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146 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
146 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
gperftools
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(originally Google Performance Tools)
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OVERVIEW
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---------
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gperftools is a collection of a high-performance multi-threaded
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malloc() implementation, plus some pretty nifty performance analysis
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tools.
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gperftools is distributed under the terms of the BSD License. Join our
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mailing list at gperftools@googlegroups.com for updates:
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https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/gperftools
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gperftools was original home for pprof program. The original pprof was
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a Perl script and there is not that many Perl experts
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nowadays. Thankfully, pprof has been rewritten in Go around 2016 and
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that version of pprof has gotten a lot more feature-ful. So the
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original pprof is now removed in favor of Go version at
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https://github.com/google/pprof. Go's own profiling facilities are
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based on that pprof version as well.
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TCMALLOC
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--------
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Just link in -ltcmalloc or -ltcmalloc_minimal to get the advantages of
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tcmalloc -- a replacement for malloc and new. See below for some
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environment variables you can use with tcmalloc, as well.
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tcmalloc functionality is available on all systems we've tested; see
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INSTALL for more details. See README_windows.txt for instructions on
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using tcmalloc on Windows.
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HEAP PROFILER
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-------------
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See docs/heapprofile.adoc for information about how to use tcmalloc's
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heap profiler and analyze its output.
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As a quick-start, do the following after installing this package:
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1) Link your executable with -ltcmalloc
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2) Run your executable with the HEAPPROFILE environment var set:
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$ HEAPPROFILE=/tmp/heapprof <path/to/binary> [binary args]
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3) Run pprof to analyze the heap usage
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$ pprof <path/to/binary> /tmp/heapprof.0045.heap # run 'ls' to see options
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$ pprof --gv <path/to/binary> /tmp/heapprof.0045.heap
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You can also use LD_PRELOAD to heap-profile an executable that you
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didn't compile.
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There are other environment variables, besides HEAPPROFILE, you can
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set to adjust the heap-profiler behavior; c.f. "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
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below.
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The heap profiler is available on all unix-based systems we've tested;
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see INSTALL for more details. It is not currently available on Windows.
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CPU PROFILER
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------------
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See docs/cpuprofile.adoc for information about how to use the CPU
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profiler and analyze its output.
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As a quick-start, do the following after installing this package:
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1) Link your executable with -lprofiler
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2) Run your executable with the CPUPROFILE environment var set:
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$ CPUPROFILE=/tmp/prof.out <path/to/binary> [binary args]
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3) Run pprof to analyze the CPU usage
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$ pprof <path/to/binary> /tmp/prof.out # -pg-like text output
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$ pprof --gv <path/to/binary> /tmp/prof.out # really cool graphical output
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There are other environment variables, besides CPUPROFILE, you can set
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to adjust the cpu-profiler behavior; cf "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" below.
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The CPU profiler is available on all unix-based systems we've tested;
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see INSTALL for more details. It is not currently available on Windows.
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NOTE: CPU profiling doesn't work after fork (unless you immediately
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do an exec()-like call afterwards). Furthermore, if you do
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fork, and the child calls exit(), it may corrupt the profile
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data. You can use _exit() to work around this. We hope to have
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a fix for both problems in the next release of perftools
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(hopefully perftools 1.2).
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CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
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---------------------
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For advanced users, there are several flags you can pass to
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'./configure' that tweak tcmalloc performance. (These are in addition
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to the environment variables you can set at runtime to affect
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tcmalloc, described below.) See the INSTALL file for details.
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ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
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---------------------
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The cpu profiler, heap checker, and heap profiler will lie dormant,
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using no memory or CPU, until you turn them on. (Thus, there's no
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harm in linking -lprofiler into every application, and also -ltcmalloc
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assuming you're ok using the non-libc malloc library.)
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The easiest way to turn them on is by setting the appropriate
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environment variables. We have several variables that let you
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enable/disable features as well as tweak parameters.
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Here are some of the most important variables:
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HEAPPROFILE=<pre> -- turns on heap profiling and dumps data using this prefix
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HEAPCHECK=<type> -- turns on heap checking with strictness 'type'
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CPUPROFILE=<file> -- turns on cpu profiling and dumps data to this file.
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PROFILESELECTED=1 -- if set, cpu-profiler will only profile regions of code
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surrounded with ProfilerEnable()/ProfilerDisable().
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CPUPROFILE_FREQUENCY=x-- how many interrupts/second the cpu-profiler samples.
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PERFTOOLS_VERBOSE=<level> -- the higher level, the more messages malloc emits
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MALLOCSTATS=<level> -- prints memory-use stats at program-exit
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For a full list of variables, see the documentation pages:
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docs/cpuprofile.adoc
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docs/heapprofile.adoc
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See also TCMALLOC_STACKTRACE_METHOD_VERBOSE and
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TCMALLOC_STACKTRACE_METHOD environment variables briefly documented in
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our INSTALL file and on our wiki page at:
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https://github.com/gperftools/gperftools/wiki/gperftools'-stacktrace-capturing-methods-and-their-issues
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COMPILING ON NON-LINUX SYSTEMS
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------------------------------
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Perftools was developed and tested on x86, aarch64 and riscv Linux
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systems, and it works in its full generality only on those systems.
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However, we've successfully ported much of the tcmalloc library to
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FreeBSD, Solaris x86 (not tested recently though), and Mac OS X
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(aarch64; x86 and ppc have not been tested recently); and we've ported
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the basic functionality in tcmalloc_minimal to Windows. See INSTALL
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for details. See README_windows.txt for details on the Windows port.
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---
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Originally written: 17 May 2011
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Last refreshed: 10 Aug 2023
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