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  1. This is gprof.info, produced by makeinfo version 5.2 from gprof.texi.
  2. This file documents the gprof profiler of the GNU system.
  3. Copyright (C) 1988-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  4. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  5. under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
  6. any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
  7. Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
  8. Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU
  9. Free Documentation License".
  10. INFO-DIR-SECTION Software development
  11. START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
  12. * gprof: (gprof). Profiling your program's execution
  13. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
  14. 
  15. File: gprof.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir)
  16. Profiling a Program: Where Does It Spend Its Time?
  17. **************************************************
  18. This manual describes the GNU profiler, 'gprof', and how you can use it
  19. to determine which parts of a program are taking most of the execution
  20. time. We assume that you know how to write, compile, and execute
  21. programs. GNU 'gprof' was written by Jay Fenlason.
  22. This manual is for 'gprof' (GNU Binutils) version 2.28.
  23. This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU Free
  24. Documentation License version 1.3. A copy of the license is included in
  25. the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License".
  26. * Menu:
  27. * Introduction:: What profiling means, and why it is useful.
  28. * Compiling:: How to compile your program for profiling.
  29. * Executing:: Executing your program to generate profile data
  30. * Invoking:: How to run 'gprof', and its options
  31. * Output:: Interpreting 'gprof''s output
  32. * Inaccuracy:: Potential problems you should be aware of
  33. * How do I?:: Answers to common questions
  34. * Incompatibilities:: (between GNU 'gprof' and Unix 'gprof'.)
  35. * Details:: Details of how profiling is done
  36. * GNU Free Documentation License:: GNU Free Documentation License
  37. 
  38. File: gprof.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Compiling, Prev: Top, Up: Top
  39. 1 Introduction to Profiling
  40. ***************************
  41. Profiling allows you to learn where your program spent its time and
  42. which functions called which other functions while it was executing.
  43. This information can show you which pieces of your program are slower
  44. than you expected, and might be candidates for rewriting to make your
  45. program execute faster. It can also tell you which functions are being
  46. called more or less often than you expected. This may help you spot
  47. bugs that had otherwise been unnoticed.
  48. Since the profiler uses information collected during the actual
  49. execution of your program, it can be used on programs that are too large
  50. or too complex to analyze by reading the source. However, how your
  51. program is run will affect the information that shows up in the profile
  52. data. If you don't use some feature of your program while it is being
  53. profiled, no profile information will be generated for that feature.
  54. Profiling has several steps:
  55. * You must compile and link your program with profiling enabled.
  56. *Note Compiling a Program for Profiling: Compiling.
  57. * You must execute your program to generate a profile data file.
  58. *Note Executing the Program: Executing.
  59. * You must run 'gprof' to analyze the profile data. *Note 'gprof'
  60. Command Summary: Invoking.
  61. The next three chapters explain these steps in greater detail.
  62. Several forms of output are available from the analysis.
  63. The "flat profile" shows how much time your program spent in each
  64. function, and how many times that function was called. If you simply
  65. want to know which functions burn most of the cycles, it is stated
  66. concisely here. *Note The Flat Profile: Flat Profile.
  67. The "call graph" shows, for each function, which functions called it,
  68. which other functions it called, and how many times. There is also an
  69. estimate of how much time was spent in the subroutines of each function.
  70. This can suggest places where you might try to eliminate function calls
  71. that use a lot of time. *Note The Call Graph: Call Graph.
  72. The "annotated source" listing is a copy of the program's source
  73. code, labeled with the number of times each line of the program was
  74. executed. *Note The Annotated Source Listing: Annotated Source.
  75. To better understand how profiling works, you may wish to read a
  76. description of its implementation. *Note Implementation of Profiling:
  77. Implementation.
  78. 
  79. File: gprof.info, Node: Compiling, Next: Executing, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top
  80. 2 Compiling a Program for Profiling
  81. ***********************************
  82. The first step in generating profile information for your program is to
  83. compile and link it with profiling enabled.
  84. To compile a source file for profiling, specify the '-pg' option when
  85. you run the compiler. (This is in addition to the options you normally
  86. use.)
  87. To link the program for profiling, if you use a compiler such as 'cc'
  88. to do the linking, simply specify '-pg' in addition to your usual
  89. options. The same option, '-pg', alters either compilation or linking
  90. to do what is necessary for profiling. Here are examples:
  91. cc -g -c myprog.c utils.c -pg
  92. cc -o myprog myprog.o utils.o -pg
  93. The '-pg' option also works with a command that both compiles and
  94. links:
  95. cc -o myprog myprog.c utils.c -g -pg
  96. Note: The '-pg' option must be part of your compilation options as
  97. well as your link options. If it is not then no call-graph data will be
  98. gathered and when you run 'gprof' you will get an error message like
  99. this:
  100. gprof: gmon.out file is missing call-graph data
  101. If you add the '-Q' switch to suppress the printing of the call graph
  102. data you will still be able to see the time samples:
  103. Flat profile:
  104. Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
  105. % cumulative self self total
  106. time seconds seconds calls Ts/call Ts/call name
  107. 44.12 0.07 0.07 zazLoop
  108. 35.29 0.14 0.06 main
  109. 20.59 0.17 0.04 bazMillion
  110. If you run the linker 'ld' directly instead of through a compiler
  111. such as 'cc', you may have to specify a profiling startup file 'gcrt0.o'
  112. as the first input file instead of the usual startup file 'crt0.o'. In
  113. addition, you would probably want to specify the profiling C library,
  114. 'libc_p.a', by writing '-lc_p' instead of the usual '-lc'. This is not
  115. absolutely necessary, but doing this gives you number-of-calls
  116. information for standard library functions such as 'read' and 'open'.
  117. For example:
  118. ld -o myprog /lib/gcrt0.o myprog.o utils.o -lc_p
  119. If you are running the program on a system which supports shared
  120. libraries you may run into problems with the profiling support code in a
  121. shared library being called before that library has been fully
  122. initialised. This is usually detected by the program encountering a
  123. segmentation fault as soon as it is run. The solution is to link
  124. against a static version of the library containing the profiling support
  125. code, which for 'gcc' users can be done via the '-static' or
  126. '-static-libgcc' command line option. For example:
  127. gcc -g -pg -static-libgcc myprog.c utils.c -o myprog
  128. If you compile only some of the modules of the program with '-pg',
  129. you can still profile the program, but you won't get complete
  130. information about the modules that were compiled without '-pg'. The
  131. only information you get for the functions in those modules is the total
  132. time spent in them; there is no record of how many times they were
  133. called, or from where. This will not affect the flat profile (except
  134. that the 'calls' field for the functions will be blank), but will
  135. greatly reduce the usefulness of the call graph.
  136. If you wish to perform line-by-line profiling you should use the
  137. 'gcov' tool instead of 'gprof'. See that tool's manual or info pages
  138. for more details of how to do this.
  139. Note, older versions of 'gcc' produce line-by-line profiling
  140. information that works with 'gprof' rather than 'gcov' so there is still
  141. support for displaying this kind of information in 'gprof'. *Note
  142. Line-by-line Profiling: Line-by-line.
  143. It also worth noting that 'gcc' implements a '-finstrument-functions'
  144. command line option which will insert calls to special user supplied
  145. instrumentation routines at the entry and exit of every function in
  146. their program. This can be used to implement an alternative profiling
  147. scheme.
  148. 
  149. File: gprof.info, Node: Executing, Next: Invoking, Prev: Compiling, Up: Top
  150. 3 Executing the Program
  151. ***********************
  152. Once the program is compiled for profiling, you must run it in order to
  153. generate the information that 'gprof' needs. Simply run the program as
  154. usual, using the normal arguments, file names, etc. The program should
  155. run normally, producing the same output as usual. It will, however, run
  156. somewhat slower than normal because of the time spent collecting and
  157. writing the profile data.
  158. The way you run the program--the arguments and input that you give
  159. it--may have a dramatic effect on what the profile information shows.
  160. The profile data will describe the parts of the program that were
  161. activated for the particular input you use. For example, if the first
  162. command you give to your program is to quit, the profile data will show
  163. the time used in initialization and in cleanup, but not much else.
  164. Your program will write the profile data into a file called
  165. 'gmon.out' just before exiting. If there is already a file called
  166. 'gmon.out', its contents are overwritten. There is currently no way to
  167. tell the program to write the profile data under a different name, but
  168. you can rename the file afterwards if you are concerned that it may be
  169. overwritten.
  170. In order to write the 'gmon.out' file properly, your program must
  171. exit normally: by returning from 'main' or by calling 'exit'. Calling
  172. the low-level function '_exit' does not write the profile data, and
  173. neither does abnormal termination due to an unhandled signal.
  174. The 'gmon.out' file is written in the program's _current working
  175. directory_ at the time it exits. This means that if your program calls
  176. 'chdir', the 'gmon.out' file will be left in the last directory your
  177. program 'chdir''d to. If you don't have permission to write in this
  178. directory, the file is not written, and you will get an error message.
