you compile only some of the modules of the program with @samp{-pg}, you
329can still profile the program, but you won't get complete information about
330the modules that were compiled without @samp{-pg}. The only information
331you get for the functions in those modules is the total time spent in them;
332there is no record of how many times they were called, or from where. This
333will not affect the flat profile (except that the @code{calls} field for
334the functions will be blank), but will greatly reduce the usefulness of the
335call graph.
336
337If you wish to perform line-by-line profiling,
338you will also need to specify the @samp{-g} option,
339instructing the compiler to insert debugging symbols into the program
340that match program addresses to source code lines.
afb17569 341@xref{Line-by-line, ,Line-by-line Profiling}.
252b5132 342
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343In addition to the @samp{-pg} and @samp{-g} options, older versions of
344GCC required you to specify the @samp{-a} option when compiling in
345order to instrument it to perform basic-block counting. Newer
346versions do not require this option and will not accept it;
347basic-block counting is always enabled when @samp{-pg} is on.
348
349When basic-block counting is enabled, as the program runs
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350it will count how many times it executed each branch of each @samp{if}
351statement, each iteration of each @samp{do} loop, etc. This will
352enable @code{gprof} to construct an annotated source code
353listing showing how many times each line of code was executed.
354
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355It also worth noting that GCC supports a different profiling method
356which is enabled by the @samp{-fprofile-arcs}, @samp{-ftest-coverage}
357and @samp{-fprofile-values} switches. These switches do not produce
358data which is useful to @code{gprof} however, so they are not
359discussed further here. There is also the
360@samp{-finstrument-functions} switch which will cause GCC to insert
361calls to special user supplied instrumentation routines at the entry
362and exit of every function in their program. This can be used to
363implement an alternative profiling scheme.
364
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365@node Executing
366@chapter Executing the Program
367
368Once the program is compiled for profiling, you must run it in order to
369generate the information that @code{gprof} needs. Simply run the program
370as usual, using the normal arguments, file names, etc. The program should
371run normally, producing the same output as usual. It will, however, run
afb17569 372somewhat slower than normal because of the time spent collecting and
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373writing the profile data.
374
375The way you run the program---the arguments and input that you give
376it---may have a dramatic effect on what the profile information shows. The
377profile data will describe the parts of the program that were activated for
378the particular input you use. For example, if the first command you give
379to your program is to quit, the profile data will show the time used in
380initialization and in cleanup, but not much else.
381
382Your program will write the profile data into a file called @file{gmon.out}
383just before exiting. If there is already a file called @file{gmon.out},
384its contents are overwritten. There is currently no way to tell the
385program to write the profile data under a different name, but you can rename
83aeabb6 386the file afterwards if you are concerned that it may be overwritten.
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387
388In order to write the @file{gmon.out} file properly, your program must exit
389normally: by returning from @code{main} or by calling @code{exit}. Calling
390the low-level function @code{_exit} does not write the profile data, and
391neither does abnormal termination due to an unhandled signal.
392
393The @file{gmon.out} file is written in the program's @emph{current working
394directory} at the time it exits. This means that if your program calls
395@code{chdir}, the @file{gmon.out} file will be left in the last directory
396your program @code{chdir}'d to. If you don't have permission to write in
397this directory, the file is not written, and you will get an error message.
398
399Older versions of the @sc{gnu} profiling library may also write a file
400called @file{bb.out}. This file, if present, contains an human-readable
401listing of the basic-block execution counts. Unfortunately, the
402appearance of a human-readable @file{bb.out} means the basic-block
403counts didn't get written into @file{gmon.out}.
404The Perl script @code{bbconv.pl}, included with the @code{gprof}
405source distribution, will convert a @file{bb.out} file into
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406a format readable by @code{gprof}. Invoke it like this:
407
408@smallexample
409bbconv.pl < bb.out > @var{bh-data}
410@end smallexample
411
412This translates the information in @file{bb.out} into a form that
413@code{gprof} can understand. But you still need to tell @code{gprof}
414about the existence of this translated information. To do that, include
415@var{bb-data} on the @code{gprof} command line, @emph{along with
416@file{gmon.out}}, like this:
417
418@smallexample
419gprof @var{options} @var{executable-file} gmon.out @var{bb-data} [@var{yet-more-profile-data-files}@dots{}] [> @var{outfile}]
420@end smallexample
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421
422@node Invoking
423@chapter @code{gprof} Command Summary
424
425After you have a profile data file @file{gmon.out}, you can run @code{gprof}
426to interpret the information in it. The @code{gprof} program prints a
427flat profile and a call graph on standard output. Typically you would
428redirect the output of @code{gprof} into a file with @samp{>}.
429
430You run @code{gprof} like this:
431
432@smallexample
433gprof @var{options} [@var{executable-file} [@var{profile-data-files}@dots{}]] [> @var{outfile}]
434@end smallexample
435
436@noindent
437Here square-brackets indicate optional arguments.
438
439If you omit the executable file name, the file @file{a.out} is used. If
440you give no profile data file name, the file @file{gmon.out} is used. If
441any file is not in the proper format, or if the profile data file does not
442appear to belong to the executable file, an error message is printed.
443
444You can give more than one profile data file by entering all their names
445after the executable file name; then the statistics in all the data files
446are summed together.
447
448The order of these options does not matter.
449
450@menu
451* Output Options:: Controlling @code{gprof}'s output style
b45619c0 452* Analysis Options:: Controlling how @code{gprof} analyzes its data
252b5132 453* Miscellaneous Options::
5af11cab 454* Deprecated Options:: Options you no longer need to use, but which
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455 have been retained for compatibility
456* Symspecs:: Specifying functions to include or exclude
457@end menu
458
afb17569 459@node Output Options
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460@section Output Options
461
40f90528 462@c man begin OPTIONS
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463These options specify which of several output formats
464@code{gprof} should produce.
465
466Many of these options take an optional @dfn{symspec} to specify
467functions to be included or excluded. These options can be
468specified multiple times, with different symspecs, to include
afb17569 469or exclude sets of symbols. @xref{Symspecs, ,Symspecs}.
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470
471Specifying any of these options overrides the default (@samp{-p -q}),
472which prints a flat profile and call graph analysis
473for all functions.
474
475@table @code
476
477@item -A[@var{symspec}]
478@itemx --annotated-source[=@var{symspec}]
479The @samp{-A} option causes @code{gprof} to print annotated source code.
480If @var{symspec} is specified, print output only for matching symbols.
afb17569 481@xref{Annotated Source, ,The Annotated Source Listing}.
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482
483@item -b
484@itemx --brief
485If the @samp{-b} option is given, @code{gprof} doesn't print the
486verbose blurbs that try to explain the meaning of all of the fields in
487the tables. This is useful if you intend to print out the output, or
488are tired of seeing the blurbs.
489
490@item -C[@var{symspec}]
491@itemx --exec-counts[=@var{symspec}]
492The @samp{-C} option causes @code{gprof} to
493print a tally of functions and the number of times each was called.
494If @var{symspec} is specified, print tally only for matching symbols.
495
5af11cab 496If the profile data file contains basic-block count records, specifying
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497the @samp{-l} option, along with @samp{-C}, will cause basic-block
498execution counts to be tallied and displayed.
499
500@item -i
501@itemx --file-info
502The @samp{-i} option causes @code{gprof} to display summary information
503about the profile data file(s) and then exit. The number of histogram,
504call graph, and basic-block count records is displayed.
505
506@item -I @var{dirs}
507@itemx --directory-path=@var{dirs}
508The @samp{-I} option specifies a list of search directories in
509which to find source files. Environment variable @var{GPROF_PATH}
5af11cab 510can also be used to convey this information.
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511Used mostly for annotated source output.
512
513@item -J[@var{symspec}]
514@itemx --no-annotated-source[=@var{symspec}]
515The @samp{-J} option causes @code{gprof} not to
516print annotated source code.
517If @var{symspec} is specified, @code{gprof} prints annotated source,
518but excludes matching symbols.
519
520@item -L
521@itemx --print-path
522Normally, source filenames are printed with the path
523component suppressed. The @samp{-L} option causes @code{gprof}
524to print the full pathname of
525source filenames, which is determined
526from symbolic debugging information in the image file
527and is relative to the directory in which the compiler
528was invoked.
529
530@item -p[@var{symspec}]
531@itemx --flat-profile[=@var{symspec}]
532The @samp{-p} option causes @code{gprof} to print a flat profile.
533If @var{symspec} is specified, print flat profile only for matching symbols.
afb17569 534@xref{Flat Profile, ,The Flat Profile}.
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535
536@item -P[@var{symspec}]
537@itemx --no-flat-profile[=@var{symspec}]
538The @samp{-P} option causes @code{gprof} to suppress printing a flat profile.
539If @var{symspec} is specified, @code{gprof} prints a flat profile,
540but excludes matching symbols.
541
542@item -q[@var{symspec}]
543@itemx --graph[=@var{symspec}]
544The @samp{-q} option causes @code{gprof} to print the call graph analysis.
545If @var{symspec} is specified, print call graph only for matching symbols
546and their children.
afb17569 547@xref{Call Graph, ,The Call Graph}.
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548
549@item -Q[@var{symspec}]
550@itemx --no-graph[=@var{symspec}]
551The @samp{-Q} option causes @code{gprof} to suppress printing the
552call graph.
553If @var{symspec} is specified, @code{gprof} prints a call graph,
554but excludes matching symbols.
555
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556@item -t
557@itemx --table-length=@var{num}
558The @samp{-t} option causes the @var{num} most active source lines in
559each source file to be listed when source annotation is enabled. The
560default is 10.
561
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562@item -y
563@itemx --separate-files
564This option affects annotated source output only.
5af11cab 565Normally, @code{gprof} prints annotated source files
252b5132 566to standard-output. If this option is specified,
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567annotated source for a file named @file{path/@var{filename}}
568is generated in the file @file{@var{filename}-ann}. If the underlying
b45619c0 569file system would truncate @file{@var{filename}-ann} so that it
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570overwrites the original @file{@var{filename}}, @code{gprof} generates
571annotated source in the file @file{@var{filename}.ann} instead (if the
572original file name has an extension, that extension is @emph{replaced}
573with @file{.ann}).
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574
575@item -Z[@var{symspec}]
576@itemx --no-exec-counts[=@var{symspec}]
577The @samp{-Z} option causes @code{gprof} not to
578print a tally of functions and the number of times each was called.
579If @var{symspec} is specified, print tally, but exclude matching symbols.
580
a1c21132 581@item -r
242b2571 582@itemx --function-ordering
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583The @samp{--function-ordering} option causes @code{gprof} to print a
584suggested function ordering for the program based on profiling data.
585This option suggests an ordering which may improve paging, tlb and
586cache behavior for the program on systems which support arbitrary
587ordering of functions in an executable.
588
589The exact details of how to force the linker to place functions
590in a particular order is system dependent and out of the scope of this
591manual.
592
a1c21132 593@item -R @var{map_file}
242b2571 594@itemx --file-ordering @var{map_file}
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595The @samp{--file-ordering} option causes @code{gprof} to print a
596suggested .o link line ordering for the program based on profiling data.
