1 | #! /usr/bin/env python
|
---|
2 | #
|
---|
3 | # Class for profiling python code. rev 1.0 6/2/94
|
---|
4 | #
|
---|
5 | # Written by James Roskind
|
---|
6 | # Based on prior profile module by Sjoerd Mullender...
|
---|
7 | # which was hacked somewhat by: Guido van Rossum
|
---|
8 |
|
---|
9 | """Class for profiling Python code."""
|
---|
10 |
|
---|
11 | # Copyright Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
|
---|
12 | # Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement
|
---|
13 | #
|
---|
14 | # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
|
---|
15 | # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
|
---|
16 | # You may obtain a copy of the License at
|
---|
17 | #
|
---|
18 | # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
|
---|
19 | #
|
---|
20 | # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
|
---|
21 | # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
|
---|
22 | # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND,
|
---|
23 | # either express or implied. See the License for the specific language
|
---|
24 | # governing permissions and limitations under the License.
|
---|
25 |
|
---|
26 |
|
---|
27 | import sys
|
---|
28 | import os
|
---|
29 | import time
|
---|
30 | import marshal
|
---|
31 | from optparse import OptionParser
|
---|
32 |
|
---|
33 | __all__ = ["run", "runctx", "help", "Profile"]
|
---|
34 |
|
---|
35 | # Sample timer for use with
|
---|
36 | #i_count = 0
|
---|
37 | #def integer_timer():
|
---|
38 | # global i_count
|
---|
39 | # i_count = i_count + 1
|
---|
40 | # return i_count
|
---|
41 | #itimes = integer_timer # replace with C coded timer returning integers
|
---|
42 |
|
---|
43 | #**************************************************************************
|
---|
44 | # The following are the static member functions for the profiler class
|
---|
45 | # Note that an instance of Profile() is *not* needed to call them.
|
---|
46 | #**************************************************************************
|
---|
47 |
|
---|
48 | def run(statement, filename=None, sort=-1):
|
---|
49 | """Run statement under profiler optionally saving results in filename
|
---|
50 |
|
---|
51 | This function takes a single argument that can be passed to the
|
---|
52 | "exec" statement, and an optional file name. In all cases this
|
---|
53 | routine attempts to "exec" its first argument and gather profiling
|
---|
54 | statistics from the execution. If no file name is present, then this
|
---|
55 | function automatically prints a simple profiling report, sorted by the
|
---|
56 | standard name string (file/line/function-name) that is presented in
|
---|
57 | each line.
|
---|
58 | """
|
---|
59 | prof = Profile()
|
---|
60 | try:
|
---|
61 | prof = prof.run(statement)
|
---|
62 | except SystemExit:
|
---|
63 | pass
|
---|
64 | if filename is not None:
|
---|
65 | prof.dump_stats(filename)
|
---|
66 | else:
|
---|
67 | return prof.print_stats(sort)
|
---|
68 |
|
---|
69 | def runctx(statement, globals, locals, filename=None, sort=-1):
|
---|
70 | """Run statement under profiler, supplying your own globals and locals,
|
---|
71 | optionally saving results in filename.
|
---|
72 |
|
---|
73 | statement and filename have the same semantics as profile.run
|
---|
74 | """
|
---|
75 | prof = Profile()
|
---|
76 | try:
|
---|
77 | prof = prof.runctx(statement, globals, locals)
|
---|
78 | except SystemExit:
|
---|
79 | pass
|
---|
80 |
|
---|
81 | if filename is not None:
|
---|
82 | prof.dump_stats(filename)
|
---|
83 | else:
|
---|
84 | return prof.print_stats(sort)
|
---|
85 |
|
---|
86 | # Backwards compatibility.
|
---|
87 | def help():
|
---|
88 | print "Documentation for the profile module can be found "
|
---|
89 | print "in the Python Library Reference, section 'The Python Profiler'."
|
---|
90 |
|
---|
91 | if hasattr(os, "times"):
|
---|
92 | def _get_time_times(timer=os.times):
|
---|
93 | t = timer()
|
---|
94 | return t[0] + t[1]
|
---|
95 |
|
---|
96 | # Using getrusage(3) is better than clock(3) if available:
|
---|
97 | # on some systems (e.g. FreeBSD), getrusage has a higher resolution
|
---|
98 | # Furthermore, on a POSIX system, returns microseconds, which
|
---|
99 | # wrap around after 36min.
