2010-08-05 20:36:47 +00:00
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=== 5 August 2010 ===
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I've just released perftools 1.6
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This version also has a large number of minor changes, including
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support for `malloc_usable_size()` as a glibc-compatible alias to
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`malloc_size()`, the addition of SVG-based output to `pprof`, and
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experimental support for tcmalloc large pages, which may speed up
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tcmalloc at the cost of greater memory use. To use tcmalloc large
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pages, see the
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2010-11-18 01:07:25 +00:00
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[http://google-perftools.googlecode.com/svn/tags/perftools-1.6/INSTALL
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2010-08-05 20:36:47 +00:00
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INSTALL file]; for all changes, see the
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2010-11-18 01:07:25 +00:00
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[http://google-perftools.googlecode.com/svn/tags/perftools-1.6/ChangeLog
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2010-08-05 20:36:47 +00:00
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ChangeLog].
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OS X NOTE: improvements in the profiler unittest have turned up an OS
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X issue: in multithreaded programs, it seems that OS X often delivers
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the profiling signal (from sigitimer()) to the main thread, even when
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it's sleeping, rather than spawned threads that are doing actual work.
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If anyone knows details of how OS X handles SIGPROF events (from
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setitimer) in threaded programs, and has insight into this problem,
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please send mail to google-perftools@googlegroups.com.
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To see if you're affected by this, look for profiling time that pprof
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2010-11-18 01:07:25 +00:00
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attributes to `___semwait_signal`. This is work being done in other
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2010-08-05 20:36:47 +00:00
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threads, that is being attributed to sleeping-time in the main thread.
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2010-05-07 21:53:24 +00:00
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=== 20 January 2010 ===
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I've just released perftools 1.5
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This version has a slew of changes, leading to somewhat faster
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performance and improvements in portability. It adds features like
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`ITIMER_REAL` support to the cpu profiler, and `tc_set_new_mode` to
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mimic the windows function of the same name. Full details are in the
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[http://google-perftools.googlecode.com/svn/tags/perftools-1.5/ChangeLog
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ChangeLog].
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=== 11 September 2009 ===
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I've just released perftools 1.4
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The major change this release is the addition of a debugging malloc
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library! If you link with `libtcmalloc_debug.so` instead of
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`libtcmalloc.so` (and likewise for the `minimal` variants) you'll get
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a debugging malloc, which will catch double-frees, writes to freed
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data, `free`/`delete` and `delete`/`delete[]` mismatches, and even
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(optionally) writes past the end of an allocated block.
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We plan to do more with this library in the future, including
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supporting it on Windows, and adding the ability to use the debugging
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library with your default malloc in addition to using it with
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tcmalloc.
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There are also the usual complement of bug fixes, documented in the
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ChangeLog, and a few minor user-tunable knobs added to components like
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the system allocator.
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=== 9 June 2009 ===
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I've just released perftools 1.3
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Like 1.2, this has a variety of bug fixes, especially related to the
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Windows build. One of my bugfixes is to undo the weird `ld -r` fix to
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`.a` files that I introduced in perftools 1.2: it caused problems on
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too many platforms. I've reverted back to normal `.a` files. To work
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around the original problem that prompted the `ld -r` fix, I now
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provide `libtcmalloc_and_profiler.a`, for folks who want to link in
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both.
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The most interesting API change is that I now not only override
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`malloc`/`free`/etc, I also expose them via a unique set of symbols:
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`tc_malloc`/`tc_free`/etc. This enables clients to write their own
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memory wrappers that use tcmalloc:
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{{{
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void* malloc(size_t size) { void* r = tc_malloc(size); Log(r); return r; }
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}}}
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=== 17 April 2009 ===
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I've just released perftools 1.2.
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This is mostly a bugfix release. The major change is internal: I have
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a new system for creating packages, which allows me to create 64-bit
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packages. (I still don't do that for perftools, because there is
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still no great 64-bit solution, with libunwind still giving problems
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and --disable-frame-pointers not practical in every environment.)
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Another interesting change involves Windows: a
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[http://code.google.com/p/google-perftools/issues/detail?id=126 new
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patch] allows users to choose to override malloc/free/etc on Windows
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rather than patching, as is done now. This can be used to create
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custom CRTs.
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My fix for this
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[http://groups.google.com/group/google-perftools/browse_thread/thread/1ff9b50043090d9d/a59210c4206f2060?lnk=gst&q=dynamic#a59210c4206f2060
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bug involving static linking] ended up being to make libtcmalloc.a and
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libperftools.a a big .o file, rather than a true `ar` archive. This
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should not yield any problems in practice -- in fact, it should be
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better, since the heap profiler, leak checker, and cpu profiler will
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now all work even with the static libraries -- but if you find it
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does, please file a bug report.
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Finally, the profile_handler_unittest provided in the perftools
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testsuite (new in this release) is failing on FreeBSD. The end-to-end
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test that uses the profile-handler is passing, so I suspect the
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problem may be with the test, not the perftools code itself. However,
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I do not know enough about how itimers work on FreeBSD to be able to
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debug it. If you can figure it out, please let me know!
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=== 11 March 2009 ===
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I've just released perftools 1.1!
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It has many changes since perftools 1.0 including
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* Faster performance due to dynamically sized thread caches
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* Better heap-sampling for more realistic profiles
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* Improved support on Windows (MSVC 7.1 and cygwin)
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* Better stacktraces in linux (using VDSO)
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* Many bug fixes and feature requests
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Note: if you use the CPU-profiler with applications that fork without
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doing an exec right afterwards, please see the README. Recent testing
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has shown that profiles are unreliable in that case. The problem has
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existed since the first release of perftools. We expect to have a fix
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for perftools 1.2. For more details, see
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[http://code.google.com/p/google-perftools/issues/detail?id=105 issue 105].
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Everyone who uses perftools 1.0 is encouraged to upgrade to perftools
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1.1. If you see any problems with the new release, please file a bug
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report at http://code.google.com/p/google-perftools/issues/list.
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Enjoy!
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