597This option suggests an ordering which may improve paging, tlb and
598cache behavior for the program on systems which do not support arbitrary
599ordering of functions in an executable.
600
601Use of the @samp{-a} argument is highly recommended with this option.
602
603The @var{map_file} argument is a pathname to a file which provides
604function name to object file mappings. The format of the file is similar to
605the output of the program @code{nm}.
606
607@smallexample
608@group
609c-parse.o:00000000 T yyparse
610c-parse.o:00000004 C yyerrflag
611c-lang.o:00000000 T maybe_objc_method_name
612c-lang.o:00000000 T print_lang_statistics
613c-lang.o:00000000 T recognize_objc_keyword
614c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_identifier
615c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_type
616@dots{}
617
618@end group
619@end smallexample
620
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621To create a @var{map_file} with @sc{gnu} @code{nm}, type a command like
622@kbd{nm --extern-only --defined-only -v --print-file-name program-name}.
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623
624@item -T
625@itemx --traditional
626The @samp{-T} option causes @code{gprof} to print its output in
627``traditional'' BSD style.
628
629@item -w @var{width}
630@itemx --width=@var{width}
631Sets width of output lines to @var{width}.
632Currently only used when printing the function index at the bottom
633of the call graph.
634
635@item -x
636@itemx --all-lines
637This option affects annotated source output only.
638By default, only the lines at the beginning of a basic-block
639are annotated. If this option is specified, every line in
640a basic-block is annotated by repeating the annotation for the
641first line. This behavior is similar to @code{tcov}'s @samp{-a}.
642
28c309a2 643@item --demangle[=@var{style}]
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644@itemx --no-demangle
645These options control whether C++ symbol names should be demangled when
646printing output. The default is to demangle symbols. The
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647@code{--no-demangle} option may be used to turn off demangling. Different
648compilers have different mangling styles. The optional demangling style
649argument can be used to choose an appropriate demangling style for your
650compiler.
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651@end table
652
afb17569 653@node Analysis Options
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654@section Analysis Options
655
656@table @code
657
658@item -a
659@itemx --no-static
660The @samp{-a} option causes @code{gprof} to suppress the printing of
661statically declared (private) functions. (These are functions whose
662names are not listed as global, and which are not visible outside the
663file/function/block where they were defined.) Time spent in these
b45619c0 664functions, calls to/from them, etc., will all be attributed to the
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665function that was loaded directly before it in the executable file.
666@c This is compatible with Unix @code{gprof}, but a bad idea.
667This option affects both the flat profile and the call graph.
668
669@item -c
670@itemx --static-call-graph
671The @samp{-c} option causes the call graph of the program to be
672augmented by a heuristic which examines the text space of the object
673file and identifies function calls in the binary machine code.
674Since normal call graph records are only generated when functions are
675entered, this option identifies children that could have been called,
676but never were. Calls to functions that were not compiled with
677profiling enabled are also identified, but only if symbol table
678entries are present for them.
679Calls to dynamic library routines are typically @emph{not} found
680by this option.
681Parents or children identified via this heuristic
682are indicated in the call graph with call counts of @samp{0}.
683
684@item -D
685@itemx --ignore-non-functions
686The @samp{-D} option causes @code{gprof} to ignore symbols which
687are not known to be functions. This option will give more accurate
688profile data on systems where it is supported (Solaris and HPUX for
689example).
690
691@item -k @var{from}/@var{to}
692The @samp{-k} option allows you to delete from the call graph any arcs from
693symbols matching symspec @var{from} to those matching symspec @var{to}.
694
695@item -l
696@itemx --line
697The @samp{-l} option enables line-by-line profiling, which causes
698histogram hits to be charged to individual source code lines,
699instead of functions.
700If the program was compiled with basic-block counting enabled,
701this option will also identify how many times each line of
702code was executed.
703While line-by-line profiling can help isolate where in a large function
704a program is spending its time, it also significantly increases
705the running time of @code{gprof}, and magnifies statistical
706inaccuracies.
afb17569 707@xref{Sampling Error, ,Statistical Sampling Error}.
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708
709@item -m @var{num}
710@itemx --min-count=@var{num}
711This option affects execution count output only.
712Symbols that are executed less than @var{num} times are suppressed.
713
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714@item -n@var{symspec}
715@itemx --time=@var{symspec}
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716The @samp{-n} option causes @code{gprof}, in its call graph analysis,
717to only propagate times for symbols matching @var{symspec}.
718
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719@item -N@var{symspec}
720@itemx --no-time=@var{symspec}
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721The @samp{-n} option causes @code{gprof}, in its call graph analysis,
722not to propagate times for symbols matching @var{symspec}.
723
724@item -z
725@itemx --display-unused-functions
726If you give the @samp{-z} option, @code{gprof} will mention all
727functions in the flat profile, even those that were never called, and
728that had no time spent in them. This is useful in conjunction with the
729@samp{-c} option for discovering which routines were never called.
730
731@end table
732
afb17569 733@node Miscellaneous Options
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734@section Miscellaneous Options
735
736@table @code
737
738@item -d[@var{num}]
739@itemx --debug[=@var{num}]
740The @samp{-d @var{num}} option specifies debugging options.
741If @var{num} is not specified, enable all debugging.
afb17569 742@xref{Debugging, ,Debugging @code{gprof}}.
252b5132 743
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744@item -h
745@itemx --help
746The @samp{-h} option prints command line usage.
747
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748@item -O@var{name}
749@itemx --file-format=@var{name}
750Selects the format of the profile data files. Recognized formats are
751@samp{auto} (the default), @samp{bsd}, @samp{4.4bsd}, @samp{magic}, and
752@samp{prof} (not yet supported).
753
754@item -s
755@itemx --sum
756The @samp{-s} option causes @code{gprof} to summarize the information
757in the profile data files it read in, and write out a profile data
758file called @file{gmon.sum}, which contains all the information from
759the profile data files that @code{gprof} read in. The file @file{gmon.sum}
760may be one of the specified input files; the effect of this is to
761merge the data in the other input files into @file{gmon.sum}.
762
763Eventually you can run @code{gprof} again without @samp{-s} to analyze the
764cumulative data in the file @file{gmon.sum}.
765
766@item -v
767@itemx --version
768The @samp{-v} flag causes @code{gprof} to print the current version
769number, and then exit.
770
771@end table
772
afb17569 773@node Deprecated Options
5af11cab 774@section Deprecated Options
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775
776@table @code
777
778These options have been replaced with newer versions that use symspecs.
779
780@item -e @var{function_name}
781The @samp{-e @var{function}} option tells @code{gprof} to not print
782information about the function @var{function_name} (and its
783children@dots{}) in the call graph. The function will still be listed
784as a child of any functions that call it, but its index number will be
785shown as @samp{[not printed]}. More than one @samp{-e} option may be
786given; only one @var{function_name} may be indicated with each @samp{-e}
787option.
788
789@item -E @var{function_name}
790The @code{-E @var{function}} option works like the @code{-e} option, but
791time spent in the function (and children who were not called from
792anywhere else), will not be used to compute the percentages-of-time for
793the call graph. More than one @samp{-E} option may be given; only one
794@var{function_name} may be indicated with each @samp{-E} option.
795
796@item -f @var{function_name}
797The @samp{-f @var{function}} option causes @code{gprof} to limit the
798call graph to the function @var{function_name} and its children (and
799their children@dots{}). More than one @samp{-f} option may be given;
800only one @var{function_name} may be indicated with each @samp{-f}
801option.
802
803@item -F @var{function_name}
804The @samp{-F @var{function}} option works like the @code{-f} option, but
805only time spent in the function and its children (and their
806children@dots{}) will be used to determine total-time and
807percentages-of-time for the call graph. More than one @samp{-F} option
808may be given; only one @var{function_name} may be indicated with each
809@samp{-F} option. The @samp{-F} option overrides the @samp{-E} option.
810
811@end table
812
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813@c man end
814
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815Note that only one function can be specified with each @code{-e},
816@code{-E}, @code{-f} or @code{-F} option. To specify more than one
817function, use multiple options. For example, this command:
818
819@example
820gprof -e boring -f foo -f bar myprogram > gprof.output
821@end example
822
823@noindent
824lists in the call graph all functions that were reached from either
825@code{foo} or @code{bar} and were not reachable from @code{boring}.
826
afb17569 827@node Symspecs
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828@section Symspecs
829
830Many of the output options allow functions to be included or excluded
831using @dfn{symspecs} (symbol specifications), which observe the
832following syntax:
833
834@example
835 filename_containing_a_dot
836| funcname_not_containing_a_dot
837| linenumber
838| ( [ any_filename ] `:' ( any_funcname | linenumber ) )
839@end example
840
841Here are some sample symspecs:
842
843@table @samp
844@item main.c
845Selects everything in file @file{main.c}---the
5af11cab 846dot in the string tells @code{gprof} to interpret
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847the string as a filename, rather than as
848a function name. To select a file whose
849name does not contain a dot, a trailing colon
850should be specified. For example, @samp{odd:} is
851interpreted as the file named @file{odd}.
852
853@item main
854Selects all functions named @samp{main}.
855
856Note that there may be multiple instances of the same function name
857because some of the definitions may be local (i.e., static). Unless a
858function name is unique in a program, you must use the colon notation
859explained below to specify a function from a specific source file.
860
a53f781e 861Sometimes, function names contain dots. In such cases, it is necessary
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862to add a leading colon to the name. For example, @samp{:.mul} selects
863function @samp{.mul}.
864
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865In some object file formats, symbols have a leading underscore.
866@code{gprof} will normally not print these underscores. When you name a
867symbol in a symspec, you should type it exactly as @code{gprof} prints
868it in its output. For example, if the compiler produces a symbol
869@samp{_main} from your @code{main} function, @code{gprof} still prints
870it as @samp{main} in its output, so you should use @samp{main} in
871symspecs.
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872
873@item main.c:main
874Selects function @samp{main} in file @file{main.c}.
875
876@item main.c:134
877Selects line 134 in file @file{main.c}.
878@end table
879
880@node Output
881@chapter Interpreting @code{gprof}'s Output
882
883@code{gprof} can produce several different output styles, the
884most important of which are described below. The simplest output
885styles (file information, execution count, and function and file ordering)
886are not described here, but are documented with the respective options
887that trigger them.
afb17569 888@xref{Output Options, ,Output Options}.
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889
890@menu
891* Flat Profile:: The flat profile shows how much time was spent
892 executing directly in each function.
893* Call Graph:: The call graph shows which functions called which
894 others, and how much time each function used
895 when its subroutine calls are included.
896* Line-by-line:: @code{gprof} can analyze individual source code lines
897* Annotated Source:: The annotated source listing displays source code
898 labeled with execution counts
899@end menu
900
901
afb17569 902@node Flat Profile
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903@section The Flat Profile
904@cindex flat profile
905
906The @dfn{flat profile} shows the total amount of time your program
907spent executing each function. Unless the @samp{-z} option is given,
908functions with no apparent time spent in them, and no apparent calls
909to them, are not mentioned. Note that if a function was not compiled
910for profiling, and didn't run long enough to show up on the program
911counter histogram, it will be indistinguishable from a function that
912was never called.