|
---|
100 | _has_res = 0
|
---|
101 | try:
|
---|
102 | import resource
|
---|
103 | resgetrusage = lambda: resource.getrusage(resource.RUSAGE_SELF)
|
---|
104 | def _get_time_resource(timer=resgetrusage):
|
---|
105 | t = timer()
|
---|
106 | return t[0] + t[1]
|
---|
107 | _has_res = 1
|
---|
108 | except ImportError:
|
---|
109 | pass
|
---|
110 |
|
---|
111 | class Profile:
|
---|
112 | """Profiler class.
|
---|
113 |
|
---|
114 | self.cur is always a tuple. Each such tuple corresponds to a stack
|
---|
115 | frame that is currently active (self.cur[-2]). The following are the
|
---|
116 | definitions of its members. We use this external "parallel stack" to
|
---|
117 | avoid contaminating the program that we are profiling. (old profiler
|
---|
118 | used to write into the frames local dictionary!!) Derived classes
|
---|
119 | can change the definition of some entries, as long as they leave
|
---|
120 | [-2:] intact (frame and previous tuple). In case an internal error is
|
---|
121 | detected, the -3 element is used as the function name.
|
---|
122 |
|
---|
123 | [ 0] = Time that needs to be charged to the parent frame's function.
|
---|
124 | It is used so that a function call will not have to access the
|
---|
125 | timing data for the parent frame.
|
---|
126 | [ 1] = Total time spent in this frame's function, excluding time in
|
---|
127 | subfunctions (this latter is tallied in cur[2]).
|
---|
128 | [ 2] = Total time spent in subfunctions, excluding time executing the
|
---|
129 | frame's function (this latter is tallied in cur[1]).
|
---|
130 | [-3] = Name of the function that corresponds to this frame.
|
---|
131 | [-2] = Actual frame that we correspond to (used to sync exception handling).
|
---|
132 | [-1] = Our parent 6-tuple (corresponds to frame.f_back).
|
---|
133 |
|
---|
134 | Timing data for each function is stored as a 5-tuple in the dictionary
|
---|
135 | self.timings[]. The index is always the name stored in self.cur[-3].
|
---|
136 | The following are the definitions of the members:
|
---|
137 |
|
---|
138 | [0] = The number of times this function was called, not counting direct
|
---|
139 | or indirect recursion,
|
---|
140 | [1] = Number of times this function appears on the stack, minus one
|
---|
141 | [2] = Total time spent internal to this function
|
---|
142 | [3] = Cumulative time that this function was present on the stack. In
|
---|
143 | non-recursive functions, this is the total execution time from start
|
---|
144 | to finish of each invocation of a function, including time spent in
|
---|
145 | all subfunctions.
|
---|
146 | [4] = A dictionary indicating for each function name, the number of times
|
---|
147 | it was called by us.
|
---|
148 | """
|
---|
149 |
|
---|
150 | bias = 0 # calibration constant
|
---|
151 |
|
---|
152 | def __init__(self, timer=None, bias=None):
|
---|
153 | self.timings = {}
|
---|
154 | self.cur = None
|
---|
155 | self.cmd = ""
|
---|
156 | self.c_func_name = ""
|
---|
157 |
|
---|
158 | if bias is None:
|
---|
159 | bias = self.bias
|
---|
160 | self.bias = bias # Materialize in local dict for lookup speed.
|
---|
161 |
|
---|
162 | if not timer:
|
---|
163 | if _has_res:
|
---|
164 | self.timer = resgetrusage
|
---|
165 | self.dispatcher = self.trace_dispatch
|
---|
166 | self.get_time = _get_time_resource
|
---|
167 | elif hasattr(time, 'clock'):
|
---|
168 | self.timer = self.get_time = time.clock
|
---|
169 | self.dispatcher = self.trace_dispatch_i
|
---|
170 | elif hasattr(os, 'times'):
|
---|
171 | self.timer = os.times
|
---|
172 | self.dispatcher = self.trace_dispatch
|
---|
173 | self.get_time = _get_time_times
|
---|
174 | else:
|
---|
175 | self.timer = self.get_time = time.time
|
---|
176 | self.dispatcher = self.trace_dispatch_i
|
---|
177 | else:
|
---|
178 | self.timer = timer
|
---|
179 | t = self.timer() # test out timer function
|
---|
180 | try:
|
---|
181 | length = len(t)
|
---|
182 | except TypeError:
|
---|
183 | self.get_time = timer
|
---|
184 | self.dispatcher = self.trace_dispatch_i
|
---|
185 | else:
|
---|
186 | if length == 2:
|
---|
187 | self.dispatcher = self.trace_dispatch
|
---|
188 | else:
|
---|
189 | self.dispatcher = self.trace_dispatch_l
|
---|
190 | # This get_time() implementation needs to be defined
|
---|
191 | # here to capture the passed-in timer in the parameter
|
---|
192 | # list (for performance). Note that we can't assume
|
---|
193 | # the timer() result contains two values in all
|
---|
194 | # cases.
