profil(S)
profil --
execution time profile
Synopsis
#include <unistd.h>
void profil(unsigned short buff, unsigned int bufsiz,
unsigned int offset, unsigned int scale);
Description
profil provides CPU-use statistics by profiling the amount of
CPU
time expended by a program.
profil generates the
statistics by creating an execution histogram for a current process.
The histogram is defined for a specific region of program code to
be profiled, and the identified region is logically broken up into
a set of equal size subdivisions, each of which corresponds to a count
in the histogram.
With each clock tick, the current subdivision
is identified and its corresponding histogram count is incremented.
These counts establish a relative measure of how much time is being
spent in each code subdivision.
The resulting histogram counts for
a profiled region can be used to identify those functions that consume
a disproportionately high percentage of
CPU
time.
buff is a buffer of bufsiz bytes in which the histogram
counts are stored in an array of unsigned short int.
offset, scale, and bufsiz specify the region to be profiled.
offset is effectively the start address of the region to be profiled.
scale, broadly speaking, is a contraction factor
that indicates how much smaller
the histogram buffer is than the region to be profiled.
More precisely, scale is interpreted as an unsigned
16-bit
fixed-point fraction with the binary point implied on the left.
Its value is the reciprocal of the number of bytes in a subdivision,
per byte of histogram buffer.
Since there are two bytes per histogram counter,
the effective ratio of subdivision bytes per counter is one half the scale.
Several observations can be made:
-
The maximal value of scale, 0xffff (approximately 1),
maps subdivisions 2 bytes long to each counter.
-
The minimum value of scale (for which profiling is performed),
0x0002 (1/32,768), maps subdivision 65,536 bytes long to
each counter.
-
The default value of scale (currently used by cc -qp), 0x4000,
maps subdivisions 8 bytes long to each counter.
The values are used within the kernel as follows:
when the process is interrupted for a clock tick,
the value of offset is subtracted
from the current value of the program counter (pc), and the remainder
is multiplied by scale to derive a result.
That result is used
as an index into the histogram array to locate the cell to be incremented.
Therefore, the cell count represents the number of times that the process
was executing code in the subdivision associated with that cell when the
process was interrupted.
scale can be computed as (``RATIO'' 0200000L), where
``RATIO'' is the desired ratio of bufsiz to profiled region size,
and has a value between 0 and 1.
Qualitatively speaking, the closer ``RATIO'' is to 1, the higher
the resolution of the profile information.
bufsiz can be computed as (size_of_region_to_be_profiled ``RATIO'').
References
monitor(S),
prof(C),
times(S)
Notices
Profiling is turned off by giving a scale of 0 or 1, and is rendered
ineffective by giving a bufsiz of 0.
Profiling is turned off when an
exec(S)
is executed, but remains on in both child and parent
processes after a
fork(S).
Profiling is turned off if a buff
update would cause a memory fault.
Considerations for threads programming
Statistics are gathered at the process level
and represent the combined usage of all contained threads.
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 - 01 June 2005