913
914This is part of a flat profile for a small program:
915
916@smallexample
917@group
918Flat profile:
919
920Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
921 % cumulative self self total
922 time seconds seconds calls ms/call ms/call name
923 33.34 0.02 0.02 7208 0.00 0.00 open
924 16.67 0.03 0.01 244 0.04 0.12 offtime
925 16.67 0.04 0.01 8 1.25 1.25 memccpy
926 16.67 0.05 0.01 7 1.43 1.43 write
927 16.67 0.06 0.01 mcount
928 0.00 0.06 0.00 236 0.00 0.00 tzset
929 0.00 0.06 0.00 192 0.00 0.00 tolower
930 0.00 0.06 0.00 47 0.00 0.00 strlen
931 0.00 0.06 0.00 45 0.00 0.00 strchr
932 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 50.00 main
933 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 0.00 memcpy
934 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 10.11 print
935 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 0.00 profil
936 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 50.00 report
937@dots{}
938@end group
939@end smallexample
940
941@noindent
afb17569 942The functions are sorted first by decreasing run-time spent in them,
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943then by decreasing number of calls, then alphabetically by name. The
944functions @samp{mcount} and @samp{profil} are part of the profiling
5af11cab 945apparatus and appear in every flat profile; their time gives a measure of
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946the amount of overhead due to profiling.
947
948Just before the column headers, a statement appears indicating
949how much time each sample counted as.
950This @dfn{sampling period} estimates the margin of error in each of the time
951figures. A time figure that is not much larger than this is not
952reliable. In this example, each sample counted as 0.01 seconds,
953suggesting a 100 Hz sampling rate.
954The program's total execution time was 0.06
955seconds, as indicated by the @samp{cumulative seconds} field. Since
956each sample counted for 0.01 seconds, this means only six samples
5af11cab 957were taken during the run. Two of the samples occurred while the
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958program was in the @samp{open} function, as indicated by the
959@samp{self seconds} field. Each of the other four samples
5af11cab 960occurred one each in @samp{offtime}, @samp{memccpy}, @samp{write},
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961and @samp{mcount}.
962Since only six samples were taken, none of these values can
963be regarded as particularly reliable.
964In another run,
965the @samp{self seconds} field for
966@samp{mcount} might well be @samp{0.00} or @samp{0.02}.
afb17569
BW
967@xref{Sampling Error, ,Statistical Sampling Error},
968for a complete discussion.
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969
970The remaining functions in the listing (those whose
971@samp{self seconds} field is @samp{0.00}) didn't appear
972in the histogram samples at all. However, the call graph
973indicated that they were called, so therefore they are listed,
974sorted in decreasing order by the @samp{calls} field.
975Clearly some time was spent executing these functions,
976but the paucity of histogram samples prevents any
977determination of how much time each took.
978
979Here is what the fields in each line mean:
980
981@table @code
982@item % time
983This is the percentage of the total execution time your program spent
984in this function. These should all add up to 100%.
985
986@item cumulative seconds
987This is the cumulative total number of seconds the computer spent
988executing this functions, plus the time spent in all the functions
989above this one in this table.
990
991@item self seconds
992This is the number of seconds accounted for by this function alone.
993The flat profile listing is sorted first by this number.
994
995@item calls
996This is the total number of times the function was called. If the
997function was never called, or the number of times it was called cannot
998be determined (probably because the function was not compiled with
999profiling enabled), the @dfn{calls} field is blank.
1000
1001@item self ms/call
1002This represents the average number of milliseconds spent in this
1003function per call, if this function is profiled. Otherwise, this field
1004is blank for this function.
1005
1006@item total ms/call
1007This represents the average number of milliseconds spent in this
1008function and its descendants per call, if this function is profiled.
1009Otherwise, this field is blank for this function.
1010This is the only field in the flat profile that uses call graph analysis.
1011
1012@item name
1013This is the name of the function. The flat profile is sorted by this
1014field alphabetically after the @dfn{self seconds} and @dfn{calls}
1015fields are sorted.
1016@end table
1017
afb17569 1018@node Call Graph
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1019@section The Call Graph
1020@cindex call graph
1021
1022The @dfn{call graph} shows how much time was spent in each function
1023and its children. From this information, you can find functions that,
1024while they themselves may not have used much time, called other
1025functions that did use unusual amounts of time.
1026
1027Here is a sample call from a small program. This call came from the
1028same @code{gprof} run as the flat profile example in the previous
afb17569 1029section.
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1030
1031@smallexample
1032@group
1033granularity: each sample hit covers 2 byte(s) for 20.00% of 0.05 seconds
1034
1035index % time self children called name
1036 <spontaneous>
1037[1] 100.0 0.00 0.05 start [1]
1038 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2]
1039 0.00 0.00 1/2 on_exit [28]
1040 0.00 0.00 1/1 exit [59]
1041-----------------------------------------------
1042 0.00 0.05 1/1 start [1]
1043[2] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 main [2]
1044 0.00 0.05 1/1 report [3]
1045-----------------------------------------------
1046 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2]
1047[3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3]
1048 0.00 0.03 8/8 timelocal [6]
1049 0.00 0.01 1/1 print [9]
1050 0.00 0.01 9/9 fgets [12]
1051 0.00 0.00 12/34 strncmp <cycle 1> [40]
1052 0.00 0.00 8/8 lookup [20]
1053 0.00 0.00 1/1 fopen [21]
1054 0.00 0.00 8/8 chewtime [24]
1055 0.00 0.00 8/16 skipspace [44]
1056-----------------------------------------------
afb17569 1057[4] 59.8 0.01 0.02 8+472 <cycle 2 as a whole> [4]
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1058 0.01 0.02 244+260 offtime <cycle 2> [7]
1059 0.00 0.00 236+1 tzset <cycle 2> [26]
1060-----------------------------------------------
1061@end group
1062@end smallexample
1063
1064The lines full of dashes divide this table into @dfn{entries}, one for each
1065function. Each entry has one or more lines.
1066
1067In each entry, the primary line is the one that starts with an index number
1068in square brackets. The end of this line says which function the entry is
1069for. The preceding lines in the entry describe the callers of this
1070function and the following lines describe its subroutines (also called
1071@dfn{children} when we speak of the call graph).
1072
1073The entries are sorted by time spent in the function and its subroutines.
1074
afb17569
BW
1075The internal profiling function @code{mcount} (@pxref{Flat Profile, ,The
1076Flat Profile}) is never mentioned in the call graph.
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1077
1078@menu
1079* Primary:: Details of the primary line's contents.
1080* Callers:: Details of caller-lines' contents.
1081* Subroutines:: Details of subroutine-lines' contents.
1082* Cycles:: When there are cycles of recursion,
1083 such as @code{a} calls @code{b} calls @code{a}@dots{}
1084@end menu
1085
1086@node Primary
1087@subsection The Primary Line
1088
1089The @dfn{primary line} in a call graph entry is the line that
1090describes the function which the entry is about and gives the overall
1091statistics for this function.
1092
1093For reference, we repeat the primary line from the entry for function
1094@code{report} in our main example, together with the heading line that
1095shows the names of the fields:
1096
1097@smallexample
1098@group
1099index % time self children called name
1100@dots{}
1101[3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3]
1102@end group
1103@end smallexample
1104
1105Here is what the fields in the primary line mean:
1106
1107@table @code
1108@item index
1109Entries are numbered with consecutive integers. Each function
1110therefore has an index number, which appears at the beginning of its
1111primary line.
1112
1113Each cross-reference to a function, as a caller or subroutine of
1114another, gives its index number as well as its name. The index number
1115guides you if you wish to look for the entry for that function.
1116
1117@item % time
1118This is the percentage of the total time that was spent in this
1119function, including time spent in subroutines called from this
1120function.
1121
1122The time spent in this function is counted again for the callers of
1123this function. Therefore, adding up these percentages is meaningless.
1124
1125@item self
1126This is the total amount of time spent in this function. This
1127should be identical to the number printed in the @code{seconds} field
1128for this function in the flat profile.
1129
1130@item children
1131This is the total amount of time spent in the subroutine calls made by
1132this function. This should be equal to the sum of all the @code{self}
1133and @code{children} entries of the children listed directly below this
1134function.
1135
1136@item called
1137This is the number of times the function was called.
1138
1139If the function called itself recursively, there are two numbers,
1140separated by a @samp{+}. The first number counts non-recursive calls,
1141and the second counts recursive calls.
1142
1143In the example above, the function @code{report} was called once from
1144@code{main}.
1145
1146@item name
1147This is the name of the current function. The index number is
1148repeated after it.
1149
1150If the function is part of a cycle of recursion, the cycle number is
1151printed between the function's name and the index number
afb17569
BW
1152(@pxref{Cycles, ,How Mutually Recursive Functions Are Described}).
1153For example, if function @code{gnurr} is part of
252b5132
RH
1154cycle number one, and has index number twelve, its primary line would
1155be end like this:
1156
1157@example
1158gnurr <cycle 1> [12]
1159@end example
1160@end table
1161
afb17569 1162@node Callers
252b5132
RH
1163@subsection Lines for a Function's Callers
1164
1165A function's entry has a line for each function it was called by.
1166These lines' fields correspond to the fields of the primary line, but
1167their meanings are different because of the difference in context.
1168
1169For reference, we repeat two lines from the entry for the function
1170@code{report}, the primary line and one caller-line preceding it, together
1171with the heading line that shows the names of the fields:
1172
1173@smallexample
1174index % time self children called name
1175@dots{}
1176 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2]
1177[3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3]
1178@end smallexample
1179
1180Here are the meanings of the fields in the caller-line for @code{report}
1181called from @code{main}:
1182
1183@table @code
1184@item self
1185An estimate of the amount of time spent in @code{report} itself when it was
1186called from @code{main}.
1187
1188@item children
1189An estimate of the amount of time spent in subroutines of @code{report}
1190when @code{report} was called from @code{main}.
1191
1192The sum of the @code{self} and @code{children} fields is an estimate
1193of the amount of time spent within calls to @code{report} from @code{main}.
1194
1195@item called
1196Two numbers: the number of times @code{report} was called from @code{main},
5af11cab 1197followed by the total number of non-recursive calls to @code{report} from
252b5132
RH
1198all its callers.
1199
1200@item name and index number
1201The name of the caller of @code{report} to which this line applies,
1202followed by the caller's index number.
1203
1204Not all functions have entries in the call graph; some
1205options to @code{gprof} request the omission of certain functions.
1206When a caller has no entry of its own, it still has caller-lines
1207in the entries of the functions it calls.
1208
1209If the caller is part of a recursion cycle, the cycle number is
1210printed between the name and the index number.
1211@end table
1212
1213If the identity of the callers of a function cannot be determined, a
1214dummy caller-line is printed which has @samp{<spontaneous>} as the
1215``caller's name'' and all other fields blank. This can happen for
1216signal handlers.