  179. Older versions of the GNU profiling library may also write a file
  180. called 'bb.out'. This file, if present, contains an human-readable
  181. listing of the basic-block execution counts. Unfortunately, the
  182. appearance of a human-readable 'bb.out' means the basic-block counts
  183. didn't get written into 'gmon.out'. The Perl script 'bbconv.pl',
  184. included with the 'gprof' source distribution, will convert a 'bb.out'
  185. file into a format readable by 'gprof'. Invoke it like this:
  186. bbconv.pl < bb.out > BH-DATA
  187. This translates the information in 'bb.out' into a form that 'gprof'
  188. can understand. But you still need to tell 'gprof' about the existence
  189. of this translated information. To do that, include BB-DATA on the
  190. 'gprof' command line, _along with 'gmon.out'_, like this:
  191. gprof OPTIONS EXECUTABLE-FILE gmon.out BB-DATA [YET-MORE-PROFILE-DATA-FILES...] [> OUTFILE]
  192. 
  193. File: gprof.info, Node: Invoking, Next: Output, Prev: Executing, Up: Top
  194. 4 'gprof' Command Summary
  195. *************************
  196. After you have a profile data file 'gmon.out', you can run 'gprof' to
  197. interpret the information in it. The 'gprof' program prints a flat
  198. profile and a call graph on standard output. Typically you would
  199. redirect the output of 'gprof' into a file with '>'.
  200. You run 'gprof' like this:
  201. gprof OPTIONS [EXECUTABLE-FILE [PROFILE-DATA-FILES...]] [> OUTFILE]
  202. Here square-brackets indicate optional arguments.
  203. If you omit the executable file name, the file 'a.out' is used. If
  204. you give no profile data file name, the file 'gmon.out' is used. If any
  205. file is not in the proper format, or if the profile data file does not
  206. appear to belong to the executable file, an error message is printed.
  207. You can give more than one profile data file by entering all their
  208. names after the executable file name; then the statistics in all the
  209. data files are summed together.
  210. The order of these options does not matter.
  211. * Menu:
  212. * Output Options:: Controlling 'gprof''s output style
  213. * Analysis Options:: Controlling how 'gprof' analyzes its data
  214. * Miscellaneous Options::
  215. * Deprecated Options:: Options you no longer need to use, but which
  216. have been retained for compatibility
  217. * Symspecs:: Specifying functions to include or exclude
  218. 
  219. File: gprof.info, Node: Output Options, Next: Analysis Options, Up: Invoking
  220. 4.1 Output Options
  221. ==================
  222. These options specify which of several output formats 'gprof' should
  223. produce.
  224. Many of these options take an optional "symspec" to specify functions
  225. to be included or excluded. These options can be specified multiple
  226. times, with different symspecs, to include or exclude sets of symbols.
  227. *Note Symspecs: Symspecs.
  228. Specifying any of these options overrides the default ('-p -q'),
  229. which prints a flat profile and call graph analysis for all functions.
  230. '-A[SYMSPEC]'
  231. '--annotated-source[=SYMSPEC]'
  232. The '-A' option causes 'gprof' to print annotated source code. If
  233. SYMSPEC is specified, print output only for matching symbols.
  234. *Note The Annotated Source Listing: Annotated Source.
  235. '-b'
  236. '--brief'
  237. If the '-b' option is given, 'gprof' doesn't print the verbose
  238. blurbs that try to explain the meaning of all of the fields in the
  239. tables. This is useful if you intend to print out the output, or
  240. are tired of seeing the blurbs.
  241. '-C[SYMSPEC]'
  242. '--exec-counts[=SYMSPEC]'
  243. The '-C' option causes 'gprof' to print a tally of functions and
  244. the number of times each was called. If SYMSPEC is specified,
  245. print tally only for matching symbols.
  246. If the profile data file contains basic-block count records,
  247. specifying the '-l' option, along with '-C', will cause basic-block
  248. execution counts to be tallied and displayed.
  249. '-i'
  250. '--file-info'
  251. The '-i' option causes 'gprof' to display summary information about
  252. the profile data file(s) and then exit. The number of histogram,
  253. call graph, and basic-block count records is displayed.
  254. '-I DIRS'
  255. '--directory-path=DIRS'
  256. The '-I' option specifies a list of search directories in which to
  257. find source files. Environment variable GPROF_PATH can also be
  258. used to convey this information. Used mostly for annotated source
  259. output.
  260. '-J[SYMSPEC]'
  261. '--no-annotated-source[=SYMSPEC]'
  262. The '-J' option causes 'gprof' not to print annotated source code.
  263. If SYMSPEC is specified, 'gprof' prints annotated source, but
  264. excludes matching symbols.
  265. '-L'
  266. '--print-path'
  267. Normally, source filenames are printed with the path component
  268. suppressed. The '-L' option causes 'gprof' to print the full
  269. pathname of source filenames, which is determined from symbolic
  270. debugging information in the image file and is relative to the
  271. directory in which the compiler was invoked.
  272. '-p[SYMSPEC]'
  273. '--flat-profile[=SYMSPEC]'
  274. The '-p' option causes 'gprof' to print a flat profile. If SYMSPEC
  275. is specified, print flat profile only for matching symbols. *Note
  276. The Flat Profile: Flat Profile.
  277. '-P[SYMSPEC]'
  278. '--no-flat-profile[=SYMSPEC]'
  279. The '-P' option causes 'gprof' to suppress printing a flat profile.
  280. If SYMSPEC is specified, 'gprof' prints a flat profile, but
  281. excludes matching symbols.
  282. '-q[SYMSPEC]'
  283. '--graph[=SYMSPEC]'
  284. The '-q' option causes 'gprof' to print the call graph analysis.
  285. If SYMSPEC is specified, print call graph only for matching symbols
  286. and their children. *Note The Call Graph: Call Graph.
  287. '-Q[SYMSPEC]'
  288. '--no-graph[=SYMSPEC]'
  289. The '-Q' option causes 'gprof' to suppress printing the call graph.
  290. If SYMSPEC is specified, 'gprof' prints a call graph, but excludes
  291. matching symbols.
  292. '-t'
  293. '--table-length=NUM'
  294. The '-t' option causes the NUM most active source lines in each
  295. source file to be listed when source annotation is enabled. The
  296. default is 10.
  297. '-y'
  298. '--separate-files'
  299. This option affects annotated source output only. Normally,
  300. 'gprof' prints annotated source files to standard-output. If this
  301. option is specified, annotated source for a file named
  302. 'path/FILENAME' is generated in the file 'FILENAME-ann'. If the
  303. underlying file system would truncate 'FILENAME-ann' so that it
  304. overwrites the original 'FILENAME', 'gprof' generates annotated
  305. source in the file 'FILENAME.ann' instead (if the original file
  306. name has an extension, that extension is _replaced_ with '.ann').
  307. '-Z[SYMSPEC]'
  308. '--no-exec-counts[=SYMSPEC]'
  309. The '-Z' option causes 'gprof' not to print a tally of functions
  310. and the number of times each was called. If SYMSPEC is specified,
  311. print tally, but exclude matching symbols.
  312. '-r'
  313. '--function-ordering'
  314. The '--function-ordering' option causes 'gprof' to print a
  315. suggested function ordering for the program based on profiling
  316. data. This option suggests an ordering which may improve paging,
  317. tlb and cache behavior for the program on systems which support
  318. arbitrary ordering of functions in an executable.
  319. The exact details of how to force the linker to place functions in
  320. a particular order is system dependent and out of the scope of this
  321. manual.
  322. '-R MAP_FILE'
  323. '--file-ordering MAP_FILE'
  324. The '--file-ordering' option causes 'gprof' to print a suggested .o
  325. link line ordering for the program based on profiling data. This
  326. option suggests an ordering which may improve paging, tlb and cache
  327. behavior for the program on systems which do not support arbitrary
  328. ordering of functions in an executable.
  329. Use of the '-a' argument is highly recommended with this option.
  330. The MAP_FILE argument is a pathname to a file which provides
  331. function name to object file mappings. The format of the file is
  332. similar to the output of the program 'nm'.
  333. c-parse.o:00000000 T yyparse
  334. c-parse.o:00000004 C yyerrflag
  335. c-lang.o:00000000 T maybe_objc_method_name
  336. c-lang.o:00000000 T print_lang_statistics
  337. c-lang.o:00000000 T recognize_objc_keyword
  338. c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_identifier
  339. c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_type
  340. ...
  341. To create a MAP_FILE with GNU 'nm', type a command like 'nm
  342. --extern-only --defined-only -v --print-file-name program-name'.
  343. '-T'
  344. '--traditional'
  345. The '-T' option causes 'gprof' to print its output in "traditional"
  346. BSD style.
  347. '-w WIDTH'
  348. '--width=WIDTH'
  349. Sets width of output lines to WIDTH. Currently only used when
  350. printing the function index at the bottom of the call graph.
