Devel::DProf(3) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Devel::DProf(3)NAMEDevel::DProf - a Perl code profiler
SYNOPSIS
perl5 -d:DProf test.pl
DESCRIPTION
The Devel::DProf package is a Perl code profiler. This
will collect information on the execution time of a Perl
script and of the subs in that script. This information
can be used to determine which subroutines are using the
most time and which subroutines are being called most
often. This information can also be used to create an
execution graph of the script, showing subroutine rela
tionships.
To profile a Perl script run the perl interpreter with the
-d debugging switch. The profiler uses the debugging
hooks. So to profile script test.pl the following command
should be used:
perl5 -d:DProf test.pl
When the script terminates (or when the output buffer is
filled) the profiler will dump the profile information to
a file called tmon.out. A tool like dprofpp can be used
to interpret the information which is in that profile.
The following command will print the top 15 subroutines
which used the most time:
dprofpp
To print an execution graph of the subroutines in the
script use the following command:
dprofpp -T
Consult the dprofpp manpage for other options.
PROFILE FORMAT
The old profile is a text file which looks like this:
#fOrTyTwO
$hz=100;
$XS_VERSION='DProf 19970606';
# All values are given in HZ
$rrun_utime=2; $rrun_stime=0; $rrun_rtime=7
PART2
+ 26 28 566822884 DynaLoader::import
- 26 28 566822884 DynaLoader::import
+ 27 28 566822885 main::bar
- 27 28 566822886 main::bar
+ 27 28 566822886 main::baz
+ 27 28 566822887 main::bar
- 27 28 566822888 main::bar
[....]
The first line is the magic number. The second line is
the hertz value, or clock ticks, of the machine where the
profile was collected. The third line is the name and
version identifier of the tool which created the profile.
The fourth line is a comment. The fifth line contains
three variables holding the user time, system time, and
realtime of the process while it was being profiled. The
sixth line indicates the beginning of the sub entry/exit
profile section.
The columns in PART2 are:
sub entry(+)/exit(-) mark
app's user time at sub entry/exit mark, in ticks
app's system time at sub entry/exit mark, in ticks
app's realtime at sub entry/exit mark, in ticks
fully-qualified sub name, when possible
With newer perls another format is used, which may look
like this:
#fOrTyTwO
$hz=10000;
$XS_VERSION='DProf 19971213';
# All values are given in HZ
$over_utime=5917; $over_stime=0; $over_rtime=5917;
$over_tests=10000;
$rrun_utime=1284; $rrun_stime=0; $rrun_rtime=1284;
$total_marks=6;
PART2
@ 406 0 406
& 2 main bar
+ 2
@ 456 0 456
- 2
@ 1 0 1
& 3 main baz
+ 3
@ 141 0 141
+ 2
@ 141 0 141
- 2
@ 1 0 1
& 4 main foo
+ 4
@ 142 0 142
+ & Devel::DProf::write
@ 5 0 5
- & Devel::DProf::write
(with high value of $ENV{PERL_DPROF_TICKS}).
New "$over_*" values show the measured overhead of making
$over_tests calls to the profiler These values are used by
the profiler to subtract the overhead from the runtimes.
The lines starting with "@" mark time passed from the pre
vious "@" line. The lines starting with "&" introduce new
subroutine id and show the package and the subroutine name
of this id. Lines starting with "+", "-" and "*" mark
entering and exit of subroutines by ids, and "goto &subr".
The old-style "+"- and "-"-lines are used to mark the
overhead related to writing to profiler-output file.
AUTOLOAD
When Devel::DProf finds a call to an "&AUTOLOAD" subrou
tine it looks at the "$AUTOLOAD" variable to find the real
name of the sub being called. See the Autoloading entry
in the perlsub manpage.
ENVIRONMENT
"PERL_DPROF_BUFFER" sets size of output buffer in words.
Defaults to 2**14.
"PERL_DPROF_TICKS" sets number of ticks per second on some
systems where a replacement for times() is used. Defaults
to the value of "HZ" macro.
"PERL_DPROF_OUT_FILE_NAME" sets the name of the output
file. If not set, defaults to tmon.out.
BUGS
Builtin functions cannot be measured by Devel::DProf.
With a newer Perl DProf relies on the fact that the
numeric slot of $DB::sub contains an address of a subrou
tine. Excessive manipulation of this variable may over
write this slot, as in
$DB::sub = 'current_sub';
...
$addr = $DB::sub + 0;
will set this numeric slot to numeric value of the string
"current_sub", i.e., to "0". This will cause a segfault
on the exit from this subroutine. Note that the first
assignment above does not change the numeric slot (it will
mark it as invalid, but will not write over it).
Mail bug reports and feature requests to the perl5-porters
mailing list at <perl5-porters@perl.org>.
SEE ALSO
the perl manpage, the dprofpp manpage, times(2)2001-03-03 perl v5.6.1 Devel::DProf(3)