1217@c What if some calls have determinable callers' names but not all?
1218@c FIXME - still relevant?
1219
afb17569 1220@node Subroutines
252b5132
RH
1221@subsection Lines for a Function's Subroutines
1222
1223A function's entry has a line for each of its subroutines---in other
1224words, a line for each other function that it called. These lines'
1225fields correspond to the fields of the primary line, but their meanings
1226are different because of the difference in context.
1227
1228For reference, we repeat two lines from the entry for the function
1229@code{main}, the primary line and a line for a subroutine, together
1230with the heading line that shows the names of the fields:
1231
1232@smallexample
1233index % time self children called name
1234@dots{}
1235[2] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 main [2]
1236 0.00 0.05 1/1 report [3]
1237@end smallexample
1238
1239Here are the meanings of the fields in the subroutine-line for @code{main}
1240calling @code{report}:
1241
1242@table @code
1243@item self
1244An estimate of the amount of time spent directly within @code{report}
1245when @code{report} was called from @code{main}.
1246
1247@item children
1248An estimate of the amount of time spent in subroutines of @code{report}
1249when @code{report} was called from @code{main}.
1250
1251The sum of the @code{self} and @code{children} fields is an estimate
1252of the total time spent in calls to @code{report} from @code{main}.
1253
1254@item called
1255Two numbers, the number of calls to @code{report} from @code{main}
5af11cab 1256followed by the total number of non-recursive calls to @code{report}.
252b5132
RH
1257This ratio is used to determine how much of @code{report}'s @code{self}
1258and @code{children} time gets credited to @code{main}.
afb17569 1259@xref{Assumptions, ,Estimating @code{children} Times}.
252b5132
RH
1260
1261@item name
1262The name of the subroutine of @code{main} to which this line applies,
1263followed by the subroutine's index number.
1264
1265If the caller is part of a recursion cycle, the cycle number is
1266printed between the name and the index number.
1267@end table
1268
afb17569 1269@node Cycles
252b5132
RH
1270@subsection How Mutually Recursive Functions Are Described
1271@cindex cycle
1272@cindex recursion cycle
1273
1274The graph may be complicated by the presence of @dfn{cycles of
1275recursion} in the call graph. A cycle exists if a function calls
1276another function that (directly or indirectly) calls (or appears to
1277call) the original function. For example: if @code{a} calls @code{b},
1278and @code{b} calls @code{a}, then @code{a} and @code{b} form a cycle.
1279
1280Whenever there are call paths both ways between a pair of functions, they
1281belong to the same cycle. If @code{a} and @code{b} call each other and
1282@code{b} and @code{c} call each other, all three make one cycle. Note that
1283even if @code{b} only calls @code{a} if it was not called from @code{a},
1284@code{gprof} cannot determine this, so @code{a} and @code{b} are still
1285considered a cycle.
1286
1287The cycles are numbered with consecutive integers. When a function
1288belongs to a cycle, each time the function name appears in the call graph
1289it is followed by @samp{<cycle @var{number}>}.
1290
1291The reason cycles matter is that they make the time values in the call
1292graph paradoxical. The ``time spent in children'' of @code{a} should
1293include the time spent in its subroutine @code{b} and in @code{b}'s
1294subroutines---but one of @code{b}'s subroutines is @code{a}! How much of
1295@code{a}'s time should be included in the children of @code{a}, when
1296@code{a} is indirectly recursive?
1297
1298The way @code{gprof} resolves this paradox is by creating a single entry
1299for the cycle as a whole. The primary line of this entry describes the
1300total time spent directly in the functions of the cycle. The
1301``subroutines'' of the cycle are the individual functions of the cycle, and
1302all other functions that were called directly by them. The ``callers'' of
1303the cycle are the functions, outside the cycle, that called functions in
1304the cycle.
1305
1306Here is an example portion of a call graph which shows a cycle containing
1307functions @code{a} and @code{b}. The cycle was entered by a call to
1308@code{a} from @code{main}; both @code{a} and @code{b} called @code{c}.
1309
1310@smallexample
1311index % time self children called name
1312----------------------------------------
1313 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
1314[3] 91.71 1.77 0 1+5 <cycle 1 as a whole> [3]
1315 1.02 0 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
1316 0.75 0 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
1317----------------------------------------
1318 3 a <cycle 1> [5]
1319[4] 52.85 1.02 0 0 b <cycle 1> [4]
1320 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
1321 0 0 3/6 c [6]
1322----------------------------------------
1323 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
1324 2 b <cycle 1> [4]
1325[5] 38.86 0.75 0 1 a <cycle 1> [5]
1326 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
1327 0 0 3/6 c [6]
1328----------------------------------------
1329@end smallexample
1330
1331@noindent
1332(The entire call graph for this program contains in addition an entry for
1333@code{main}, which calls @code{a}, and an entry for @code{c}, with callers
1334@code{a} and @code{b}.)
1335
1336@smallexample
1337index % time self children called name
1338 <spontaneous>
1339[1] 100.00 0 1.93 0 start [1]
1340 0.16 1.77 1/1 main [2]
1341----------------------------------------
1342 0.16 1.77 1/1 start [1]
1343[2] 100.00 0.16 1.77 1 main [2]
1344 1.77 0 1/1 a <cycle 1> [5]
1345----------------------------------------
1346 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
1347[3] 91.71 1.77 0 1+5 <cycle 1 as a whole> [3]
1348 1.02 0 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
1349 0.75 0 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
1350 0 0 6/6 c [6]
1351----------------------------------------
1352 3 a <cycle 1> [5]
1353[4] 52.85 1.02 0 0 b <cycle 1> [4]
1354 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
1355 0 0 3/6 c [6]
1356----------------------------------------
1357 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
1358 2 b <cycle 1> [4]
1359[5] 38.86 0.75 0 1 a <cycle 1> [5]
1360 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
1361 0 0 3/6 c [6]
1362----------------------------------------
1363 0 0 3/6 b <cycle 1> [4]
1364 0 0 3/6 a <cycle 1> [5]
1365[6] 0.00 0 0 6 c [6]
1366----------------------------------------
1367@end smallexample
1368
1369The @code{self} field of the cycle's primary line is the total time
1370spent in all the functions of the cycle. It equals the sum of the
1371@code{self} fields for the individual functions in the cycle, found
1372in the entry in the subroutine lines for these functions.
1373
1374The @code{children} fields of the cycle's primary line and subroutine lines
1375count only subroutines outside the cycle. Even though @code{a} calls
1376@code{b}, the time spent in those calls to @code{b} is not counted in
1377@code{a}'s @code{children} time. Thus, we do not encounter the problem of
1378what to do when the time in those calls to @code{b} includes indirect
1379recursive calls back to @code{a}.
1380
1381The @code{children} field of a caller-line in the cycle's entry estimates
1382the amount of time spent @emph{in the whole cycle}, and its other
1383subroutines, on the times when that caller called a function in the cycle.
1384
afb17569 1385The @code{called} field in the primary line for the cycle has two numbers:
252b5132
RH
1386first, the number of times functions in the cycle were called by functions
1387outside the cycle; second, the number of times they were called by
1388functions in the cycle (including times when a function in the cycle calls
5af11cab 1389itself). This is a generalization of the usual split into non-recursive and
252b5132
RH
1390recursive calls.
1391
afb17569 1392The @code{called} field of a subroutine-line for a cycle member in the
252b5132
RH
1393cycle's entry says how many time that function was called from functions in
1394the cycle. The total of all these is the second number in the primary line's
afb17569 1395@code{called} field.
252b5132
RH
1396
1397In the individual entry for a function in a cycle, the other functions in
1398the same cycle can appear as subroutines and as callers. These lines show
1399how many times each function in the cycle called or was called from each other
1400function in the cycle. The @code{self} and @code{children} fields in these
1401lines are blank because of the difficulty of defining meanings for them
1402when recursion is going on.
1403
afb17569 1404@node Line-by-line
252b5132
RH
1405@section Line-by-line Profiling
1406
1407@code{gprof}'s @samp{-l} option causes the program to perform
1408@dfn{line-by-line} profiling. In this mode, histogram
1409samples are assigned not to functions, but to individual
1410lines of source code. The program usually must be compiled
1411with a @samp{-g} option, in addition to @samp{-pg}, in order
1412to generate debugging symbols for tracking source code lines.
1413
1414The flat profile is the most useful output table
1415in line-by-line mode.
1416The call graph isn't as useful as normal, since
1417the current version of @code{gprof} does not propagate
1418call graph arcs from source code lines to the enclosing function.
1419The call graph does, however, show each line of code
1420that called each function, along with a count.
1421
1422Here is a section of @code{gprof}'s output, without line-by-line profiling.
1423Note that @code{ct_init} accounted for four histogram hits, and
142413327 calls to @code{init_block}.
1425
1426@smallexample
1427Flat profile:
1428
1429Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
1430 % cumulative self self total
1431 time seconds seconds calls us/call us/call name
1432 30.77 0.13 0.04 6335 6.31 6.31 ct_init
1433
1434
1435 Call graph (explanation follows)
1436
1437
1438granularity: each sample hit covers 4 byte(s) for 7.69% of 0.13 seconds
1439
1440index % time self children called name
1441
1442 0.00 0.00 1/13496 name_too_long
1443 0.00 0.00 40/13496 deflate
1444 0.00 0.00 128/13496 deflate_fast
1445 0.00 0.00 13327/13496 ct_init
1446[7] 0.0 0.00 0.00 13496 init_block
1447
1448@end smallexample
1449
1450Now let's look at some of @code{gprof}'s output from the same program run,
1451this time with line-by-line profiling enabled. Note that @code{ct_init}'s
afb17569 1452four histogram hits are broken down into four lines of source code---one hit
5af11cab 1453occurred on each of lines 349, 351, 382 and 385. In the call graph,
252b5132
RH
1454note how
1455@code{ct_init}'s 13327 calls to @code{init_block} are broken down
1456into one call from line 396, 3071 calls from line 384, 3730 calls
1457from line 385, and 6525 calls from 387.
1458
1459@smallexample
1460Flat profile:
1461
1462Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
1463 % cumulative self
1464 time seconds seconds calls name
1465 7.69 0.10 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:349)
1466 7.69 0.11 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:351)
1467 7.69 0.12 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:382)
1468 7.69 0.13 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:385)
1469
1470
1471 Call graph (explanation follows)
1472
1473
1474granularity: each sample hit covers 4 byte(s) for 7.69% of 0.13 seconds
1475
1476 % time self children called name
1477
1478 0.00 0.00 1/13496 name_too_long (gzip.c:1440)
1479 0.00 0.00 1/13496 deflate (deflate.c:763)
1480 0.00 0.00 1/13496 ct_init (trees.c:396)
1481 0.00 0.00 2/13496 deflate (deflate.c:727)
1482 0.00 0.00 4/13496 deflate (deflate.c:686)
1483 0.00 0.00 5/13496 deflate (deflate.c:675)
1484 0.00 0.00 12/13496 deflate (deflate.c:679)
1485 0.00 0.00 16/13496 deflate (deflate.c:730)
1486 0.00 0.00 128/13496 deflate_fast (deflate.c:654)
1487 0.00 0.00 3071/13496 ct_init (trees.c:384)
1488 0.00 0.00 3730/13496 ct_init (trees.c:385)
1489 0.00 0.00 6525/13496 ct_init (trees.c:387)
1490[6] 0.0 0.00 0.00 13496 init_block (trees.c:408)
1491
1492@end smallexample
1493
1494
afb17569 1495@node Annotated Source
252b5132
RH
1496@section The Annotated Source Listing
1497
1498@code{gprof}'s @samp{-A} option triggers an annotated source listing,
1499which lists the program's source code, each function labeled with the
1500number of times it was called. You may also need to specify the
1501@samp{-I} option, if @code{gprof} can't find the source code files.