  351. '-x'
  352. '--all-lines'
  353. This option affects annotated source output only. By default, only
  354. the lines at the beginning of a basic-block are annotated. If this
  355. option is specified, every line in a basic-block is annotated by
  356. repeating the annotation for the first line. This behavior is
  357. similar to 'tcov''s '-a'.
  358. '--demangle[=STYLE]'
  359. '--no-demangle'
  360. These options control whether C++ symbol names should be demangled
  361. when printing output. The default is to demangle symbols. The
  362. '--no-demangle' option may be used to turn off demangling.
  363. Different compilers have different mangling styles. The optional
  364. demangling style argument can be used to choose an appropriate
  365. demangling style for your compiler.
  366. 
  367. File: gprof.info, Node: Analysis Options, Next: Miscellaneous Options, Prev: Output Options, Up: Invoking
  368. 4.2 Analysis Options
  369. ====================
  370. '-a'
  371. '--no-static'
  372. The '-a' option causes 'gprof' to suppress the printing of
  373. statically declared (private) functions. (These are functions
  374. whose names are not listed as global, and which are not visible
  375. outside the file/function/block where they were defined.) Time
  376. spent in these functions, calls to/from them, etc., will all be
  377. attributed to the function that was loaded directly before it in
  378. the executable file. This option affects both the flat profile and
  379. the call graph.
  380. '-c'
  381. '--static-call-graph'
  382. The '-c' option causes the call graph of the program to be
  383. augmented by a heuristic which examines the text space of the
  384. object file and identifies function calls in the binary machine
  385. code. Since normal call graph records are only generated when
  386. functions are entered, this option identifies children that could
  387. have been called, but never were. Calls to functions that were not
  388. compiled with profiling enabled are also identified, but only if
  389. symbol table entries are present for them. Calls to dynamic
  390. library routines are typically _not_ found by this option. Parents
  391. or children identified via this heuristic are indicated in the call
  392. graph with call counts of '0'.
  393. '-D'
  394. '--ignore-non-functions'
  395. The '-D' option causes 'gprof' to ignore symbols which are not
  396. known to be functions. This option will give more accurate profile
  397. data on systems where it is supported (Solaris and HPUX for
  398. example).
  399. '-k FROM/TO'
  400. The '-k' option allows you to delete from the call graph any arcs
  401. from symbols matching symspec FROM to those matching symspec TO.
  402. '-l'
  403. '--line'
  404. The '-l' option enables line-by-line profiling, which causes
  405. histogram hits to be charged to individual source code lines,
  406. instead of functions. This feature only works with programs
  407. compiled by older versions of the 'gcc' compiler. Newer versions
  408. of 'gcc' are designed to work with the 'gcov' tool instead.
  409. If the program was compiled with basic-block counting enabled, this
  410. option will also identify how many times each line of code was
  411. executed. While line-by-line profiling can help isolate where in a
  412. large function a program is spending its time, it also
  413. significantly increases the running time of 'gprof', and magnifies
  414. statistical inaccuracies. *Note Statistical Sampling Error:
  415. Sampling Error.
  416. '--inline-file-names'
  417. This option causes 'gprof' to print the source file after each
  418. symbol in both the flat profile and the call graph. The full path
  419. to the file is printed if used with the '-L' option.
  420. '-m NUM'
  421. '--min-count=NUM'
  422. This option affects execution count output only. Symbols that are
  423. executed less than NUM times are suppressed.
  424. '-nSYMSPEC'
  425. '--time=SYMSPEC'
  426. The '-n' option causes 'gprof', in its call graph analysis, to only
  427. propagate times for symbols matching SYMSPEC.
  428. '-NSYMSPEC'
  429. '--no-time=SYMSPEC'
  430. The '-n' option causes 'gprof', in its call graph analysis, not to
  431. propagate times for symbols matching SYMSPEC.
  432. '-SFILENAME'
  433. '--external-symbol-table=FILENAME'
  434. The '-S' option causes 'gprof' to read an external symbol table
  435. file, such as '/proc/kallsyms', rather than read the symbol table
  436. from the given object file (the default is 'a.out'). This is
  437. useful for profiling kernel modules.
  438. '-z'
  439. '--display-unused-functions'
  440. If you give the '-z' option, 'gprof' will mention all functions in
  441. the flat profile, even those that were never called, and that had
  442. no time spent in them. This is useful in conjunction with the '-c'
  443. option for discovering which routines were never called.
  444. 
  445. File: gprof.info, Node: Miscellaneous Options, Next: Deprecated Options, Prev: Analysis Options, Up: Invoking
  446. 4.3 Miscellaneous Options
  447. =========================
  448. '-d[NUM]'
  449. '--debug[=NUM]'
  450. The '-d NUM' option specifies debugging options. If NUM is not
  451. specified, enable all debugging. *Note Debugging 'gprof':
  452. Debugging.
  453. '-h'
  454. '--help'
  455. The '-h' option prints command line usage.
  456. '-ONAME'
  457. '--file-format=NAME'
  458. Selects the format of the profile data files. Recognized formats
  459. are 'auto' (the default), 'bsd', '4.4bsd', 'magic', and 'prof' (not
  460. yet supported).
  461. '-s'
  462. '--sum'
  463. The '-s' option causes 'gprof' to summarize the information in the
  464. profile data files it read in, and write out a profile data file
  465. called 'gmon.sum', which contains all the information from the
  466. profile data files that 'gprof' read in. The file 'gmon.sum' may
  467. be one of the specified input files; the effect of this is to merge
  468. the data in the other input files into 'gmon.sum'.
  469. Eventually you can run 'gprof' again without '-s' to analyze the
  470. cumulative data in the file 'gmon.sum'.
  471. '-v'
  472. '--version'
  473. The '-v' flag causes 'gprof' to print the current version number,
  474. and then exit.
  475. 
  476. File: gprof.info, Node: Deprecated Options, Next: Symspecs, Prev: Miscellaneous Options, Up: Invoking
  477. 4.4 Deprecated Options
  478. ======================
  479. These options have been replaced with newer versions that use symspecs.
  480. '-e FUNCTION_NAME'
  481. The '-e FUNCTION' option tells 'gprof' to not print information
  482. about the function FUNCTION_NAME (and its children...) in the call
  483. graph. The function will still be listed as a child of any
  484. functions that call it, but its index number will be shown as '[not
  485. printed]'. More than one '-e' option may be given; only one
  486. FUNCTION_NAME may be indicated with each '-e' option.
  487. '-E FUNCTION_NAME'
  488. The '-E FUNCTION' option works like the '-e' option, but time spent
  489. in the function (and children who were not called from anywhere
  490. else), will not be used to compute the percentages-of-time for the
  491. call graph. More than one '-E' option may be given; only one
  492. FUNCTION_NAME may be indicated with each '-E' option.
  493. '-f FUNCTION_NAME'
  494. The '-f FUNCTION' option causes 'gprof' to limit the call graph to
  495. the function FUNCTION_NAME and its children (and their
  496. children...). More than one '-f' option may be given; only one
  497. FUNCTION_NAME may be indicated with each '-f' option.
  498. '-F FUNCTION_NAME'
  499. The '-F FUNCTION' option works like the '-f' option, but only time
  500. spent in the function and its children (and their children...) will
  501. be used to determine total-time and percentages-of-time for the
  502. call graph. More than one '-F' option may be given; only one
  503. FUNCTION_NAME may be indicated with each '-F' option. The '-F'
  504. option overrides the '-E' option.
  505. Note that only one function can be specified with each '-e', '-E',
  506. '-f' or '-F' option. To specify more than one function, use multiple
  507. options. For example, this command:
  508. gprof -e boring -f foo -f bar myprogram > gprof.output
  509. lists in the call graph all functions that were reached from either
  510. 'foo' or 'bar' and were not reachable from 'boring'.
  511. 
  512. File: gprof.info, Node: Symspecs, Prev: Deprecated Options, Up: Invoking
  513. 4.5 Symspecs
  514. ============
  515. Many of the output options allow functions to be included or excluded
  516. using "symspecs" (symbol specifications), which observe the following
  517. syntax:
  518. filename_containing_a_dot
  519. | funcname_not_containing_a_dot
  520. | linenumber
  521. | ( [ any_filename ] `:' ( any_funcname | linenumber ) )
  522. Here are some sample symspecs:
  523. 'main.c'
  524. Selects everything in file 'main.c'--the dot in the string tells
  525. 'gprof' to interpret the string as a filename, rather than as a
  526. function name. To select a file whose name does not contain a dot,
  527. a trailing colon should be specified. For example, 'odd:' is
  528. interpreted as the file named 'odd'.
  529. 'main'
  530. Selects all functions named 'main'.
  531. Note that there may be multiple instances of the same function name
  532. because some of the definitions may be local (i.e., static).