|
---|
195 | def get_time_timer(timer=timer, sum=sum):
|
---|
196 | return sum(timer())
|
---|
197 | self.get_time = get_time_timer
|
---|
198 | self.t = self.get_time()
|
---|
199 | self.simulate_call('profiler')
|
---|
200 |
|
---|
201 | # Heavily optimized dispatch routine for os.times() timer
|
---|
202 |
|
---|
203 | def trace_dispatch(self, frame, event, arg):
|
---|
204 | timer = self.timer
|
---|
205 | t = timer()
|
---|
206 | t = t[0] + t[1] - self.t - self.bias
|
---|
207 |
|
---|
208 | if event == "c_call":
|
---|
209 | self.c_func_name = arg.__name__
|
---|
210 |
|
---|
211 | if self.dispatch[event](self, frame,t):
|
---|
212 | t = timer()
|
---|
213 | self.t = t[0] + t[1]
|
---|
214 | else:
|
---|
215 | r = timer()
|
---|
216 | self.t = r[0] + r[1] - t # put back unrecorded delta
|
---|
217 |
|
---|
218 | # Dispatch routine for best timer program (return = scalar, fastest if
|
---|
219 | # an integer but float works too -- and time.clock() relies on that).
|
---|
220 |
|
---|
221 | def trace_dispatch_i(self, frame, event, arg):
|
---|
222 | timer = self.timer
|
---|
223 | t = timer() - self.t - self.bias
|
---|
224 |
|
---|
225 | if event == "c_call":
|
---|
226 | self.c_func_name = arg.__name__
|
---|
227 |
|
---|
228 | if self.dispatch[event](self, frame, t):
|
---|
229 | self.t = timer()
|
---|
230 | else:
|
---|
231 | self.t = timer() - t # put back unrecorded delta
|
---|
232 |
|
---|
233 | # Dispatch routine for macintosh (timer returns time in ticks of
|
---|
234 | # 1/60th second)
|
---|
235 |
|
---|
236 | def trace_dispatch_mac(self, frame, event, arg):
|
---|
237 | timer = self.timer
|
---|
238 | t = timer()/60.0 - self.t - self.bias
|
---|
239 |
|
---|
240 | if event == "c_call":
|
---|
241 | self.c_func_name = arg.__name__
|
---|
242 |
|
---|
243 | if self.dispatch[event](self, frame, t):
|
---|
244 | self.t = timer()/60.0
|
---|
245 | else:
|
---|
246 | self.t = timer()/60.0 - t # put back unrecorded delta
|
---|
247 |
|
---|
248 | # SLOW generic dispatch routine for timer returning lists of numbers
|
---|
249 |
|
---|
250 | def trace_dispatch_l(self, frame, event, arg):
|
---|
251 | get_time = self.get_time
|
---|
252 | t = get_time() - self.t - self.bias
|
---|
253 |
|
---|
254 | if event == "c_call":
|
---|
255 | self.c_func_name = arg.__name__
|
---|
256 |
|
---|
257 | if self.dispatch[event](self, frame, t):
|
---|
258 | self.t = get_time()
|
---|
259 | else:
|
---|
260 | self.t = get_time() - t # put back unrecorded delta
|
---|
261 |
|
---|
262 | # In the event handlers, the first 3 elements of self.cur are unpacked
|
---|
263 | # into vrbls w/ 3-letter names. The last two characters are meant to be
|
---|
264 | # mnemonic:
|
---|
265 | # _pt self.cur[0] "parent time" time to be charged to parent frame
|
---|
266 | # _it self.cur[1] "internal time" time spent directly in the function
|
---|
267 | # _et self.cur[2] "external time" time spent in subfunctions
|
---|
268 |
|
---|
269 | def trace_dispatch_exception(self, frame, t):
|
---|