1502
1503Compiling with @samp{gcc @dots{} -g -pg -a} augments your program
1504with basic-block counting code, in addition to function counting code.
1505This enables @code{gprof} to determine how many times each line
5af11cab 1506of code was executed.
252b5132
RH
1507For example, consider the following function, taken from gzip,
1508with line numbers added:
1509
1510@smallexample
1511 1 ulg updcrc(s, n)
1512 2 uch *s;
1513 3 unsigned n;
1514 4 @{
1515 5 register ulg c;
1516 6
1517 7 static ulg crc = (ulg)0xffffffffL;
1518 8
1519 9 if (s == NULL) @{
152010 c = 0xffffffffL;
152111 @} else @{
152212 c = crc;
152313 if (n) do @{
152414 c = crc_32_tab[...];
152515 @} while (--n);
152616 @}
152717 crc = c;
152818 return c ^ 0xffffffffL;
152919 @}
1530
1531@end smallexample
1532
1533@code{updcrc} has at least five basic-blocks.
1534One is the function itself. The
1535@code{if} statement on line 9 generates two more basic-blocks, one
1536for each branch of the @code{if}. A fourth basic-block results from
1537the @code{if} on line 13, and the contents of the @code{do} loop form
1538the fifth basic-block. The compiler may also generate additional
1539basic-blocks to handle various special cases.
1540
1541A program augmented for basic-block counting can be analyzed with
afb17569
BW
1542@samp{gprof -l -A}.
1543The @samp{-x} option is also helpful,
1544to ensure that each line of code is labeled at least once.
252b5132
RH
1545Here is @code{updcrc}'s
1546annotated source listing for a sample @code{gzip} run:
1547
1548@smallexample
1549 ulg updcrc(s, n)
1550 uch *s;
1551 unsigned n;
1552 2 ->@{
1553 register ulg c;
1554
1555 static ulg crc = (ulg)0xffffffffL;
1556
1557 2 -> if (s == NULL) @{
afb17569 1558 1 -> c = 0xffffffffL;
252b5132 1559 1 -> @} else @{
afb17569 1560 1 -> c = crc;
252b5132
RH
1561 1 -> if (n) do @{
1562 26312 -> c = crc_32_tab[...];
156326312,1,26311 -> @} while (--n);
1564 @}
1565 2 -> crc = c;
1566 2 -> return c ^ 0xffffffffL;
1567 2 ->@}
1568@end smallexample
1569
1570In this example, the function was called twice, passing once through
1571each branch of the @code{if} statement. The body of the @code{do}
1572loop was executed a total of 26312 times. Note how the @code{while}
1573statement is annotated. It began execution 26312 times, once for
1574each iteration through the loop. One of those times (the last time)
1575it exited, while it branched back to the beginning of the loop 26311 times.
1576
1577@node Inaccuracy
1578@chapter Inaccuracy of @code{gprof} Output
1579
1580@menu
1581* Sampling Error:: Statistical margins of error
1582* Assumptions:: Estimating children times
1583@end menu
1584
afb17569 1585@node Sampling Error
252b5132
RH
1586@section Statistical Sampling Error
1587
1588The run-time figures that @code{gprof} gives you are based on a sampling
1589process, so they are subject to statistical inaccuracy. If a function runs
1590only a small amount of time, so that on the average the sampling process
1591ought to catch that function in the act only once, there is a pretty good
1592chance it will actually find that function zero times, or twice.
1593
1594By contrast, the number-of-calls and basic-block figures
1595are derived by counting, not
1596sampling. They are completely accurate and will not vary from run to run
1597if your program is deterministic.
1598
1599The @dfn{sampling period} that is printed at the beginning of the flat
1600profile says how often samples are taken. The rule of thumb is that a
1601run-time figure is accurate if it is considerably bigger than the sampling
1602period.
1603
1604The actual amount of error can be predicted.
1605For @var{n} samples, the @emph{expected} error
1606is the square-root of @var{n}. For example,
1607if the sampling period is 0.01 seconds and @code{foo}'s run-time is 1 second,
1608@var{n} is 100 samples (1 second/0.01 seconds), sqrt(@var{n}) is 10 samples, so
1609the expected error in @code{foo}'s run-time is 0.1 seconds (10*0.01 seconds),
1610or ten percent of the observed value.
1611Again, if the sampling period is 0.01 seconds and @code{bar}'s run-time is
1612100 seconds, @var{n} is 10000 samples, sqrt(@var{n}) is 100 samples, so
1613the expected error in @code{bar}'s run-time is 1 second,
1614or one percent of the observed value.
1615It is likely to
1616vary this much @emph{on the average} from one profiling run to the next.
1617(@emph{Sometimes} it will vary more.)
1618
1619This does not mean that a small run-time figure is devoid of information.
1620If the program's @emph{total} run-time is large, a small run-time for one
1621function does tell you that that function used an insignificant fraction of
1622the whole program's time. Usually this means it is not worth optimizing.
1623
1624One way to get more accuracy is to give your program more (but similar)
1625input data so it will take longer. Another way is to combine the data from
1626several runs, using the @samp{-s} option of @code{gprof}. Here is how:
1627
1628@enumerate
1629@item
1630Run your program once.
1631
1632@item
1633Issue the command @samp{mv gmon.out gmon.sum}.
1634
1635@item
1636Run your program again, the same as before.
1637
1638@item
1639Merge the new data in @file{gmon.out} into @file{gmon.sum} with this command:
1640
1641@example
1642gprof -s @var{executable-file} gmon.out gmon.sum
1643@end example
1644
1645@item
1646Repeat the last two steps as often as you wish.
1647
1648@item
1649Analyze the cumulative data using this command:
1650
1651@example
1652gprof @var{executable-file} gmon.sum > @var{output-file}
1653@end example
1654@end enumerate
1655
afb17569 1656@node Assumptions
252b5132
RH
1657@section Estimating @code{children} Times
1658
1659Some of the figures in the call graph are estimates---for example, the
1be59579 1660@code{children} time values and all the time figures in caller and
252b5132
RH
1661subroutine lines.
1662
1663There is no direct information about these measurements in the profile
1664data itself. Instead, @code{gprof} estimates them by making an assumption
1665about your program that might or might not be true.
1666
1667The assumption made is that the average time spent in each call to any
1668function @code{foo} is not correlated with who called @code{foo}. If
1669@code{foo} used 5 seconds in all, and 2/5 of the calls to @code{foo} came
1670from @code{a}, then @code{foo} contributes 2 seconds to @code{a}'s
1671@code{children} time, by assumption.
1672
1673This assumption is usually true enough, but for some programs it is far
1674from true. Suppose that @code{foo} returns very quickly when its argument
1675is zero; suppose that @code{a} always passes zero as an argument, while
1676other callers of @code{foo} pass other arguments. In this program, all the
1677time spent in @code{foo} is in the calls from callers other than @code{a}.
1678But @code{gprof} has no way of knowing this; it will blindly and
1679incorrectly charge 2 seconds of time in @code{foo} to the children of
1680@code{a}.
1681
1682@c FIXME - has this been fixed?
1683We hope some day to put more complete data into @file{gmon.out}, so that
1684this assumption is no longer needed, if we can figure out how. For the
afb17569 1685novice, the estimated figures are usually more useful than misleading.
252b5132
RH
1686
1687@node How do I?
1688@chapter Answers to Common Questions
1689
1690@table @asis
83aeabb6
NC
1691@item How can I get more exact information about hot spots in my program?
1692
1693Looking at the per-line call counts only tells part of the story.
1694Because @code{gprof} can only report call times and counts by function,
1695the best way to get finer-grained information on where the program
1696is spending its time is to re-factor large functions into sequences
83b6e7e8 1697of calls to smaller ones. Beware however that this can introduce
b45619c0 1698artificial hot spots since compiling with @samp{-pg} adds a significant
83b6e7e8
NC
1699overhead to function calls. An alternative solution is to use a
1700non-intrusive profiler, e.g.@: oprofile.
83aeabb6 1701
252b5132
RH
1702@item How do I find which lines in my program were executed the most times?
1703
1704Compile your program with basic-block counting enabled, run it, then
1705use the following pipeline:
1706
1707@example
1708gprof -l -C @var{objfile} | sort -k 3 -n -r
1709@end example
1710
1711This listing will show you the lines in your code executed most often,
1712but not necessarily those that consumed the most time.
1713
1714@item How do I find which lines in my program called a particular function?
1715
5af11cab 1716Use @samp{gprof -l} and lookup the function in the call graph.
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1717The callers will be broken down by function and line number.
1718
1719@item How do I analyze a program that runs for less than a second?
1720
1721Try using a shell script like this one:
1722
1723@example
1724for i in `seq 1 100`; do
1725 fastprog
1726 mv gmon.out gmon.out.$i
1727done
1728
1729gprof -s fastprog gmon.out.*
1730
1731gprof fastprog gmon.sum
1732@end example
1733
1734If your program is completely deterministic, all the call counts
b45619c0 1735will be simple multiples of 100 (i.e., a function called once in
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1736each run will appear with a call count of 100).
1737
1738@end table
1739
1740@node Incompatibilities
1741@chapter Incompatibilities with Unix @code{gprof}
1742
1743@sc{gnu} @code{gprof} and Berkeley Unix @code{gprof} use the same data
1744file @file{gmon.out}, and provide essentially the same information. But
1745there are a few differences.
1746
1747@itemize @bullet
1748@item
1749@sc{gnu} @code{gprof} uses a new, generalized file format with support
1750for basic-block execution counts and non-realtime histograms. A magic
1751cookie and version number allows @code{gprof} to easily identify
1752new style files. Old BSD-style files can still be read.
afb17569 1753@xref{File Format, ,Profiling Data File Format}.
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1754
1755@item
1756For a recursive function, Unix @code{gprof} lists the function as a
1757parent and as a child, with a @code{calls} field that lists the number
1758of recursive calls. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} omits these lines and puts
1759the number of recursive calls in the primary line.
1760
1761@item
1762When a function is suppressed from the call graph with @samp{-e}, @sc{gnu}
1763@code{gprof} still lists it as a subroutine of functions that call it.