  533. Unless a function name is unique in a program, you must use the
  534. colon notation explained below to specify a function from a
  535. specific source file.
  536. Sometimes, function names contain dots. In such cases, it is
  537. necessary to add a leading colon to the name. For example, ':.mul'
  538. selects function '.mul'.
  539. In some object file formats, symbols have a leading underscore.
  540. 'gprof' will normally not print these underscores. When you name a
  541. symbol in a symspec, you should type it exactly as 'gprof' prints
  542. it in its output. For example, if the compiler produces a symbol
  543. '_main' from your 'main' function, 'gprof' still prints it as
  544. 'main' in its output, so you should use 'main' in symspecs.
  545. 'main.c:main'
  546. Selects function 'main' in file 'main.c'.
  547. 'main.c:134'
  548. Selects line 134 in file 'main.c'.
  549. 
  550. File: gprof.info, Node: Output, Next: Inaccuracy, Prev: Invoking, Up: Top
  551. 5 Interpreting 'gprof''s Output
  552. *******************************
  553. 'gprof' can produce several different output styles, the most important
  554. of which are described below. The simplest output styles (file
  555. information, execution count, and function and file ordering) are not
  556. described here, but are documented with the respective options that
  557. trigger them. *Note Output Options: Output Options.
  558. * Menu:
  559. * Flat Profile:: The flat profile shows how much time was spent
  560. executing directly in each function.
  561. * Call Graph:: The call graph shows which functions called which
  562. others, and how much time each function used
  563. when its subroutine calls are included.
  564. * Line-by-line:: 'gprof' can analyze individual source code lines
  565. * Annotated Source:: The annotated source listing displays source code
  566. labeled with execution counts
  567. 
  568. File: gprof.info, Node: Flat Profile, Next: Call Graph, Up: Output
  569. 5.1 The Flat Profile
  570. ====================
  571. The "flat profile" shows the total amount of time your program spent
  572. executing each function. Unless the '-z' option is given, functions
  573. with no apparent time spent in them, and no apparent calls to them, are
  574. not mentioned. Note that if a function was not compiled for profiling,
  575. and didn't run long enough to show up on the program counter histogram,
  576. it will be indistinguishable from a function that was never called.
  577. This is part of a flat profile for a small program:
  578. Flat profile:
  579. Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
  580. % cumulative self self total
  581. time seconds seconds calls ms/call ms/call name
  582. 33.34 0.02 0.02 7208 0.00 0.00 open
  583. 16.67 0.03 0.01 244 0.04 0.12 offtime
  584. 16.67 0.04 0.01 8 1.25 1.25 memccpy
  585. 16.67 0.05 0.01 7 1.43 1.43 write
  586. 16.67 0.06 0.01 mcount
  587. 0.00 0.06 0.00 236 0.00 0.00 tzset
  588. 0.00 0.06 0.00 192 0.00 0.00 tolower
  589. 0.00 0.06 0.00 47 0.00 0.00 strlen
  590. 0.00 0.06 0.00 45 0.00 0.00 strchr
  591. 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 50.00 main
  592. 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 0.00 memcpy
  593. 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 10.11 print
  594. 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 0.00 profil
  595. 0.00 0.06 0.00 1 0.00 50.00 report
  596. ...
  597. The functions are sorted first by decreasing run-time spent in them,
  598. then by decreasing number of calls, then alphabetically by name. The
  599. functions 'mcount' and 'profil' are part of the profiling apparatus and
  600. appear in every flat profile; their time gives a measure of the amount
  601. of overhead due to profiling.
  602. Just before the column headers, a statement appears indicating how
  603. much time each sample counted as. This "sampling period" estimates the
  604. margin of error in each of the time figures. A time figure that is not
  605. much larger than this is not reliable. In this example, each sample
  606. counted as 0.01 seconds, suggesting a 100 Hz sampling rate. The
  607. program's total execution time was 0.06 seconds, as indicated by the
  608. 'cumulative seconds' field. Since each sample counted for 0.01 seconds,
  609. this means only six samples were taken during the run. Two of the
  610. samples occurred while the program was in the 'open' function, as
  611. indicated by the 'self seconds' field. Each of the other four samples
  612. occurred one each in 'offtime', 'memccpy', 'write', and 'mcount'. Since
  613. only six samples were taken, none of these values can be regarded as
  614. particularly reliable. In another run, the 'self seconds' field for
  615. 'mcount' might well be '0.00' or '0.02'. *Note Statistical Sampling
  616. Error: Sampling Error, for a complete discussion.
  617. The remaining functions in the listing (those whose 'self seconds'
  618. field is '0.00') didn't appear in the histogram samples at all.
  619. However, the call graph indicated that they were called, so therefore
  620. they are listed, sorted in decreasing order by the 'calls' field.
  621. Clearly some time was spent executing these functions, but the paucity
  622. of histogram samples prevents any determination of how much time each
  623. took.
  624. Here is what the fields in each line mean:
  625. '% time'
  626. This is the percentage of the total execution time your program
  627. spent in this function. These should all add up to 100%.
  628. 'cumulative seconds'
  629. This is the cumulative total number of seconds the computer spent
  630. executing this functions, plus the time spent in all the functions
  631. above this one in this table.
  632. 'self seconds'
  633. This is the number of seconds accounted for by this function alone.
  634. The flat profile listing is sorted first by this number.
  635. 'calls'
  636. This is the total number of times the function was called. If the
  637. function was never called, or the number of times it was called
  638. cannot be determined (probably because the function was not
  639. compiled with profiling enabled), the "calls" field is blank.
  640. 'self ms/call'
  641. This represents the average number of milliseconds spent in this
  642. function per call, if this function is profiled. Otherwise, this
  643. field is blank for this function.
  644. 'total ms/call'
  645. This represents the average number of milliseconds spent in this
  646. function and its descendants per call, if this function is
  647. profiled. Otherwise, this field is blank for this function. This
  648. is the only field in the flat profile that uses call graph
  649. analysis.
  650. 'name'
  651. This is the name of the function. The flat profile is sorted by
  652. this field alphabetically after the "self seconds" and "calls"
  653. fields are sorted.
  654. 
  655. File: gprof.info, Node: Call Graph, Next: Line-by-line, Prev: Flat Profile, Up: Output
  656. 5.2 The Call Graph
  657. ==================
  658. The "call graph" shows how much time was spent in each function and its
  659. children. From this information, you can find functions that, while
  660. they themselves may not have used much time, called other functions that
  661. did use unusual amounts of time.
  662. Here is a sample call from a small program. This call came from the
  663. same 'gprof' run as the flat profile example in the previous section.
  664. granularity: each sample hit covers 2 byte(s) for 20.00% of 0.05 seconds
  665. index % time self children called name
  666. <spontaneous>
  667. [1] 100.0 0.00 0.05 start [1]
  668. 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2]
  669. 0.00 0.00 1/2 on_exit [28]
  670. 0.00 0.00 1/1 exit [59]
  671. -----------------------------------------------
  672. 0.00 0.05 1/1 start [1]
  673. [2] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 main [2]
  674. 0.00 0.05 1/1 report [3]
  675. -----------------------------------------------
  676. 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2]
  677. [3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3]
  678. 0.00 0.03 8/8 timelocal [6]
  679. 0.00 0.01 1/1 print [9]
  680. 0.00 0.01 9/9 fgets [12]
  681. 0.00 0.00 12/34 strncmp <cycle 1> [40]
  682. 0.00 0.00 8/8 lookup [20]
  683. 0.00 0.00 1/1 fopen [21]
  684. 0.00 0.00 8/8 chewtime [24]
  685. 0.00 0.00 8/16 skipspace [44]
  686. -----------------------------------------------
  687. [4] 59.8 0.01 0.02 8+472 <cycle 2 as a whole> [4]
  688. 0.01 0.02 244+260 offtime <cycle 2> [7]
  689. 0.00 0.00 236+1 tzset <cycle 2> [26]
  690. -----------------------------------------------
  691. The lines full of dashes divide this table into "entries", one for
  692. each function. Each entry has one or more lines.
  693. In each entry, the primary line is the one that starts with an index
  694. number in square brackets. The end of this line says which function the
  695. entry is for. The preceding lines in the entry describe the callers of
  696. this function and the following lines describe its subroutines (also
  697. called "children" when we speak of the call graph).
  698. The entries are sorted by time spent in the function and its
  699. subroutines.
  700. The internal profiling function 'mcount' (*note The Flat Profile:
  701. Flat Profile.) is never mentioned in the call graph.
  702. * Menu:
  703. * Primary:: Details of the primary line's contents.
  704. * Callers:: Details of caller-lines' contents.
  705. * Subroutines:: Details of subroutine-lines' contents.
  706. * Cycles:: When there are cycles of recursion,
  707. such as 'a' calls 'b' calls 'a'...
  708. 
