1DProf(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation DProf(3)
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6 Devel::DProf - a DEPRECATED Perl code profiler
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9 perl -d:DProf test.pl
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12 "Devel::DProf" is DEPRECATED and will be removed from a future version
13 of Perl. We strongly recommend that you install and use Devel::NYTProf
14 instead, as it offers significantly improved profiling and reporting.
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17 The Devel::DProf package is a Perl code profiler. This will collect
18 information on the execution time of a Perl script and of the subs in
19 that script. This information can be used to determine which
20 subroutines are using the most time and which subroutines are being
21 called most often. This information can also be used to create an
22 execution graph of the script, showing subroutine relationships.
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24 To profile a Perl script run the perl interpreter with the -d debugging
25 switch. The profiler uses the debugging hooks. So to profile script
26 test.pl the following command should be used:
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28 perl -d:DProf test.pl
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30 When the script terminates (or when the output buffer is filled) the
31 profiler will dump the profile information to a file called tmon.out.
32 A tool like dprofpp can be used to interpret the information which is
33 in that profile. The following command will print the top 15
34 subroutines which used the most time:
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36 dprofpp
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38 To print an execution graph of the subroutines in the script use the
39 following command:
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41 dprofpp -T
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43 Consult dprofpp for other options.
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46 The old profile is a text file which looks like this:
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48 #fOrTyTwO
49 $hz=100;
50 $XS_VERSION='DProf 19970606';
51 # All values are given in HZ
52 $rrun_utime=2; $rrun_stime=0; $rrun_rtime=7
53 PART2
54 + 26 28 566822884 DynaLoader::import
55 - 26 28 566822884 DynaLoader::import
56 + 27 28 566822885 main::bar
57 - 27 28 566822886 main::bar
58 + 27 28 566822886 main::baz
59 + 27 28 566822887 main::bar
60 - 27 28 566822888 main::bar
61 [....]
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63 The first line is the magic number. The second line is the hertz
64 value, or clock ticks, of the machine where the profile was collected.
65 The third line is the name and version identifier of the tool which
66 created the profile. The fourth line is a comment. The fifth line
67 contains three variables holding the user time, system time, and
68 realtime of the process while it was being profiled. The sixth line
69 indicates the beginning of the sub entry/exit profile section.
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71 The columns in PART2 are:
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73 sub entry(+)/exit(-) mark
74 app's user time at sub entry/exit mark, in ticks
75 app's system time at sub entry/exit mark, in ticks
76 app's realtime at sub entry/exit mark, in ticks
77 fully-qualified sub name, when possible
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79 With newer perls another format is used, which may look like this:
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81 #fOrTyTwO
82 $hz=10000;
83 $XS_VERSION='DProf 19971213';
84 # All values are given in HZ
85 $over_utime=5917; $over_stime=0; $over_rtime=5917;
86 $over_tests=10000;
87 $rrun_utime=1284; $rrun_stime=0; $rrun_rtime=1284;
88 $total_marks=6;
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90 PART2
91 @ 406 0 406
92 & 2 main bar
93 + 2
94 @ 456 0 456
95 - 2
96 @ 1 0 1
97 & 3 main baz
98 + 3
99 @ 141 0 141
100 + 2
101 @ 141 0 141
102 - 2
103 @ 1 0 1
104 & 4 main foo
105 + 4
106 @ 142 0 142
107 + & Devel::DProf::write
108 @ 5 0 5
109 - & Devel::DProf::write
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111 (with high value of $ENV{PERL_DPROF_TICKS}).
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113 New "$over_*" values show the measured overhead of making $over_tests
114 calls to the profiler These values are used by the profiler to subtract
115 the overhead from the runtimes.
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117 Lines starting with "@" mark the amount of time passed since the
118 previous "@" line. The numbers following the "@" are integer tick
119 counts representing user, system, and real time. Divide these numbers
120 by the $hz value in the header to get seconds.
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122 Lines starting with "&" map subroutine identifiers (an integer) to
123 subroutine packages and names. These should only occur once per
124 subroutine.
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126 Lines starting with "+" or "-" mark normal entering and exit of
127 subroutines. The number following is a reference to a subroutine
128 identifier.
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130 Lines starting with "*" mark where subroutines are entered by "goto
131 &subr", but note that the return will still be marked as coming from
132 the original sub. The sequence might look like this:
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134 + 5
135 * 6
136 - 5
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138 Lines starting with "/" is like "-" but mark where subroutines are
139 exited by dying. Example:
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141 + 5
142 + 6
143 / 6
144 / 5
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146 Finally you might find "@" time stamp marks surrounded by "+ &
147 Devel::DProf::write" and "- & Devel::DProf::write" lines. These 3
148 lines are outputted when printing of the mark above actually consumed
149 measurable time.
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152 When Devel::DProf finds a call to an &AUTOLOAD subroutine it looks at
153 the $AUTOLOAD variable to find the real name of the sub being called.
154 See "Autoloading" in perlsub.
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157 "PERL_DPROF_BUFFER" sets size of output buffer in words. Defaults to
158 2**14.
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160 "PERL_DPROF_TICKS" sets number of ticks per second on some systems
161 where a replacement for times() is used. Defaults to the value of "HZ"
162 macro.
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164 "PERL_DPROF_OUT_FILE_NAME" sets the name of the output file. If not
165 set, defaults to tmon.out.
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168 Builtin functions cannot be measured by Devel::DProf.
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170 With a newer Perl DProf relies on the fact that the numeric slot of
171 $DB::sub contains an address of a subroutine. Excessive manipulation
172 of this variable may overwrite this slot, as in
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174 $DB::sub = 'current_sub';
175 ...
176 $addr = $DB::sub + 0;
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178 will set this numeric slot to numeric value of the string
179 "current_sub", i.e., to 0. This will cause a segfault on the exit from
180 this subroutine. Note that the first assignment above does not change
181 the numeric slot (it will mark it as invalid, but will not write over
182 it).
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184 Another problem is that if a subroutine exits using goto(LABEL),
185 last(LABEL) or next(LABEL) then perl may crash or Devel::DProf will die
186 with the error:
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188 panic: Devel::DProf inconsistent subroutine return
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190 For example, this code will break under Devel::DProf:
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192 sub foo {
193 last FOO;
194 }
195 FOO: {
196 foo();
197 }
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199 A pattern like this is used by Test::More's skip() function, for
200 example. See perldiag for more details.
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203 perl, dprofpp, times(2)
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207perl v5.28.0 2011-08-02 DProf(3)