1764
1765@item
1766@sc{gnu} @code{gprof} accepts the @samp{-k} with its argument
1767in the form @samp{from/to}, instead of @samp{from to}.
1768
1769@item
1770In the annotated source listing,
1771if there are multiple basic blocks on the same line,
5af11cab 1772@sc{gnu} @code{gprof} prints all of their counts, separated by commas.
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1773
1774@ignore - it does this now
1775@item
1776The function names printed in @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} output do not include
1777the leading underscores that are added internally to the front of all
1778C identifiers on many operating systems.
1779@end ignore
1780
1781@item
1782The blurbs, field widths, and output formats are different. @sc{gnu}
1783@code{gprof} prints blurbs after the tables, so that you can see the
1784tables without skipping the blurbs.
1785@end itemize
1786
1787@node Details
1788@chapter Details of Profiling
1789
1790@menu
5af11cab 1791* Implementation:: How a program collects profiling information
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1792* File Format:: Format of @samp{gmon.out} files
1793* Internals:: @code{gprof}'s internal operation
1794* Debugging:: Using @code{gprof}'s @samp{-d} option
1795@end menu
1796
afb17569 1797@node Implementation
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1798@section Implementation of Profiling
1799
1800Profiling works by changing how every function in your program is compiled
1801so that when it is called, it will stash away some information about where
1802it was called from. From this, the profiler can figure out what function
1803called it, and can count how many times it was called. This change is made
1804by the compiler when your program is compiled with the @samp{-pg} option,
1805which causes every function to call @code{mcount}
1806(or @code{_mcount}, or @code{__mcount}, depending on the OS and compiler)
1807as one of its first operations.
1808
1809The @code{mcount} routine, included in the profiling library,
1810is responsible for recording in an in-memory call graph table
1811both its parent routine (the child) and its parent's parent. This is
1812typically done by examining the stack frame to find both
1813the address of the child, and the return address in the original parent.
5af11cab 1814Since this is a very machine-dependent operation, @code{mcount}
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1815itself is typically a short assembly-language stub routine
1816that extracts the required
1817information, and then calls @code{__mcount_internal}
afb17569 1818(a normal C function) with two arguments---@code{frompc} and @code{selfpc}.
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1819@code{__mcount_internal} is responsible for maintaining
1820the in-memory call graph, which records @code{frompc}, @code{selfpc},
5af11cab 1821and the number of times each of these call arcs was traversed.
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1822
1823GCC Version 2 provides a magical function (@code{__builtin_return_address}),
1824which allows a generic @code{mcount} function to extract the
1825required information from the stack frame. However, on some
1826architectures, most notably the SPARC, using this builtin can be
1827very computationally expensive, and an assembly language version
1828of @code{mcount} is used for performance reasons.
1829
1830Number-of-calls information for library routines is collected by using a
1831special version of the C library. The programs in it are the same as in
1832the usual C library, but they were compiled with @samp{-pg}. If you
1833link your program with @samp{gcc @dots{} -pg}, it automatically uses the
1834profiling version of the library.
1835
1836Profiling also involves watching your program as it runs, and keeping a
1837histogram of where the program counter happens to be every now and then.
1838Typically the program counter is looked at around 100 times per second of
1839run time, but the exact frequency may vary from system to system.
1840
1841This is done is one of two ways. Most UNIX-like operating systems
1842provide a @code{profil()} system call, which registers a memory
1843array with the kernel, along with a scale
1844factor that determines how the program's address space maps
1845into the array.
1846Typical scaling values cause every 2 to 8 bytes of address space
1847to map into a single array slot.
1848On every tick of the system clock
1849(assuming the profiled program is running), the value of the
1850program counter is examined and the corresponding slot in
1851the memory array is incremented. Since this is done in the kernel,
1852which had to interrupt the process anyway to handle the clock
1853interrupt, very little additional system overhead is required.
1854
1855However, some operating systems, most notably Linux 2.0 (and earlier),
1856do not provide a @code{profil()} system call. On such a system,
1857arrangements are made for the kernel to periodically deliver
1858a signal to the process (typically via @code{setitimer()}),
1859which then performs the same operation of examining the
1860program counter and incrementing a slot in the memory array.
1861Since this method requires a signal to be delivered to
1862user space every time a sample is taken, it uses considerably
1863more overhead than kernel-based profiling. Also, due to the
1864added delay required to deliver the signal, this method is
1865less accurate as well.
1866
1867A special startup routine allocates memory for the histogram and
1868either calls @code{profil()} or sets up
1869a clock signal handler.
1870This routine (@code{monstartup}) can be invoked in several ways.
1871On Linux systems, a special profiling startup file @code{gcrt0.o},
1872which invokes @code{monstartup} before @code{main},
1873is used instead of the default @code{crt0.o}.
1874Use of this special startup file is one of the effects
1875of using @samp{gcc @dots{} -pg} to link.
1876On SPARC systems, no special startup files are used.
1877Rather, the @code{mcount} routine, when it is invoked for
1878the first time (typically when @code{main} is called),
1879calls @code{monstartup}.
1880
1881If the compiler's @samp{-a} option was used, basic-block counting
1882is also enabled. Each object file is then compiled with a static array
1883of counts, initially zero.
1884In the executable code, every time a new basic-block begins
afb17569 1885(i.e., when an @code{if} statement appears), an extra instruction
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1886is inserted to increment the corresponding count in the array.
1887At compile time, a paired array was constructed that recorded
1888the starting address of each basic-block. Taken together,
1889the two arrays record the starting address of every basic-block,
1890along with the number of times it was executed.
1891
1892The profiling library also includes a function (@code{mcleanup}) which is
1893typically registered using @code{atexit()} to be called as the
1894program exits, and is responsible for writing the file @file{gmon.out}.
1895Profiling is turned off, various headers are output, and the histogram
1896is written, followed by the call-graph arcs and the basic-block counts.
1897
1898The output from @code{gprof} gives no indication of parts of your program that
1899are limited by I/O or swapping bandwidth. This is because samples of the
1900program counter are taken at fixed intervals of the program's run time.
1901Therefore, the
1902time measurements in @code{gprof} output say nothing about time that your
1903program was not running. For example, a part of the program that creates
1904so much data that it cannot all fit in physical memory at once may run very
1905slowly due to thrashing, but @code{gprof} will say it uses little time. On
1906the other hand, sampling by run time has the advantage that the amount of
1907load due to other users won't directly affect the output you get.
1908
afb17569 1909@node File Format
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1910@section Profiling Data File Format
1911
1912The old BSD-derived file format used for profile data does not contain a
1913magic cookie that allows to check whether a data file really is a
5af11cab 1914@code{gprof} file. Furthermore, it does not provide a version number, thus
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1915rendering changes to the file format almost impossible. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof}
1916uses a new file format that provides these features. For backward
1917compatibility, @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} continues to support the old BSD-derived
1918format, but not all features are supported with it. For example,
1919basic-block execution counts cannot be accommodated by the old file
1920format.
1921
1922The new file format is defined in header file @file{gmon_out.h}. It
1923consists of a header containing the magic cookie and a version number,
1924as well as some spare bytes available for future extensions. All data
dbdec02b
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1925in a profile data file is in the native format of the target for which
1926the profile was collected. @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} adapts automatically
1927to the byte-order in use.
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1928
1929In the new file format, the header is followed by a sequence of
1930records. Currently, there are three different record types: histogram
1931records, call-graph arc records, and basic-block execution count
1932records. Each file can contain any number of each record type. When
1933reading a file, @sc{gnu} @code{gprof} will ensure records of the same type are
1934compatible with each other and compute the union of all records. For
1935example, for basic-block execution counts, the union is simply the sum
1936of all execution counts for each basic-block.
1937
1938@subsection Histogram Records
1939
1940Histogram records consist of a header that is followed by an array of
1941bins. The header contains the text-segment range that the histogram
1942spans, the size of the histogram in bytes (unlike in the old BSD
1943format, this does not include the size of the header), the rate of the
1944profiling clock, and the physical dimension that the bin counts
1945represent after being scaled by the profiling clock rate. The
1946physical dimension is specified in two parts: a long name of up to 15
1947characters and a single character abbreviation. For example, a
1948histogram representing real-time would specify the long name as
afb17569 1949``seconds'' and the abbreviation as ``s''. This feature is useful for
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1950architectures that support performance monitor hardware (which,
1951fortunately, is becoming increasingly common). For example, under DEC
afb17569 1952OSF/1, the ``uprofile'' command can be used to produce a histogram of,
252b5132 1953say, instruction cache misses. In this case, the dimension in the
afb17569
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1954histogram header could be set to ``i-cache misses'' and the abbreviation
1955could be set to ``1'' (because it is simply a count, not a physical
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1956dimension). Also, the profiling rate would have to be set to 1 in
1957this case.
1958
1959Histogram bins are 16-bit numbers and each bin represent an equal
1960amount of text-space. For example, if the text-segment is one
1961thousand bytes long and if there are ten bins in the histogram, each
1962bin represents one hundred bytes.
1963
1964
1965@subsection Call-Graph Records
1966
1967Call-graph records have a format that is identical to the one used in
1968the BSD-derived file format. It consists of an arc in the call graph
1969and a count indicating the number of times the arc was traversed
1970during program execution. Arcs are specified by a pair of addresses:
1971the first must be within caller's function and the second must be
1972within the callee's function. When performing profiling at the
1973function level, these addresses can point anywhere within the
1974respective function. However, when profiling at the line-level, it is
1975better if the addresses are as close to the call-site/entry-point as
1976possible. This will ensure that the line-level call-graph is able to
1977identify exactly which line of source code performed calls to a
1978function.
1979
1980@subsection Basic-Block Execution Count Records
1981
1982Basic-block execution count records consist of a header followed by a
1983sequence of address/count pairs. The header simply specifies the
1984length of the sequence. In an address/count pair, the address
1985identifies a basic-block and the count specifies the number of times
1986that basic-block was executed. Any address within the basic-address can
1987be used.
1988
afb17569 1989@node Internals
252b5132
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1990@section @code{gprof}'s Internal Operation
1991
1992Like most programs, @code{gprof} begins by processing its options.
1993During this stage, it may building its symspec list
afb17569 1994(@code{sym_ids.c:@-sym_id_add}), if
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1995options are specified which use symspecs.
1996@code{gprof} maintains a single linked list of symspecs,
1997which will eventually get turned into 12 symbol tables,
afb17569 1998organized into six include/exclude pairs---one
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1999pair each for the flat profile (INCL_FLAT/EXCL_FLAT),
2000the call graph arcs (INCL_ARCS/EXCL_ARCS),
2001printing in the call graph (INCL_GRAPH/EXCL_GRAPH),
2002timing propagation in the call graph (INCL_TIME/EXCL_TIME),
2003the annotated source listing (INCL_ANNO/EXCL_ANNO),
2004and the execution count listing (INCL_EXEC/EXCL_EXEC).
2005
2006After option processing, @code{gprof} finishes
2007building the symspec list by adding all the symspecs in
2008@code{default_excluded_list} to the exclude lists
2009EXCL_TIME and EXCL_GRAPH, and if line-by-line profiling is specified,
2010EXCL_FLAT as well.