270 | rpt, rit, ret, rfn, rframe, rcur = self.cur
|
---|
271 | if (rframe is not frame) and rcur:
|
---|
272 | return self.trace_dispatch_return(rframe, t)
|
---|
273 | self.cur = rpt, rit+t, ret, rfn, rframe, rcur
|
---|
274 | return 1
|
---|
275 |
|
---|
276 |
|
---|
277 | def trace_dispatch_call(self, frame, t):
|
---|
278 | if self.cur and frame.f_back is not self.cur[-2]:
|
---|
279 | rpt, rit, ret, rfn, rframe, rcur = self.cur
|
---|
280 | if not isinstance(rframe, Profile.fake_frame):
|
---|
281 | assert rframe.f_back is frame.f_back, ("Bad call", rfn,
|
---|
282 | rframe, rframe.f_back,
|
---|
283 | frame, frame.f_back)
|
---|
284 | self.trace_dispatch_return(rframe, 0)
|
---|
285 | assert (self.cur is None or \
|
---|
286 | frame.f_back is self.cur[-2]), ("Bad call",
|
---|
287 | self.cur[-3])
|
---|
288 | fcode = frame.f_code
|
---|
289 | fn = (fcode.co_filename, fcode.co_firstlineno, fcode.co_name)
|
---|
290 | self.cur = (t, 0, 0, fn, frame, self.cur)
|
---|
291 | timings = self.timings
|
---|
292 | if fn in timings:
|
---|
293 | cc, ns, tt, ct, callers = timings[fn]
|
---|
294 | timings[fn] = cc, ns + 1, tt, ct, callers
|
---|
295 | else:
|
---|
296 | timings[fn] = 0, 0, 0, 0, {}
|
---|
297 | return 1
|
---|
298 |
|
---|
299 | def trace_dispatch_c_call (self, frame, t):
|
---|
300 | fn = ("", 0, self.c_func_name)
|
---|
301 | self.cur = (t, 0, 0, fn, frame, self.cur)
|
---|
302 | timings = self.timings
|
---|
303 | if fn in timings:
|
---|
304 | cc, ns, tt, ct, callers = timings[fn]
|
---|
305 | timings[fn] = cc, ns+1, tt, ct, callers
|
---|
306 | else:
|
---|
307 | timings[fn] = 0, 0, 0, 0, {}
|
---|
308 | return 1
|
---|
309 |
|
---|
310 | def trace_dispatch_return(self, frame, t):
|
---|
311 | if frame is not self.cur[-2]:
|
---|
312 | assert frame is self.cur[-2].f_back, ("Bad return", self.cur[-3])
|
---|
313 | self.trace_dispatch_return(self.cur[-2], 0)
|
---|
314 |
|
---|
315 | # Prefix "r" means part of the Returning or exiting frame.
|
---|
316 | # Prefix "p" means part of the Previous or Parent or older frame.
|
---|
317 |
|
---|
318 | rpt, rit, ret, rfn, frame, rcur = self.cur
|
---|
319 | rit = rit + t
|
---|
320 | frame_total = rit + ret
|
---|
321 |
|
---|
322 | ppt, pit, pet, pfn, pframe, pcur = rcur
|
---|
323 | self.cur = ppt, pit + rpt, pet + frame_total, pfn, pframe, pcur
|
---|
324 |
|
---|
325 | timings = self.timings
|
---|
326 | cc, ns, tt, ct, callers = timings[rfn]
|
---|
327 | if not ns:
|
---|
328 | # This is the only occurrence of the function on the stack.
|
---|
329 | # Else this is a (directly or indirectly) recursive call, and
|
---|
330 | # its cumulative time will get updated when the topmost call to
|
---|
331 | # it returns.
|
---|
332 | ct = ct + frame_total
|
---|
333 | cc = cc + 1
|
---|
334 |
|
---|
335 | if pfn in callers:
|
---|
336 | callers[pfn] = callers[pfn] + 1 # hack: gather more
|
---|
337 | # stats such as the amount of time added to ct courtesy
|
---|
338 | # of this specific call, and the contribution to cc
|
---|
339 | # courtesy of this call.
