Created Linux Profiling (markdown)

Kongqun Yang 2016-04-29 11:42:57 -07:00
parent 52b23b4e6c
commit d0a4b0d985
1 changed files with 80 additions and 0 deletions

80
Linux-Profiling.md Normal file

@ -0,0 +1,80 @@
# Linux Profiling
Profiling code is enabled when the `use_allocator` variable in gyp is set to
`tcmalloc` (currently the default) and `profiling` variable in gyp is set to
`1`. That will build the tcmalloc library, including the cpu profiling and heap
profiling code into edash-packager, e.g.
GYP_DEFINES='profiling=1 use_allocator="tcmalloc"' gclient runhooks
If the stack traces in your profiles are incomplete, this may be due to missing
frame pointers in some of the libraries. A workaround is to use the
`linux_keep_shadow_stacks=1` gyp option. This will keep a shadow stack using the
`-finstrument-functions` option of gcc and consult the stack when unwinding.
## CPU Profiling
In order to enable cpu profiling, run edash-packager with the environment
variable `CPUPROFILE` set to a filename. For example:
CPUPROFILE=/tmp/cpuprofile out/Release/packager
The cpu profile will be dumped periodically to the filename specified in the
CPUPROFILE environment variable. You can then analyze the dumps using the pprof
script (packager/third_party/tcmalloc/chromium/src/pprof). For example,
pprof --gv out/Release/packager /tmp/cpuprofile
This will generate a visual representation of the cpu profile as a postscript
file and load it up using `gv`. For more powerful commands, please refer to the
pprof help output and the google-perftools documentation.
For further information, please refer to
http://google-perftools.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/cpuprofile.html.
## Heap Profiling
To turn on the heap profiler on edash-packager, use the `HEAPPROFILE`
environment variable to specify a filename for the heap profile. For example:
HEAPPROFILE=/tmp/heapprofile out/Release/packager
The heap profile will be dumped periodically to the filename specified in the
`HEAPPROFILE` environment variable. The dumps can be analyzed using the same
command as cpu profiling above.
For further information, please refer to
http://google-perftools.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/heapprofile.html.
Some tests fork short-living processes which have a small memory footprint. To
catch those, use the `HEAP_PROFILE_ALLOCATION_INTERVAL` environment variable.
#### Dumping a profile of a running process
To programmatically generate a heap profile before exit, use code like:
#include "packager/third_party/tcmalloc/chromium/src/gperftools/heap-profiler.h"
// "foobar" will be included in the message printed to the console
HeapProfilerDump("foobar");
Then add allocator.gyp dependency to the target with the above change:
'conditions': [
['profiling==1', {
'dependencies': [
'base/allocator/allocator.gyp:allocator',
],
}],
],
Or you can use gdb to attach at any point:
1. Attach gdb to the process: `$ gdb -p 12345`
2. Cause it to dump a profile: `(gdb) p HeapProfilerDump("foobar")`
3. The filename will be printed on the console, e.g.
"`Dumping heap profile to heap.0001.heap (foobar)`"
## Reference
[Linux Profiling in Chromium](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/master/docs/linux_profiling.md)