Module: Profiler__
Relationships & Source Files | |
Defined in: | lib/profiler.rb |
Overview
Profile provides a way to Profile your Ruby application.
Profiling your program is a way of determining which methods are called and how long each method takes to complete. This way you can detect which methods are possible bottlenecks.
Profiling your program will slow down your execution time considerably, so activate it only when you need it. Don't confuse benchmarking with profiling.
There are two ways to activate Profiling:
Command line
Run your Ruby script with -rprofile
:
ruby -rprofile example.rb
If you're profiling an executable in your $PATH
you can use ruby -S
:
ruby -rprofile -S some_executable
From code
Just require 'profile':
require 'profile'
def slow_method
5000.times do
9999999999999999*999999999
end
end
def fast_method
5000.times do
9999999999999999+999999999
end
end
slow_method
fast_method
The output in both cases is a report when the execution is over:
ruby -rprofile example.rb
% cumulative self self total
time seconds seconds calls ms/call ms/call name
68.42 0.13 0.13 2 65.00 95.00 Integer#times
15.79 0.16 0.03 5000 0.01 0.01 Fixnum#*
15.79 0.19 0.03 5000 0.01 0.01 Fixnum#+
0.00 0.19 0.00 2 0.00 0.00 IO#set_encoding
0.00 0.19 0.00 1 0.00 100.00 Object#slow_method
0.00 0.19 0.00 2 0.00 0.00 Module#method_added
0.00 0.19 0.00 1 0.00 90.00 Object#fast_method
0.00 0.19 0.00 1 0.00 190.00 #toplevel
Class Method Summary
-
.print_profile(f)
mod_func
Outputs the results from the profiler.
-
.start_profile
mod_func
Starts the profiler.
-
.stop_profile
mod_func
Stops the profiler.
Class Method Details
.print_profile(f) (mod_func)
Outputs the results from the profiler.
See Profiler__ for more information.
# File 'lib/profiler.rb', line 119
def print_profile(f) stop_profile total = Process.times[0] - @@start if total == 0 then total = 0.01 end totals = {} @@maps.values.each do |threadmap| threadmap.each do |key, data| total_data = (totals[key] ||= [0, 0.0, 0.0, key]) total_data[0] += data[0] total_data[1] += data[1] total_data[2] += data[2] end end # Maybe we should show a per thread output and a totals view? data = totals.values data = data.sort_by{|x| -x[2]} sum = 0 f.printf " %% cumulative self self total\n" f.printf " time seconds seconds calls ms/call ms/call name\n" for d in data sum += d[2] f.printf "%6.2f %8.2f %8.2f %8d ", d[2]/total*100, sum, d[2], d[0] f.printf "%8.2f %8.2f %s\n", d[2]*1000/d[0], d[1]*1000/d[0], d[3] end f.printf "%6.2f %8.2f %8.2f %8d ", 0.0, total, 0.0, 1 # ??? f.printf "%8.2f %8.2f %s\n", 0.0, total*1000, "#toplevel" # ??? end
.start_profile (mod_func)
Starts the profiler.
See Profiler__ for more information.
# File 'lib/profiler.rb', line 102
def start_profile @@start = Process.times[0] @@stacks = {} @@maps = {} PROFILE_CALL_PROC.enable PROFILE_RETURN_PROC.enable end
.stop_profile (mod_func)
Stops the profiler.
See Profiler__ for more information.
# File 'lib/profiler.rb', line 112
def stop_profile PROFILE_CALL_PROC.disable PROFILE_RETURN_PROC.disable end