|
---|
340 | else:
|
---|
341 | callers[pfn] = 1
|
---|
342 |
|
---|
343 | timings[rfn] = cc, ns - 1, tt + rit, ct, callers
|
---|
344 |
|
---|
345 | return 1
|
---|
346 |
|
---|
347 |
|
---|
348 | dispatch = {
|
---|
349 | "call": trace_dispatch_call,
|
---|
350 | "exception": trace_dispatch_exception,
|
---|
351 | "return": trace_dispatch_return,
|
---|
352 | "c_call": trace_dispatch_c_call,
|
---|
353 | "c_exception": trace_dispatch_return, # the C function returned
|
---|
354 | "c_return": trace_dispatch_return,
|
---|
355 | }
|
---|
356 |
|
---|
357 |
|
---|
358 | # The next few functions play with self.cmd. By carefully preloading
|
---|
359 | # our parallel stack, we can force the profiled result to include
|
---|
360 | # an arbitrary string as the name of the calling function.
|
---|
361 | # We use self.cmd as that string, and the resulting stats look
|
---|
362 | # very nice :-).
|
---|
363 |
|
---|
364 | def set_cmd(self, cmd):
|
---|
365 | if self.cur[-1]: return # already set
|
---|
366 | self.cmd = cmd
|
---|
367 | self.simulate_call(cmd)
|
---|
368 |
|
---|
369 | class fake_code:
|
---|
370 | def __init__(self, filename, line, name):
|
---|
371 | self.co_filename = filename
|
---|
372 | self.co_line = line
|
---|
373 | self.co_name = name
|
---|
374 | self.co_firstlineno = 0
|
---|
375 |
|
---|
376 | def __repr__(self):
|
---|
377 | return repr((self.co_filename, self.co_line, self.co_name))
|
---|
378 |
|
---|
379 | class fake_frame:
|
---|
380 | def __init__(self, code, prior):
|
---|
381 | self.f_code = code
|
---|
382 | self.f_back = prior
|
---|
383 |
|
---|
384 | def simulate_call(self, name):
|
---|
385 | code = self.fake_code('profile', 0, name)
|
---|
386 | if self.cur:
|
---|
387 | pframe = self.cur[-2]
|
---|
388 | else:
|
---|
389 | pframe = None
|
---|
390 | frame = self.fake_frame(code, pframe)
|
---|
391 | self.dispatch['call'](self, frame, 0)
|
---|
392 |
|
---|
393 | # collect stats from pending stack, including getting final
|
---|
394 | # timings for self.cmd frame.
|
---|
395 |
|
---|
396 | def simulate_cmd_complete(self):
|
---|
397 | get_time = self.get_time
|
---|
398 | t = get_time() - self.t
|
---|
399 | while self.cur[-1]:
|
---|
400 | # We *can* cause assertion errors here if
|
---|
401 | # dispatch_trace_return checks for a frame match!
|
---|
402 | self.dispatch['return'](self, self.cur[-2], t)
|
---|
403 | t = 0
|
---|
404 | self.t = get_time() - t
|
---|
405 |
|
---|
406 |
|
---|
407 | def print_stats(self, sort=-1):
|
---|
408 | import pstats
|
---|
409 | pstats.Stats(self).strip_dirs().sort_stats(sort). \
|
---|
410 | print_stats()
|
---|
411 |
|
---|
412 | def dump_stats(self, file):
|
---|
413 | f = open(file, 'wb')
|
---|
414 | self.create_stats()
|
---|
415 | marshal.dump(self.stats, f)
|
---|
416 | f.close()
|
---|
417 |
|
---|
418 | def create_stats(self):
|
---|
419 | self.simulate_cmd_complete()
|
---|
420 | self.snapshot_stats()
|
---|
421 |
|
---|
422 | def snapshot_stats(self):
|
---|
423 | self.stats = {}
|
---|
424 | for func, (cc, ns, tt, ct, callers) in self.timings.iteritems():
|
---|
425 | callers = callers.copy()
|
---|
426 | nc = 0
|
---|
427 | for callcnt in callers.itervalues():
|
---|
428 | nc += callcnt
|
---|
429 | self.stats[func] = cc, nc, tt, ct, callers
|
---|
430 |
|
---|
431 |
|
---|
432 | # The following two methods can be called by clients to use
|
---|
433 | # a profiler to profile a statement, given as a string.
|
---|
434 |
|
---|
435 | def run(self, cmd):
|
---|
436 | import __main__
|
---|
437 | dict = __main__.__dict__
|
---|
438 | return self.runctx(cmd, dict, dict)
|
---|
439 |
|
---|
440 | def runctx(self, cmd, globals, locals):
|
---|
441 | self.set_cmd(cmd)
|
---|
442 | sys.setprofile(self.dispatcher)
|
---|
443 | try:
|
---|
444 | exec cmd in globals, locals
|
---|
445 | finally:
|
---|
446 | sys.setprofile(None)
|
---|
447 | return self
|
---|
448 |
|
---|
449 | # This method is more useful to profile a single function call.