  709. File: gprof.info, Node: Primary, Next: Callers, Up: Call Graph
  710. 5.2.1 The Primary Line
  711. ----------------------
  712. The "primary line" in a call graph entry is the line that describes the
  713. function which the entry is about and gives the overall statistics for
  714. this function.
  715. For reference, we repeat the primary line from the entry for function
  716. 'report' in our main example, together with the heading line that shows
  717. the names of the fields:
  718. index % time self children called name
  719. ...
  720. [3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3]
  721. Here is what the fields in the primary line mean:
  722. 'index'
  723. Entries are numbered with consecutive integers. Each function
  724. therefore has an index number, which appears at the beginning of
  725. its primary line.
  726. Each cross-reference to a function, as a caller or subroutine of
  727. another, gives its index number as well as its name. The index
  728. number guides you if you wish to look for the entry for that
  729. function.
  730. '% time'
  731. This is the percentage of the total time that was spent in this
  732. function, including time spent in subroutines called from this
  733. function.
  734. The time spent in this function is counted again for the callers of
  735. this function. Therefore, adding up these percentages is
  736. meaningless.
  737. 'self'
  738. This is the total amount of time spent in this function. This
  739. should be identical to the number printed in the 'seconds' field
  740. for this function in the flat profile.
  741. 'children'
  742. This is the total amount of time spent in the subroutine calls made
  743. by this function. This should be equal to the sum of all the
  744. 'self' and 'children' entries of the children listed directly below
  745. this function.
  746. 'called'
  747. This is the number of times the function was called.
  748. If the function called itself recursively, there are two numbers,
  749. separated by a '+'. The first number counts non-recursive calls,
  750. and the second counts recursive calls.
  751. In the example above, the function 'report' was called once from
  752. 'main'.
  753. 'name'
  754. This is the name of the current function. The index number is
  755. repeated after it.
  756. If the function is part of a cycle of recursion, the cycle number
  757. is printed between the function's name and the index number (*note
  758. How Mutually Recursive Functions Are Described: Cycles.). For
  759. example, if function 'gnurr' is part of cycle number one, and has
  760. index number twelve, its primary line would be end like this:
  761. gnurr <cycle 1> [12]
  762. 
  763. File: gprof.info, Node: Callers, Next: Subroutines, Prev: Primary, Up: Call Graph
  764. 5.2.2 Lines for a Function's Callers
  765. ------------------------------------
  766. A function's entry has a line for each function it was called by. These
  767. lines' fields correspond to the fields of the primary line, but their
  768. meanings are different because of the difference in context.
  769. For reference, we repeat two lines from the entry for the function
  770. 'report', the primary line and one caller-line preceding it, together
  771. with the heading line that shows the names of the fields:
  772. index % time self children called name
  773. ...
  774. 0.00 0.05 1/1 main [2]
  775. [3] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 report [3]
  776. Here are the meanings of the fields in the caller-line for 'report'
  777. called from 'main':
  778. 'self'
  779. An estimate of the amount of time spent in 'report' itself when it
  780. was called from 'main'.
  781. 'children'
  782. An estimate of the amount of time spent in subroutines of 'report'
  783. when 'report' was called from 'main'.
  784. The sum of the 'self' and 'children' fields is an estimate of the
  785. amount of time spent within calls to 'report' from 'main'.
  786. 'called'
  787. Two numbers: the number of times 'report' was called from 'main',
  788. followed by the total number of non-recursive calls to 'report'
  789. from all its callers.
  790. 'name and index number'
  791. The name of the caller of 'report' to which this line applies,
  792. followed by the caller's index number.
  793. Not all functions have entries in the call graph; some options to
  794. 'gprof' request the omission of certain functions. When a caller
  795. has no entry of its own, it still has caller-lines in the entries
  796. of the functions it calls.
  797. If the caller is part of a recursion cycle, the cycle number is
  798. printed between the name and the index number.
  799. If the identity of the callers of a function cannot be determined, a
  800. dummy caller-line is printed which has '<spontaneous>' as the "caller's
  801. name" and all other fields blank. This can happen for signal handlers.
  802. 
  803. File: gprof.info, Node: Subroutines, Next: Cycles, Prev: Callers, Up: Call Graph
  804. 5.2.3 Lines for a Function's Subroutines
  805. ----------------------------------------
  806. A function's entry has a line for each of its subroutines--in other
  807. words, a line for each other function that it called. These lines'
  808. fields correspond to the fields of the primary line, but their meanings
  809. are different because of the difference in context.
  810. For reference, we repeat two lines from the entry for the function
  811. 'main', the primary line and a line for a subroutine, together with the
  812. heading line that shows the names of the fields:
  813. index % time self children called name
  814. ...
  815. [2] 100.0 0.00 0.05 1 main [2]
  816. 0.00 0.05 1/1 report [3]
  817. Here are the meanings of the fields in the subroutine-line for 'main'
  818. calling 'report':
  819. 'self'
  820. An estimate of the amount of time spent directly within 'report'
  821. when 'report' was called from 'main'.
  822. 'children'
  823. An estimate of the amount of time spent in subroutines of 'report'
  824. when 'report' was called from 'main'.
  825. The sum of the 'self' and 'children' fields is an estimate of the
  826. total time spent in calls to 'report' from 'main'.
  827. 'called'
  828. Two numbers, the number of calls to 'report' from 'main' followed
  829. by the total number of non-recursive calls to 'report'. This ratio
  830. is used to determine how much of 'report''s 'self' and 'children'
  831. time gets credited to 'main'. *Note Estimating 'children' Times:
  832. Assumptions.
  833. 'name'
  834. The name of the subroutine of 'main' to which this line applies,
  835. followed by the subroutine's index number.
  836. If the caller is part of a recursion cycle, the cycle number is
  837. printed between the name and the index number.
  838. 
  839. File: gprof.info, Node: Cycles, Prev: Subroutines, Up: Call Graph
  840. 5.2.4 How Mutually Recursive Functions Are Described
  841. ----------------------------------------------------
  842. The graph may be complicated by the presence of "cycles of recursion" in
  843. the call graph. A cycle exists if a function calls another function
  844. that (directly or indirectly) calls (or appears to call) the original
  845. function. For example: if 'a' calls 'b', and 'b' calls 'a', then 'a'
  846. and 'b' form a cycle.
  847. Whenever there are call paths both ways between a pair of functions,
  848. they belong to the same cycle. If 'a' and 'b' call each other and 'b'
  849. and 'c' call each other, all three make one cycle. Note that even if
  850. 'b' only calls 'a' if it was not called from 'a', 'gprof' cannot
  851. determine this, so 'a' and 'b' are still considered a cycle.
  852. The cycles are numbered with consecutive integers. When a function
  853. belongs to a cycle, each time the function name appears in the call
  854. graph it is followed by '<cycle NUMBER>'.
  855. The reason cycles matter is that they make the time values in the
  856. call graph paradoxical. The "time spent in children" of 'a' should
  857. include the time spent in its subroutine 'b' and in 'b''s
  858. subroutines--but one of 'b''s subroutines is 'a'! How much of 'a''s
  859. time should be included in the children of 'a', when 'a' is indirectly
  860. recursive?
  861. The way 'gprof' resolves this paradox is by creating a single entry
  862. for the cycle as a whole. The primary line of this entry describes the
  863. total time spent directly in the functions of the cycle. The
  864. "subroutines" of the cycle are the individual functions of the cycle,
  865. and all other functions that were called directly by them. The
  866. "callers" of the cycle are the functions, outside the cycle, that called
  867. functions in the cycle.
  868. Here is an example portion of a call graph which shows a cycle
  869. containing functions 'a' and 'b'. The cycle was entered by a call to
  870. 'a' from 'main'; both 'a' and 'b' called 'c'.
  871. index % time self children called name
  872. ----------------------------------------
  873. 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
  874. [3] 91.71 1.77 0 1+5 <cycle 1 as a whole> [3]
  875. 1.02 0 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
  876. 0.75 0 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
  877. ----------------------------------------
  878. 3 a <cycle 1> [5]
  879. [4] 52.85 1.02 0 0 b <cycle 1> [4]
  880. 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
  881. 0 0 3/6 c [6]
  882. ----------------------------------------
  883. 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
  884. 2 b <cycle 1> [4]
  885. [5] 38.86 0.75 0 1 a <cycle 1> [5]
  886. 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
  887. 0 0 3/6 c [6]
  888. ----------------------------------------
  889. (The entire call graph for this program contains in addition an entry
  890. for 'main', which calls 'a', and an entry for 'c', with callers 'a' and
  891. 'b'.)