2011These default excludes are not added to EXCL_ANNO, EXCL_ARCS, and EXCL_EXEC.
2012
2013Next, the BFD library is called to open the object file,
2014verify that it is an object file,
afb17569 2015and read its symbol table (@code{core.c:@-core_init}),
252b5132 2016using @code{bfd_canonicalize_symtab} after mallocing
5af11cab 2017an appropriately sized array of symbols. At this point,
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2018function mappings are read (if the @samp{--file-ordering} option
2019has been specified), and the core text space is read into
2020memory (if the @samp{-c} option was given).
2021
2022@code{gprof}'s own symbol table, an array of Sym structures,
2023is now built.
2024This is done in one of two ways, by one of two routines, depending
2025on whether line-by-line profiling (@samp{-l} option) has been
2026enabled.
2027For normal profiling, the BFD canonical symbol table is scanned.
2028For line-by-line profiling, every
2029text space address is examined, and a new symbol table entry
2030gets created every time the line number changes.
2031In either case, two passes are made through the symbol
afb17569 2032table---one to count the size of the symbol table required,
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2033and the other to actually read the symbols. In between the
2034two passes, a single array of type @code{Sym} is created of
5af11cab 2035the appropriate length.
afb17569 2036Finally, @code{symtab.c:@-symtab_finalize}
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2037is called to sort the symbol table and remove duplicate entries
2038(entries with the same memory address).
2039
2040The symbol table must be a contiguous array for two reasons.
2041First, the @code{qsort} library function (which sorts an array)
2042will be used to sort the symbol table.
afb17569 2043Also, the symbol lookup routine (@code{symtab.c:@-sym_lookup}),
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2044which finds symbols
2045based on memory address, uses a binary search algorithm
2046which requires the symbol table to be a sorted array.
2047Function symbols are indicated with an @code{is_func} flag.
2048Line number symbols have no special flags set.
2049Additionally, a symbol can have an @code{is_static} flag
2050to indicate that it is a local symbol.
2051
2052With the symbol table read, the symspecs can now be translated
afb17569 2053into Syms (@code{sym_ids.c:@-sym_id_parse}). Remember that a single
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2054symspec can match multiple symbols.
2055An array of symbol tables
2056(@code{syms}) is created, each entry of which is a symbol table
2057of Syms to be included or excluded from a particular listing.
2058The master symbol table and the symspecs are examined by nested
2059loops, and every symbol that matches a symspec is inserted
2060into the appropriate syms table. This is done twice, once to
2061count the size of each required symbol table, and again to build
2062the tables, which have been malloced between passes.
2063From now on, to determine whether a symbol is on an include
2064or exclude symspec list, @code{gprof} simply uses its
2065standard symbol lookup routine on the appropriate table
2066in the @code{syms} array.
2067
2068Now the profile data file(s) themselves are read
afb17569 2069(@code{gmon_io.c:@-gmon_out_read}),
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2070first by checking for a new-style @samp{gmon.out} header,
2071then assuming this is an old-style BSD @samp{gmon.out}
2072if the magic number test failed.
2073
afb17569 2074New-style histogram records are read by @code{hist.c:@-hist_read_rec}.
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2075For the first histogram record, allocate a memory array to hold
2076all the bins, and read them in.
2077When multiple profile data files (or files with multiple histogram
b3296dc5
VP
2078records) are read, the memory ranges of each pair of histogram records
2079must be either equal, or non-overlapping. For each pair of histogram
2080records, the resolution (memory region size divided by the number of
2081bins) must be the same. The time unit must be the same for all
2082histogram records. If the above containts are met, all histograms
2083for the same memory range are merged.
252b5132 2084
afb17569 2085As each call graph record is read (@code{call_graph.c:@-cg_read_rec}),
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2086the parent and child addresses
2087are matched to symbol table entries, and a call graph arc is
afb17569 2088created by @code{cg_arcs.c:@-arc_add}, unless the arc fails a symspec
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2089check against INCL_ARCS/EXCL_ARCS. As each arc is added,
2090a linked list is maintained of the parent's child arcs, and of the child's
2091parent arcs.
2092Both the child's call count and the arc's call count are
2093incremented by the record's call count.
2094
afb17569 2095Basic-block records are read (@code{basic_blocks.c:@-bb_read_rec}),
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2096but only if line-by-line profiling has been selected.
2097Each basic-block address is matched to a corresponding line
2098symbol in the symbol table, and an entry made in the symbol's
2099bb_addr and bb_calls arrays. Again, if multiple basic-block
2100records are present for the same address, the call counts
2101are cumulative.
2102
afb17569 2103A gmon.sum file is dumped, if requested (@code{gmon_io.c:@-gmon_out_write}).
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2104
2105If histograms were present in the data files, assign them to symbols
afb17569 2106(@code{hist.c:@-hist_assign_samples}) by iterating over all the sample
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2107bins and assigning them to symbols. Since the symbol table
2108is sorted in order of ascending memory addresses, we can
2109simple follow along in the symbol table as we make our pass
2110over the sample bins.
2111This step includes a symspec check against INCL_FLAT/EXCL_FLAT.
2112Depending on the histogram
2113scale factor, a sample bin may span multiple symbols,
2114in which case a fraction of the sample count is allocated
2115to each symbol, proportional to the degree of overlap.
2116This effect is rare for normal profiling, but overlaps
2117are more common during line-by-line profiling, and can
2118cause each of two adjacent lines to be credited with half
2119a hit, for example.
2120
afb17569 2121If call graph data is present, @code{cg_arcs.c:@-cg_assemble} is called.
5af11cab 2122First, if @samp{-c} was specified, a machine-dependent
252b5132
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2123routine (@code{find_call}) scans through each symbol's machine code,
2124looking for subroutine call instructions, and adding them
2125to the call graph with a zero call count.
2126A topological sort is performed by depth-first numbering
afb17569 2127all the symbols (@code{cg_dfn.c:@-cg_dfn}), so that
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2128children are always numbered less than their parents,
2129then making a array of pointers into the symbol table and sorting it into
2130numerical order, which is reverse topological
2131order (children appear before parents).
2132Cycles are also detected at this point, all members
2133of which are assigned the same topological number.
2134Two passes are now made through this sorted array of symbol pointers.
2135The first pass, from end to beginning (parents to children),
5af11cab 2136computes the fraction of child time to propagate to each parent
252b5132
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2137and a print flag.
2138The print flag reflects symspec handling of INCL_GRAPH/EXCL_GRAPH,
2139with a parent's include or exclude (print or no print) property
2140being propagated to its children, unless they themselves explicitly appear
2141in INCL_GRAPH or EXCL_GRAPH.
2142A second pass, from beginning to end (children to parents) actually
5af11cab 2143propagates the timings along the call graph, subject
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2144to a check against INCL_TIME/EXCL_TIME.
2145With the print flag, fractions, and timings now stored in the symbol
2146structures, the topological sort array is now discarded, and a
2147new array of pointers is assembled, this time sorted by propagated time.
2148
2149Finally, print the various outputs the user requested, which is now fairly
afb17569
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2150straightforward. The call graph (@code{cg_print.c:@-cg_print}) and
2151flat profile (@code{hist.c:@-hist_print}) are regurgitations of values
252b5132 2152already computed. The annotated source listing
afb17569 2153(@code{basic_blocks.c:@-print_annotated_source}) uses basic-block
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2154information, if present, to label each line of code with call counts,
2155otherwise only the function call counts are presented.
2156
2157The function ordering code is marginally well documented
2158in the source code itself (@code{cg_print.c}). Basically,
2159the functions with the most use and the most parents are
2160placed first, followed by other functions with the most use,
2161followed by lower use functions, followed by unused functions
2162at the end.
2163
afb17569 2164@node Debugging
19c6af1e 2165@section Debugging @code{gprof}
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2166
2167If @code{gprof} was compiled with debugging enabled,
2168the @samp{-d} option triggers debugging output
2169(to stdout) which can be helpful in understanding its operation.
2170The debugging number specified is interpreted as a sum of the following
2171options:
2172
2173@table @asis
2174@item 2 - Topological sort
2175Monitor depth-first numbering of symbols during call graph analysis
2176@item 4 - Cycles
2177Shows symbols as they are identified as cycle heads
2178@item 16 - Tallying
2179As the call graph arcs are read, show each arc and how
2180the total calls to each function are tallied
2181@item 32 - Call graph arc sorting
2182Details sorting individual parents/children within each call graph entry
2183@item 64 - Reading histogram and call graph records
2184Shows address ranges of histograms as they are read, and each
2185call graph arc
2186@item 128 - Symbol table
2187Reading, classifying, and sorting the symbol table from the object file.
2188For line-by-line profiling (@samp{-l} option), also shows line numbers
2189being assigned to memory addresses.
2190@item 256 - Static call graph
2191Trace operation of @samp{-c} option
2192@item 512 - Symbol table and arc table lookups
2193Detail operation of lookup routines
2194@item 1024 - Call graph propagation
2195Shows how function times are propagated along the call graph
2196@item 2048 - Basic-blocks
2197Shows basic-block records as they are read from profile data
2198(only meaningful with @samp{-l} option)
2199@item 4096 - Symspecs
2200Shows symspec-to-symbol pattern matching operation
2201@item 8192 - Annotate source
2202Tracks operation of @samp{-A} option
2203@end table
2204
cf055d54 2205@node GNU Free Documentation License
afb17569
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2206@appendix GNU Free Documentation License
2207@center Version 1.1, March 2000
2208
2209@display
2210Copyright (C) 2000, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
221151 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
2212
2213Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
2214of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
2215@end display
2216@sp 1
2217@enumerate 0
2218@item
2219PREAMBLE
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2220
2221The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
afb17569 2222written document ``free'' in the sense of freedom: to assure everyone
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2223the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it, with or without
2224modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially. Secondarily,
2225this License preserves for the author and publisher a way to get
2226credit for their work, while not being considered responsible for
2227modifications made by others.
2228
afb17569 2229This License is a kind of ``copyleft'', which means that derivative
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2230works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It
2231complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
2232license designed for free software.
2233
2234We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free
2235software, because free software needs free documentation: a free
2236program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the
2237software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals;
2238it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or
2239whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License
2240principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference.
2241
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2242@sp 1
2243@item
2244APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS
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2245
2246This License applies to any manual or other work that contains a
2247notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can be distributed
afb17569 2248under the terms of this License. The ``Document'', below, refers to any
cf055d54 2249such manual or work. Any member of the public is a licensee, and is
afb17569 2250addressed as ``you.''
cf055d54 2251
afb17569 2252A ``Modified Version'' of the Document means any work containing the
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2253Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with
2254modifications and/or translated into another language.
2255
afb17569 2256A ``Secondary Section'' is a named appendix or a front-matter section of
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2257the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the
2258publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall subject
2259(or to related matters) and contains nothing that could fall directly
2260within that overall subject. (For example, if the Document is in part a
2261textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not explain any
2262mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of historical
2263connection with the subject or with related matters, or of legal,
2264commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position regarding
2265them.