|
---|
450 | def runcall(self, func, *args, **kw):
|
---|
451 | self.set_cmd(repr(func))
|
---|
452 | sys.setprofile(self.dispatcher)
|
---|
453 | try:
|
---|
454 | return func(*args, **kw)
|
---|
455 | finally:
|
---|
456 | sys.setprofile(None)
|
---|
457 |
|
---|
458 |
|
---|
459 | #******************************************************************
|
---|
460 | # The following calculates the overhead for using a profiler. The
|
---|
461 | # problem is that it takes a fair amount of time for the profiler
|
---|
462 | # to stop the stopwatch (from the time it receives an event).
|
---|
463 | # Similarly, there is a delay from the time that the profiler
|
---|
464 | # re-starts the stopwatch before the user's code really gets to
|
---|
465 | # continue. The following code tries to measure the difference on
|
---|
466 | # a per-event basis.
|
---|
467 | #
|
---|
468 | # Note that this difference is only significant if there are a lot of
|
---|
469 | # events, and relatively little user code per event. For example,
|
---|
470 | # code with small functions will typically benefit from having the
|
---|
471 | # profiler calibrated for the current platform. This *could* be
|
---|
472 | # done on the fly during init() time, but it is not worth the
|
---|
473 | # effort. Also note that if too large a value specified, then
|
---|
474 | # execution time on some functions will actually appear as a
|
---|
475 | # negative number. It is *normal* for some functions (with very
|
---|
476 | # low call counts) to have such negative stats, even if the
|
---|
477 | # calibration figure is "correct."
|
---|
478 | #
|
---|
479 | # One alternative to profile-time calibration adjustments (i.e.,
|
---|
480 | # adding in the magic little delta during each event) is to track
|
---|
481 | # more carefully the number of events (and cumulatively, the number
|
---|
482 | # of events during sub functions) that are seen. If this were
|
---|
483 | # done, then the arithmetic could be done after the fact (i.e., at
|
---|
484 | # display time). Currently, we track only call/return events.
|
---|
485 | # These values can be deduced by examining the callees and callers
|
---|
486 | # vectors for each functions. Hence we *can* almost correct the
|
---|
487 | # internal time figure at print time (note that we currently don't
|
---|
488 | # track exception event processing counts). Unfortunately, there
|
---|
489 | # is currently no similar information for cumulative sub-function
|
---|
490 | # time. It would not be hard to "get all this info" at profiler
|
---|
491 | # time. Specifically, we would have to extend the tuples to keep
|
---|
492 | # counts of this in each frame, and then extend the defs of timing
|
---|
493 | # tuples to include the significant two figures. I'm a bit fearful
|
---|
494 | # that this additional feature will slow the heavily optimized
|
---|
495 | # event/time ratio (i.e., the profiler would run slower, fur a very
|
---|
496 | # low "value added" feature.)
|
---|
497 | #**************************************************************
|
---|
498 |
|
---|
499 | def calibrate(self, m, verbose=0):
|
---|
500 | if self.__class__ is not Profile:
|
---|
501 | raise TypeError("Subclasses must override .calibrate().")
|
---|
502 |
|
---|
503 | saved_bias = self.bias
|
---|
504 | self.bias = 0
|
---|
505 | try:
|
---|
506 | return self._calibrate_inner(m, verbose)
|
---|
507 | finally:
|
---|
508 | self.bias = saved_bias
|
---|
509 |
|
---|
510 | def _calibrate_inner(self, m, verbose):
|
---|
511 | get_time = self.get_time
|
---|
512 |
|
---|
513 | # Set up a test case to be run with and without profiling. Include
|
---|
514 | # lots of calls, because we're trying to quantify stopwatch overhead.
|
---|
515 | # Do not raise any exceptions, though, because we want to know
|
---|
516 | # exactly how many profile events are generated (one call event, +
|
---|
517 | # one return event, per Python-level call).