  892. index % time self children called name
  893. <spontaneous>
  894. [1] 100.00 0 1.93 0 start [1]
  895. 0.16 1.77 1/1 main [2]
  896. ----------------------------------------
  897. 0.16 1.77 1/1 start [1]
  898. [2] 100.00 0.16 1.77 1 main [2]
  899. 1.77 0 1/1 a <cycle 1> [5]
  900. ----------------------------------------
  901. 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
  902. [3] 91.71 1.77 0 1+5 <cycle 1 as a whole> [3]
  903. 1.02 0 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
  904. 0.75 0 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
  905. 0 0 6/6 c [6]
  906. ----------------------------------------
  907. 3 a <cycle 1> [5]
  908. [4] 52.85 1.02 0 0 b <cycle 1> [4]
  909. 2 a <cycle 1> [5]
  910. 0 0 3/6 c [6]
  911. ----------------------------------------
  912. 1.77 0 1/1 main [2]
  913. 2 b <cycle 1> [4]
  914. [5] 38.86 0.75 0 1 a <cycle 1> [5]
  915. 3 b <cycle 1> [4]
  916. 0 0 3/6 c [6]
  917. ----------------------------------------
  918. 0 0 3/6 b <cycle 1> [4]
  919. 0 0 3/6 a <cycle 1> [5]
  920. [6] 0.00 0 0 6 c [6]
  921. ----------------------------------------
  922. The 'self' field of the cycle's primary line is the total time spent
  923. in all the functions of the cycle. It equals the sum of the 'self'
  924. fields for the individual functions in the cycle, found in the entry in
  925. the subroutine lines for these functions.
  926. The 'children' fields of the cycle's primary line and subroutine
  927. lines count only subroutines outside the cycle. Even though 'a' calls
  928. 'b', the time spent in those calls to 'b' is not counted in 'a''s
  929. 'children' time. Thus, we do not encounter the problem of what to do
  930. when the time in those calls to 'b' includes indirect recursive calls
  931. back to 'a'.
  932. The 'children' field of a caller-line in the cycle's entry estimates
  933. the amount of time spent _in the whole cycle_, and its other
  934. subroutines, on the times when that caller called a function in the
  935. cycle.
  936. The 'called' field in the primary line for the cycle has two numbers:
  937. first, the number of times functions in the cycle were called by
  938. functions outside the cycle; second, the number of times they were
  939. called by functions in the cycle (including times when a function in the
  940. cycle calls itself). This is a generalization of the usual split into
  941. non-recursive and recursive calls.
  942. The 'called' field of a subroutine-line for a cycle member in the
  943. cycle's entry says how many time that function was called from functions
  944. in the cycle. The total of all these is the second number in the
  945. primary line's 'called' field.
  946. In the individual entry for a function in a cycle, the other
  947. functions in the same cycle can appear as subroutines and as callers.
  948. These lines show how many times each function in the cycle called or was
  949. called from each other function in the cycle. The 'self' and 'children'
  950. fields in these lines are blank because of the difficulty of defining
  951. meanings for them when recursion is going on.
  952. 
  953. File: gprof.info, Node: Line-by-line, Next: Annotated Source, Prev: Call Graph, Up: Output
  954. 5.3 Line-by-line Profiling
  955. ==========================
  956. 'gprof''s '-l' option causes the program to perform "line-by-line"
  957. profiling. In this mode, histogram samples are assigned not to
  958. functions, but to individual lines of source code. This only works with
  959. programs compiled with older versions of the 'gcc' compiler. Newer
  960. versions of 'gcc' use a different program - 'gcov' - to display
  961. line-by-line profiling information.
  962. With the older versions of 'gcc' the program usually has to be
  963. compiled with a '-g' option, in addition to '-pg', in order to generate
  964. debugging symbols for tracking source code lines. Note, in much older
  965. versions of 'gcc' the program had to be compiled with the '-a' command
  966. line option as well.
  967. The flat profile is the most useful output table in line-by-line
  968. mode. The call graph isn't as useful as normal, since the current
  969. version of 'gprof' does not propagate call graph arcs from source code
  970. lines to the enclosing function. The call graph does, however, show
  971. each line of code that called each function, along with a count.
  972. Here is a section of 'gprof''s output, without line-by-line
  973. profiling. Note that 'ct_init' accounted for four histogram hits, and
  974. 13327 calls to 'init_block'.
  975. Flat profile:
  976. Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
  977. % cumulative self self total
  978. time seconds seconds calls us/call us/call name
  979. 30.77 0.13 0.04 6335 6.31 6.31 ct_init
  980. Call graph (explanation follows)
  981. granularity: each sample hit covers 4 byte(s) for 7.69% of 0.13 seconds
  982. index % time self children called name
  983. 0.00 0.00 1/13496 name_too_long
  984. 0.00 0.00 40/13496 deflate
  985. 0.00 0.00 128/13496 deflate_fast
  986. 0.00 0.00 13327/13496 ct_init
  987. [7] 0.0 0.00 0.00 13496 init_block
  988. Now let's look at some of 'gprof''s output from the same program run,
  989. this time with line-by-line profiling enabled. Note that 'ct_init''s
  990. four histogram hits are broken down into four lines of source code--one
  991. hit occurred on each of lines 349, 351, 382 and 385. In the call graph,
  992. note how 'ct_init''s 13327 calls to 'init_block' are broken down into
  993. one call from line 396, 3071 calls from line 384, 3730 calls from line
  994. 385, and 6525 calls from 387.
  995. Flat profile:
  996. Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
  997. % cumulative self
  998. time seconds seconds calls name
  999. 7.69 0.10 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:349)
  1000. 7.69 0.11 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:351)
  1001. 7.69 0.12 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:382)
  1002. 7.69 0.13 0.01 ct_init (trees.c:385)
  1003. Call graph (explanation follows)
  1004. granularity: each sample hit covers 4 byte(s) for 7.69% of 0.13 seconds
  1005. % time self children called name
  1006. 0.00 0.00 1/13496 name_too_long (gzip.c:1440)
  1007. 0.00 0.00 1/13496 deflate (deflate.c:763)
  1008. 0.00 0.00 1/13496 ct_init (trees.c:396)
  1009. 0.00 0.00 2/13496 deflate (deflate.c:727)
  1010. 0.00 0.00 4/13496 deflate (deflate.c:686)
  1011. 0.00 0.00 5/13496 deflate (deflate.c:675)
  1012. 0.00 0.00 12/13496 deflate (deflate.c:679)
  1013. 0.00 0.00 16/13496 deflate (deflate.c:730)
  1014. 0.00 0.00 128/13496 deflate_fast (deflate.c:654)
  1015. 0.00 0.00 3071/13496 ct_init (trees.c:384)
  1016. 0.00 0.00 3730/13496 ct_init (trees.c:385)
  1017. 0.00 0.00 6525/13496 ct_init (trees.c:387)
  1018. [6] 0.0 0.00 0.00 13496 init_block (trees.c:408)
  1019. 
  1020. File: gprof.info, Node: Annotated Source, Prev: Line-by-line, Up: Output
  1021. 5.4 The Annotated Source Listing
  1022. ================================
  1023. 'gprof''s '-A' option triggers an annotated source listing, which lists
  1024. the program's source code, each function labeled with the number of
  1025. times it was called. You may also need to specify the '-I' option, if
  1026. 'gprof' can't find the source code files.
  1027. With older versions of 'gcc' compiling with 'gcc ... -g -pg -a'
  1028. augments your program with basic-block counting code, in addition to
  1029. function counting code. This enables 'gprof' to determine how many
  1030. times each line of code was executed. With newer versions of 'gcc'
  1031. support for displaying basic-block counts is provided by the 'gcov'
  1032. program.
  1033. For example, consider the following function, taken from gzip, with
  1034. line numbers added:
  1035. 1 ulg updcrc(s, n)
  1036. 2 uch *s;
  1037. 3 unsigned n;
  1038. 4 {
  1039. 5 register ulg c;
  1040. 6
  1041. 7 static ulg crc = (ulg)0xffffffffL;
  1042. 8
  1043. 9 if (s == NULL) {
  1044. 10 c = 0xffffffffL;
  1045. 11 } else {
  1046. 12 c = crc;
  1047. 13 if (n) do {
  1048. 14 c = crc_32_tab[...];
  1049. 15 } while (--n);
  1050. 16 }
  1051. 17 crc = c;
  1052. 18 return c ^ 0xffffffffL;
  1053. 19 }
  1054. 'updcrc' has at least five basic-blocks. One is the function itself.
  1055. The 'if' statement on line 9 generates two more basic-blocks, one for
  1056. each branch of the 'if'. A fourth basic-block results from the 'if' on
  1057. line 13, and the contents of the 'do' loop form the fifth basic-block.
  1058. The compiler may also generate additional basic-blocks to handle various
  1059. special cases.
