gdbprofiler is not maintained anymore. I recommend using perf or samply.
Old Readme below.
This is a fork of Ygrek's ocaml-gdb, a gdb-based profiler for native OCaml programs. Support for writing cpuprofile files has been added, which can be viewed in Chromium's DevTools, which can be opened by pressing F12 or navigating to this page (you may need to open this page first). It also supports writing callgrind files, which can be viewed using kachegrind.
Additionally, support for lldb has been added (by passing the --use-lldb
command line argument). This is experimental and requires the lldb-mi
executable.
gdbprofiler works on OCaml 4.03.0 and higher.
gdbprofiler doesn't require instrumentation. Compile your code to native binaries. Optionally, add
-g
in ocamlc or -tag debug
in ocamlbuild to see source code locations.
Installation: opam install gdbprofiler
Usage: gdbprofiler -p <pid> [--use-lldb] [--debugger path] [--cpuprofile path] [--callgrind path]
Example: gdbprofiler -p `pidof my_example_program.native` --cpuprofile example.cpuprofile --callgrind callgrind.out
If you're getting a "not permitted" error on Linux, run the following: su -c 'sysctlkernel.yama.ptrace_scope=0'
(more
infos).
The output file must have a .cpuprofile
extension, otherwise Chromium refuses to load it.
In recent versions of Chromium the profiler view has moved. It can be found in the ... menu on the top right -> More tools -> JavaScript Profiler.
Bottom up view in Chromium.
Top down view in Chromium.
Chart view in Chromium.
Tree Map in kcachegrind.
Call Graph in kcachegrind.
RMP is a stack sampling profiler based on ocaml-gdb library for communication with GDB machine interface (GDB/MI).
Stack sampling profiler works by taking many stack traces of the profiled process and aggregating similar traces together, providing empirical evidence of program behaviour with statistical estimation of percentage of time spent in different code paths. This means, that profiler will show not only cpu-bound hotspots, but also all places where the code is waiting for the kernel call to finish (e.g. sleep, blocking IO, etc). One nice property of stack sampling approach is that the profiled program needn't be modified or restarted - profiler only needs the permission to attach to the running process and collect stack traces for the short period of time.
See http://poormansprofiler.org/ for general description of this technique.
RMP attaches GDB to the profiled program once and then instructs it to probe the stack of the inferior process periodically. The traces are aggregated and displayed/updated immediately. It has access to all the information that GDB provides (static stack unwinding, debug symbols, etc). Interactive mode allows to stop/resume profiling at any time (e.g. when enough information is available or waiting for the process to engage into some specific activity).
RMP was devised to fill the gap between existing solutions :
-
gprof
Instrumenting profiler, requires recompilation, instrumentation influences code behaviour significantly (inflating execution time for small functions).
-
pmp
Poor man's profiler shell script works by calling gdb several times each time attaching to the process, collecting trace and detaching. This extremely simple approach works everywhere and yields tons of useful information. Unfortunately, it also incurs significant pauses in the profiled process and takes quite a bit of time to collect the traces, also doesn't have interactive mode.
-
linux perf
Works only on linux, needs to be compiled with the matching version of kernel headers. Can profile both kernel and userland, but only the code that saves frame pointer on the stack. This is true for the majority of C code, but doesn't hold for the OCaml native code (in default mode).