2266
afb17569 2267The ``Invariant Sections'' are certain Secondary Sections whose titles
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2268are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the notice
2269that says that the Document is released under this License.
2270
afb17569 2271The ``Cover Texts'' are certain short passages of text that are listed,
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2272as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice that says that
2273the Document is released under this License.
2274
afb17569 2275A ``Transparent'' copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy,
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2276represented in a format whose specification is available to the
2277general public, whose contents can be viewed and edited directly and
2278straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images composed of
2279pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some widely available
2280drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to text formatters or
2281for automatic translation to a variety of formats suitable for input
2282to text formatters. A copy made in an otherwise Transparent file
2283format whose markup has been designed to thwart or discourage
2284subsequent modification by readers is not Transparent. A copy that is
afb17569 2285not ``Transparent'' is called ``Opaque.''
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2286
2287Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain
2288ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format, SGML
2289or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming simple
2290HTML designed for human modification. Opaque formats include
2291PostScript, PDF, proprietary formats that can be read and edited only
2292by proprietary word processors, SGML or XML for which the DTD and/or
2293processing tools are not generally available, and the
2294machine-generated HTML produced by some word processors for output
2295purposes only.
2296
afb17569 2297The ``Title Page'' means, for a printed book, the title page itself,
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2298plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the material
2299this License requires to appear in the title page. For works in
afb17569 2300formats which do not have any title page as such, ``Title Page'' means
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2301the text near the most prominent appearance of the work's title,
2302preceding the beginning of the body of the text.
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2303@sp 1
2304@item
2305VERBATIM COPYING
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2306
2307You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
2308commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
2309copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License applies
2310to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you add no other
2311conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You may not use
2312technical measures to obstruct or control the reading or further
2313copying of the copies you make or distribute. However, you may accept
2314compensation in exchange for copies. If you distribute a large enough
2315number of copies you must also follow the conditions in section 3.
2316
2317You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above, and
2318you may publicly display copies.
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2319@sp 1
2320@item
2321COPYING IN QUANTITY
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2322
2323If you publish printed copies of the Document numbering more than 100,
2324and the Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must enclose
2325the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all these Cover
2326Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and Back-Cover Texts on
2327the back cover. Both covers must also clearly and legibly identify
2328you as the publisher of these copies. The front cover must present
2329the full title with all words of the title equally prominent and
2330visible. You may add other material on the covers in addition.
2331Copying with changes limited to the covers, as long as they preserve
2332the title of the Document and satisfy these conditions, can be treated
2333as verbatim copying in other respects.
2334
2335If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit
2336legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit
2337reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto adjacent
2338pages.
2339
2340If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document numbering
2341more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable Transparent
2342copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with each Opaque copy
2343a publicly-accessible computer-network location containing a complete
2344Transparent copy of the Document, free of added material, which the
2345general network-using public has access to download anonymously at no
2346charge using public-standard network protocols. If you use the latter
2347option, you must take reasonably prudent steps, when you begin
2348distribution of Opaque copies in quantity, to ensure that this
2349Transparent copy will remain thus accessible at the stated location
2350until at least one year after the last time you distribute an Opaque
2351copy (directly or through your agents or retailers) of that edition to
2352the public.
2353
2354It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of the
2355Document well before redistributing any large number of copies, to give
2356them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the Document.
afb17569
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2357@sp 1
2358@item
2359MODIFICATIONS
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2360
2361You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document under
2362the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you release
2363the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the Modified
2364Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing distribution
2365and modification of the Modified Version to whoever possesses a copy
2366of it. In addition, you must do these things in the Modified Version:
2367
2368A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title distinct
2369 from that of the Document, and from those of previous versions
2370 (which should, if there were any, be listed in the History section
2371 of the Document). You may use the same title as a previous version
afb17569 2372 if the original publisher of that version gives permission.@*
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2373B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or entities
2374 responsible for authorship of the modifications in the Modified
2375 Version, together with at least five of the principal authors of the
afb17569 2376 Document (all of its principal authors, if it has less than five).@*
cf055d54 2377C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the
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2378 Modified Version, as the publisher.@*
2379D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.@*
cf055d54 2380E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications
afb17569 2381 adjacent to the other copyright notices.@*
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2382F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license notice
2383 giving the public permission to use the Modified Version under the
afb17569 2384 terms of this License, in the form shown in the Addendum below.@*
cf055d54 2385G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant Sections
afb17569
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2386 and required Cover Texts given in the Document's license notice.@*
2387H. Include an unaltered copy of this License.@*
2388I. Preserve the section entitled ``History'', and its title, and add to
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2389 it an item stating at least the title, year, new authors, and
2390 publisher of the Modified Version as given on the Title Page. If
afb17569 2391 there is no section entitled ``History'' in the Document, create one
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2392 stating the title, year, authors, and publisher of the Document as
2393 given on its Title Page, then add an item describing the Modified
afb17569 2394 Version as stated in the previous sentence.@*
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2395J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document for
2396 public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and likewise
2397 the network locations given in the Document for previous versions
afb17569 2398 it was based on. These may be placed in the ``History'' section.
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2399 You may omit a network location for a work that was published at
2400 least four years before the Document itself, or if the original
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2401 publisher of the version it refers to gives permission.@*
2402K. In any section entitled ``Acknowledgements'' or ``Dedications'',
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2403 preserve the section's title, and preserve in the section all the
2404 substance and tone of each of the contributor acknowledgements
afb17569 2405 and/or dedications given therein.@*
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2406L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document,
2407 unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers
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2408 or the equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.@*
2409M. Delete any section entitled ``Endorsements.'' Such a section
2410 may not be included in the Modified Version.@*
2411N. Do not retitle any existing section as ``Endorsements''
2412 or to conflict in title with any Invariant Section.@*
2413@sp 1
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2414If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
2415appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no material
2416copied from the Document, you may at your option designate some or all
2417of these sections as invariant. To do this, add their titles to the
2418list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version's license notice.
2419These titles must be distinct from any other section titles.
2420
afb17569 2421You may add a section entitled ``Endorsements'', provided it contains
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2422nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various
2423parties--for example, statements of peer review or that the text has
2424been approved by an organization as the authoritative definition of a
2425standard.
2426
2427You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text, and a
2428passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of the list
2429of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one passage of
2430Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or
2431through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the Document already
2432includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added by you or
2433by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on behalf of,
2434you may not add another; but you may replace the old one, on explicit
2435permission from the previous publisher that added the old one.
2436
2437The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this License
2438give permission to use their names for publicity for or to assert or
2439imply endorsement of any Modified Version.
afb17569
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2440@sp 1
2441@item
2442COMBINING DOCUMENTS
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2443
2444You may combine the Document with other documents released under this
2445License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for modified
2446versions, provided that you include in the combination all of the
2447Invariant Sections of all of the original documents, unmodified, and
2448list them all as Invariant Sections of your combined work in its
2449license notice.
2450
2451The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and
2452multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single
2453copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name but
2454different contents, make the title of each such section unique by
2455adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the original
2456author or publisher of that section if known, or else a unique number.
2457Make the same adjustment to the section titles in the list of
2458Invariant Sections in the license notice of the combined work.
2459
afb17569 2460In the combination, you must combine any sections entitled ``History''
cf055d54 2461in the various original documents, forming one section entitled
afb17569
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2462``History''; likewise combine any sections entitled ``Acknowledgements'',
2463and any sections entitled ``Dedications.'' You must delete all sections
2464entitled ``Endorsements.''
2465@sp 1
2466@item
2467COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS
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2468
2469You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other documents
2470released under this License, and replace the individual copies of this
2471License in the various documents with a single copy that is included in
2472the collection, provided that you follow the rules of this License for
2473verbatim copying of each of the documents in all other respects.
2474
2475You may extract a single document from such a collection, and distribute
2476it individually under this License, provided you insert a copy of this
2477License into the extracted document, and follow this License in all
2478other respects regarding verbatim copying of that document.
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2479@sp 1
2480@item
2481AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS
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2482
2483A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other separate
2484and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of a storage or
2485distribution medium, does not as a whole count as a Modified Version
2486of the Document, provided no compilation copyright is claimed for the
afb17569 2487compilation. Such a compilation is called an ``aggregate'', and this
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2488License does not apply to the other self-contained works thus compiled
2489with the Document, on account of their being thus compiled, if they
2490are not themselves derivative works of the Document.
2491
2492If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
2493copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one quarter
2494of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed on
2495covers that surround only the Document within the aggregate.
2496Otherwise they must appear on covers around the whole aggregate.
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2497@sp 1
2498@item
2499TRANSLATION
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2500
2501Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may
2502distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section 4.
2503Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special
2504permission from their copyright holders, but you may include
2505translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the
2506original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a
2507translation of this License provided that you also include the
2508original English version of this License. In case of a disagreement
2509between the translation and the original English version of this
2510License, the original English version will prevail.
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2511@sp 1
2512@item
2513TERMINATION
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2514
2515You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document except
2516as expressly provided for under this License. Any other attempt to
2517copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Document is void, and will
2518automatically terminate your rights under this License. However,
2519parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this
2520License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such
2521parties remain in full compliance.
afb17569
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2522@sp 1
2523@item
2524FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE
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2525
2526The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions
2527of the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new
2528versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
2529differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See
2530http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/.
2531
2532Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version number.
2533If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this
afb17569 2534License ``or any later version'' applies to it, you have the option of
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2535following the terms and conditions either of that specified version or
2536of any later version that has been published (not as a draft) by the
2537Free Software Foundation. If the Document does not specify a version
2538number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not
2539as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation.
2540
afb17569 2541@end enumerate
cf055d54 2542
afb17569 2543@unnumberedsec ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents
cf055d54
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2544
2545To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
2546the License in the document and put the following copyright and
2547license notices just after the title page:
2548
2549@smallexample
afb17569
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2550@group
2551Copyright (C) @var{year} @var{your name}.
2552Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
2553under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
2554or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
2555with the Invariant Sections being @var{list their titles}, with the
2556Front-Cover Texts being @var{list}, and with the Back-Cover Texts being @var{list}.
2557A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU
2558Free Documentation License."
2559@end group
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2560@end smallexample
2561
afb17569 2562If you have no Invariant Sections, write ``with no Invariant Sections''
cf055d54 2563instead of saying which ones are invariant. If you have no
afb17569
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2564Front-Cover Texts, write ``no Front-Cover Texts'' instead of
2565``Front-Cover Texts being @var{list}''; likewise for Back-Cover Texts.
cf055d54
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2566
2567If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
2568recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of
2569free software license, such as the GNU General Public License,
2570to permit their use in free software.
2571
252b5132
RH
2572@bye
2573
2574NEEDS AN INDEX
2575
2576-T - "traditional BSD style": How is it different? Should the
2577differences be documented?
2578
2579example flat file adds up to 100.01%...
2580
2581note: time estimates now only go out to one decimal place (0.0), where
2582they used to extend two (78.67).
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