  1060. A program augmented for basic-block counting can be analyzed with
  1061. 'gprof -l -A'. The '-x' option is also helpful, to ensure that each
  1062. line of code is labeled at least once. Here is 'updcrc''s annotated
  1063. source listing for a sample 'gzip' run:
  1064. ulg updcrc(s, n)
  1065. uch *s;
  1066. unsigned n;
  1067. 2 ->{
  1068. register ulg c;
  1069. static ulg crc = (ulg)0xffffffffL;
  1070. 2 -> if (s == NULL) {
  1071. 1 -> c = 0xffffffffL;
  1072. 1 -> } else {
  1073. 1 -> c = crc;
  1074. 1 -> if (n) do {
  1075. 26312 -> c = crc_32_tab[...];
  1076. 26312,1,26311 -> } while (--n);
  1077. }
  1078. 2 -> crc = c;
  1079. 2 -> return c ^ 0xffffffffL;
  1080. 2 ->}
  1081. In this example, the function was called twice, passing once through
  1082. each branch of the 'if' statement. The body of the 'do' loop was
  1083. executed a total of 26312 times. Note how the 'while' statement is
  1084. annotated. It began execution 26312 times, once for each iteration
  1085. through the loop. One of those times (the last time) it exited, while
  1086. it branched back to the beginning of the loop 26311 times.
  1087. 
  1088. File: gprof.info, Node: Inaccuracy, Next: How do I?, Prev: Output, Up: Top
  1089. 6 Inaccuracy of 'gprof' Output
  1090. ******************************
  1091. * Menu:
  1092. * Sampling Error:: Statistical margins of error
  1093. * Assumptions:: Estimating children times
  1094. 
  1095. File: gprof.info, Node: Sampling Error, Next: Assumptions, Up: Inaccuracy
  1096. 6.1 Statistical Sampling Error
  1097. ==============================
  1098. The run-time figures that 'gprof' gives you are based on a sampling
  1099. process, so they are subject to statistical inaccuracy. If a function
  1100. runs only a small amount of time, so that on the average the sampling
  1101. process ought to catch that function in the act only once, there is a
  1102. pretty good chance it will actually find that function zero times, or
  1103. twice.
  1104. By contrast, the number-of-calls and basic-block figures are derived
  1105. by counting, not sampling. They are completely accurate and will not
  1106. vary from run to run if your program is deterministic and single
  1107. threaded. In multi-threaded applications, or single threaded
  1108. applications that link with multi-threaded libraries, the counts are
  1109. only deterministic if the counting function is thread-safe. (Note:
  1110. beware that the mcount counting function in glibc is _not_ thread-safe).
  1111. *Note Implementation of Profiling: Implementation.
  1112. The "sampling period" that is printed at the beginning of the flat
  1113. profile says how often samples are taken. The rule of thumb is that a
  1114. run-time figure is accurate if it is considerably bigger than the
  1115. sampling period.
  1116. The actual amount of error can be predicted. For N samples, the
  1117. _expected_ error is the square-root of N. For example, if the sampling
  1118. period is 0.01 seconds and 'foo''s run-time is 1 second, N is 100
  1119. samples (1 second/0.01 seconds), sqrt(N) is 10 samples, so the expected
  1120. error in 'foo''s run-time is 0.1 seconds (10*0.01 seconds), or ten
  1121. percent of the observed value. Again, if the sampling period is 0.01
  1122. seconds and 'bar''s run-time is 100 seconds, N is 10000 samples, sqrt(N)
  1123. is 100 samples, so the expected error in 'bar''s run-time is 1 second,
  1124. or one percent of the observed value. It is likely to vary this much
  1125. _on the average_ from one profiling run to the next. (_Sometimes_ it
  1126. will vary more.)
  1127. This does not mean that a small run-time figure is devoid of
  1128. information. If the program's _total_ run-time is large, a small
  1129. run-time for one function does tell you that that function used an
  1130. insignificant fraction of the whole program's time. Usually this means
  1131. it is not worth optimizing.
  1132. One way to get more accuracy is to give your program more (but
  1133. similar) input data so it will take longer. Another way is to combine
  1134. the data from several runs, using the '-s' option of 'gprof'. Here is
  1135. how:
  1136. 1. Run your program once.
  1137. 2. Issue the command 'mv gmon.out gmon.sum'.
  1138. 3. Run your program again, the same as before.
  1139. 4. Merge the new data in 'gmon.out' into 'gmon.sum' with this command:
  1140. gprof -s EXECUTABLE-FILE gmon.out gmon.sum
  1141. 5. Repeat the last two steps as often as you wish.
  1142. 6. Analyze the cumulative data using this command:
  1143. gprof EXECUTABLE-FILE gmon.sum > OUTPUT-FILE
  1144. 
  1145. File: gprof.info, Node: Assumptions, Prev: Sampling Error, Up: Inaccuracy
  1146. 6.2 Estimating 'children' Times
  1147. ===============================
  1148. Some of the figures in the call graph are estimates--for example, the
  1149. 'children' time values and all the time figures in caller and subroutine
  1150. lines.
  1151. There is no direct information about these measurements in the
  1152. profile data itself. Instead, 'gprof' estimates them by making an
  1153. assumption about your program that might or might not be true.
  1154. The assumption made is that the average time spent in each call to
  1155. any function 'foo' is not correlated with who called 'foo'. If 'foo'
  1156. used 5 seconds in all, and 2/5 of the calls to 'foo' came from 'a', then
  1157. 'foo' contributes 2 seconds to 'a''s 'children' time, by assumption.
  1158. This assumption is usually true enough, but for some programs it is
  1159. far from true. Suppose that 'foo' returns very quickly when its
  1160. argument is zero; suppose that 'a' always passes zero as an argument,
  1161. while other callers of 'foo' pass other arguments. In this program, all
  1162. the time spent in 'foo' is in the calls from callers other than 'a'.
  1163. But 'gprof' has no way of knowing this; it will blindly and incorrectly
  1164. charge 2 seconds of time in 'foo' to the children of 'a'.
  1165. We hope some day to put more complete data into 'gmon.out', so that
  1166. this assumption is no longer needed, if we can figure out how. For the
  1167. novice, the estimated figures are usually more useful than misleading.
  1168. 
  1169. File: gprof.info, Node: How do I?, Next: Incompatibilities, Prev: Inaccuracy, Up: Top
  1170. 7 Answers to Common Questions
  1171. *****************************
  1172. How can I get more exact information about hot spots in my program?
  1173. Looking at the per-line call counts only tells part of the story.
  1174. Because 'gprof' can only report call times and counts by function,
  1175. the best way to get finer-grained information on where the program
  1176. is spending its time is to re-factor large functions into sequences
  1177. of calls to smaller ones. Beware however that this can introduce
  1178. artificial hot spots since compiling with '-pg' adds a significant
  1179. overhead to function calls. An alternative solution is to use a
  1180. non-intrusive profiler, e.g. oprofile.
  1181. How do I find which lines in my program were executed the most times?
  1182. Use the 'gcov' program.
  1183. How do I find which lines in my program called a particular function?
  1184. Use 'gprof -l' and lookup the function in the call graph. The
  1185. callers will be broken down by function and line number.
  1186. How do I analyze a program that runs for less than a second?
  1187. Try using a shell script like this one:
  1188. for i in `seq 1 100`; do
  1189. fastprog
  1190. mv gmon.out gmon.out.$i
  1191. done
  1192. gprof -s fastprog gmon.out.*
  1193. gprof fastprog gmon.sum
  1194. If your program is completely deterministic, all the call counts
  1195. will be simple multiples of 100 (i.e., a function called once in
  1196. each run will appear with a call count of 100).
  1197. 
  1198. File: gprof.info, Node: Incompatibilities, Next: Details, Prev: How do I?, Up: Top
  1199. 8 Incompatibilities with Unix 'gprof'
  1200. *************************************
  1201. GNU 'gprof' and Berkeley Unix 'gprof' use the same data file 'gmon.out',
  1202. and provide essentially the same information. But there are a few
  1203. differences.
  1204. * GNU 'gprof' uses a new, generalized file format with support for
  1205. basic-block execution counts and non-realtime histograms. A magic
  1206. cookie and version number allows 'gprof' to easily identify new
  1207. style files. Old BSD-style files can still be read. *Note
  1208. Profiling Data File Format: File Format.
  1209. * For a recursive function, Unix 'gprof' lists the function as a
  1210. parent and as a child, with a 'calls' field that lists the number
  1211. of recursive calls. GNU 'gprof' omits these lines and puts the
  1212. number of recursive calls in the primary line.
  1213. * When a function is suppressed from the call graph with '-e', GNU
  1214. 'gprof' still lists it as a subroutine of functions that call it.
  1215. * GNU 'gprof' accepts the '-k' with its argument in the form
  1216. 'from/to', instead of 'from to'.
  1217. * In the annotated source listing, if there are multiple basic blocks
  1218. on the same line, GNU 'gprof' prints all of their counts, separated
  1219. by commas.
  1220. * The blurbs, field widths, and output formats are different. GNU
  1221. 'gprof' prints blurbs after the tables, so that you can see the
  1222. tables without skipping the blurbs.
  1223. 
  1224. File: gprof.info, Node: Details, Next: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Incompatibilities, Up: Top
  1225. 9 Details of Profiling
  1226. **********************
  1227. * Menu:
  1228. * Implementation:: How a program collects profiling information
  1229. * File Format:: Format of 'gmon.out' files
  1230. * Internals:: 'gprof''s internal operation
  1231. * Debugging:: Using 'gprof''s '-d' option
  1232. 