|
---|
518 |
|
---|
519 | def f1(n):
|
---|
520 | for i in range(n):
|
---|
521 | x = 1
|
---|
522 |
|
---|
523 | def f(m, f1=f1):
|
---|
524 | for i in range(m):
|
---|
525 | f1(100)
|
---|
526 |
|
---|
527 | f(m) # warm up the cache
|
---|
528 |
|
---|
529 | # elapsed_noprofile <- time f(m) takes without profiling.
|
---|
530 | t0 = get_time()
|
---|
531 | f(m)
|
---|
532 | t1 = get_time()
|
---|
533 | elapsed_noprofile = t1 - t0
|
---|
534 | if verbose:
|
---|
535 | print "elapsed time without profiling =", elapsed_noprofile
|
---|
536 |
|
---|
537 | # elapsed_profile <- time f(m) takes with profiling. The difference
|
---|
538 | # is profiling overhead, only some of which the profiler subtracts
|
---|
539 | # out on its own.
|
---|
540 | p = Profile()
|
---|
541 | t0 = get_time()
|
---|
542 | p.runctx('f(m)', globals(), locals())
|
---|
543 | t1 = get_time()
|
---|
544 | elapsed_profile = t1 - t0
|
---|
545 | if verbose:
|
---|
546 | print "elapsed time with profiling =", elapsed_profile
|
---|
547 |
|
---|
548 | # reported_time <- "CPU seconds" the profiler charged to f and f1.
|
---|
549 | total_calls = 0.0
|
---|
550 | reported_time = 0.0
|
---|
551 | for (filename, line, funcname), (cc, ns, tt, ct, callers) in \
|
---|
552 | p.timings.items():
|
---|
553 | if funcname in ("f", "f1"):
|
---|
554 | total_calls += cc
|
---|
555 | reported_time += tt
|
---|
556 |
|
---|
557 | if verbose:
|
---|
558 | print "'CPU seconds' profiler reported =", reported_time
|
---|
559 | print "total # calls =", total_calls
|
---|
560 | if total_calls != m + 1:
|
---|
561 | raise ValueError("internal error: total calls = %d" % total_calls)
|
---|
562 |
|
---|
563 | # reported_time - elapsed_noprofile = overhead the profiler wasn't
|
---|
564 | # able to measure. Divide by twice the number of calls (since there
|
---|
565 | # are two profiler events per call in this test) to get the hidden
|
---|
566 | # overhead per event.
|
---|
567 | mean = (reported_time - elapsed_noprofile) / 2.0 / total_calls
|
---|
568 | if verbose:
|
---|
569 | print "mean stopwatch overhead per profile event =", mean
|
---|
570 | return mean
|
---|
571 |
|
---|
572 | #****************************************************************************
|
---|
573 | def Stats(*args):
|
---|
574 | print 'Report generating functions are in the "pstats" module\a'
|
---|
575 |
|
---|
576 | def main():
|
---|
577 | usage = "profile.py [-o output_file_path] [-s sort] scriptfile [arg] ..."
|
---|
578 | parser = OptionParser(usage=usage)
|
---|
579 | parser.allow_interspersed_args = False
|
---|
580 | parser.add_option('-o', '--outfile', dest="outfile",
|
---|
581 | help="Save stats to <outfile>", default=None)
|
---|
582 | parser.add_option('-s', '--sort', dest="sort",
|
---|
583 | help="Sort order when printing to stdout, based on pstats.Stats class",
|
---|
584 | default=-1)
|
---|
585 |
|
---|
586 | if not sys.argv[1:]:
|
---|
587 | parser.print_usage()
|
---|
588 | sys.exit(2)
|
---|
589 |
|
---|
590 | (options, args) = parser.parse_args()
|
---|
591 | sys.argv[:] = args
|
---|
592 |
|
---|
593 | if len(args) > 0:
|
---|
594 | progname = args[0]
|
---|
595 | sys.path.insert(0, os.path.dirname(progname))
|
---|
596 | with open(progname, 'rb') as fp:
|
---|
597 | code = compile(fp.read(), progname, 'exec')
|
---|
598 | globs = {
|
---|
599 | '__file__': progname,
|
---|
600 | '__name__': '__main__',
|
---|
601 | '__package__': None,
|
---|
602 | }
|
---|
603 | runctx(code, globs, None, options.outfile, options.sort)
|
---|
604 | else:
|
---|
605 | parser.print_usage()
|
---|
606 | return parser
|
---|
607 |
|
---|
608 | # When invoked as main program, invoke the profiler on a script
|
---|
609 | if __name__ == '__main__':
|
---|
610 | main()
|
---|