  1233. File: gprof.info, Node: Implementation, Next: File Format, Up: Details
  1234. 9.1 Implementation of Profiling
  1235. ===============================
  1236. Profiling works by changing how every function in your program is
  1237. compiled so that when it is called, it will stash away some information
  1238. about where it was called from. From this, the profiler can figure out
  1239. what function called it, and can count how many times it was called.
  1240. This change is made by the compiler when your program is compiled with
  1241. the '-pg' option, which causes every function to call 'mcount' (or
  1242. '_mcount', or '__mcount', depending on the OS and compiler) as one of
  1243. its first operations.
  1244. The 'mcount' routine, included in the profiling library, is
  1245. responsible for recording in an in-memory call graph table both its
  1246. parent routine (the child) and its parent's parent. This is typically
  1247. done by examining the stack frame to find both the address of the child,
  1248. and the return address in the original parent. Since this is a very
  1249. machine-dependent operation, 'mcount' itself is typically a short
  1250. assembly-language stub routine that extracts the required information,
  1251. and then calls '__mcount_internal' (a normal C function) with two
  1252. arguments--'frompc' and 'selfpc'. '__mcount_internal' is responsible
  1253. for maintaining the in-memory call graph, which records 'frompc',
  1254. 'selfpc', and the number of times each of these call arcs was traversed.
  1255. GCC Version 2 provides a magical function
  1256. ('__builtin_return_address'), which allows a generic 'mcount' function
  1257. to extract the required information from the stack frame. However, on
  1258. some architectures, most notably the SPARC, using this builtin can be
  1259. very computationally expensive, and an assembly language version of
  1260. 'mcount' is used for performance reasons.
  1261. Number-of-calls information for library routines is collected by
  1262. using a special version of the C library. The programs in it are the
  1263. same as in the usual C library, but they were compiled with '-pg'. If
  1264. you link your program with 'gcc ... -pg', it automatically uses the
  1265. profiling version of the library.
  1266. Profiling also involves watching your program as it runs, and keeping
  1267. a histogram of where the program counter happens to be every now and
  1268. then. Typically the program counter is looked at around 100 times per
  1269. second of run time, but the exact frequency may vary from system to
  1270. system.
  1271. This is done is one of two ways. Most UNIX-like operating systems
  1272. provide a 'profil()' system call, which registers a memory array with
  1273. the kernel, along with a scale factor that determines how the program's
  1274. address space maps into the array. Typical scaling values cause every 2
  1275. to 8 bytes of address space to map into a single array slot. On every
  1276. tick of the system clock (assuming the profiled program is running), the
  1277. value of the program counter is examined and the corresponding slot in
  1278. the memory array is incremented. Since this is done in the kernel,
  1279. which had to interrupt the process anyway to handle the clock interrupt,
  1280. very little additional system overhead is required.
  1281. However, some operating systems, most notably Linux 2.0 (and
  1282. earlier), do not provide a 'profil()' system call. On such a system,
  1283. arrangements are made for the kernel to periodically deliver a signal to
  1284. the process (typically via 'setitimer()'), which then performs the same
  1285. operation of examining the program counter and incrementing a slot in
  1286. the memory array. Since this method requires a signal to be delivered
  1287. to user space every time a sample is taken, it uses considerably more
  1288. overhead than kernel-based profiling. Also, due to the added delay
  1289. required to deliver the signal, this method is less accurate as well.
  1290. A special startup routine allocates memory for the histogram and
  1291. either calls 'profil()' or sets up a clock signal handler. This routine
  1292. ('monstartup') can be invoked in several ways. On Linux systems, a
  1293. special profiling startup file 'gcrt0.o', which invokes 'monstartup'
  1294. before 'main', is used instead of the default 'crt0.o'. Use of this
  1295. special startup file is one of the effects of using 'gcc ... -pg' to
  1296. link. On SPARC systems, no special startup files are used. Rather, the
  1297. 'mcount' routine, when it is invoked for the first time (typically when
  1298. 'main' is called), calls 'monstartup'.
  1299. If the compiler's '-a' option was used, basic-block counting is also
  1300. enabled. Each object file is then compiled with a static array of
  1301. counts, initially zero. In the executable code, every time a new
  1302. basic-block begins (i.e., when an 'if' statement appears), an extra
  1303. instruction is inserted to increment the corresponding count in the
  1304. array. At compile time, a paired array was constructed that recorded
  1305. the starting address of each basic-block. Taken together, the two
  1306. arrays record the starting address of every basic-block, along with the
  1307. number of times it was executed.
  1308. The profiling library also includes a function ('mcleanup') which is
  1309. typically registered using 'atexit()' to be called as the program exits,
  1310. and is responsible for writing the file 'gmon.out'. Profiling is turned
  1311. off, various headers are output, and the histogram is written, followed
  1312. by the call-graph arcs and the basic-block counts.
  1313. The output from 'gprof' gives no indication of parts of your program
  1314. that are limited by I/O or swapping bandwidth. This is because samples
  1315. of the program counter are taken at fixed intervals of the program's run
  1316. time. Therefore, the time measurements in 'gprof' output say nothing
  1317. about time that your program was not running. For example, a part of
  1318. the program that creates so much data that it cannot all fit in physical
  1319. memory at once may run very slowly due to thrashing, but 'gprof' will
  1320. say it uses little time. On the other hand, sampling by run time has
  1321. the advantage that the amount of load due to other users won't directly
  1322. affect the output you get.
  1323. 
  1324. File: gprof.info, Node: File Format, Next: Internals, Prev: Implementation, Up: Details
  1325. 9.2 Profiling Data File Format
  1326. ==============================
  1327. The old BSD-derived file format used for profile data does not contain a
  1328. magic cookie that allows to check whether a data file really is a
  1329. 'gprof' file. Furthermore, it does not provide a version number, thus
  1330. rendering changes to the file format almost impossible. GNU 'gprof'
  1331. uses a new file format that provides these features. For backward
  1332. compatibility, GNU 'gprof' continues to support the old BSD-derived
  1333. format, but not all features are supported with it. For example,
  1334. basic-block execution counts cannot be accommodated by the old file
  1335. format.
  1336. The new file format is defined in header file 'gmon_out.h'. It
  1337. consists of a header containing the magic cookie and a version number,
  1338. as well as some spare bytes available for future extensions. All data
  1339. in a profile data file is in the native format of the target for which
  1340. the profile was collected. GNU 'gprof' adapts automatically to the
  1341. byte-order in use.
  1342. In the new file format, the header is followed by a sequence of
  1343. records. Currently, there are three different record types: histogram
  1344. records, call-graph arc records, and basic-block execution count
  1345. records. Each file can contain any number of each record type. When
  1346. reading a file, GNU 'gprof' will ensure records of the same type are
  1347. compatible with each other and compute the union of all records. For
  1348. example, for basic-block execution counts, the union is simply the sum
  1349. of all execution counts for each basic-block.
  1350. 9.2.1 Histogram Records
  1351. -----------------------
  1352. Histogram records consist of a header that is followed by an array of
  1353. bins. The header contains the text-segment range that the histogram
  1354. spans, the size of the histogram in bytes (unlike in the old BSD format,
  1355. this does not include the size of the header), the rate of the profiling
  1356. clock, and the physical dimension that the bin counts represent after
  1357. being scaled by the profiling clock rate. The physical dimension is
  1358. specified in two parts: a long name of up to 15 characters and a single
  1359. character abbreviation. For example, a histogram representing real-time
  1360. would specify the long name as "seconds" and the abbreviation as "s".
  1361. This feature is useful for architectures that support performance
  1362. monitor hardware (which, fortunately, is becoming increasingly common).
  1363. For example, under DEC OSF/1, the "uprofile" command can be used to
  1364. produce a histogram of, say, instruction cache misses. In this case,
  1365. the dimension in the histogram header could be set to "i-cache misses"
  1366. and the abbreviation could be set to "1" (because it is simply a count,
  1367. not a physical dimension). Also, the profiling rate would have to be
  1368. set to 1 in this case.
  1369. Histogram bins are 16-bit numbers and each bin represent an equal
  1370. amount of text-space. For example, if the text-segment is one thousand
  1371. bytes long and if there are ten bins in the histogram, each bin
  1372. represents one hundred bytes.
  1373. 9.2.2 Call-Graph Records
  1374. ------------------------
  1375. Call-graph records have a format that is identical to the one used in
  1376. the BSD-derived file format. It consists of an arc in the call graph
  1377. and a count indicating the number of times the arc was traversed during
  1378. program execution. Arcs are specified by a pair of addresses: the first
  1379. must be within caller's function and the second must be within the
  1380. callee's function. When performing profiling at the function level,
  1381. these addresses can point anywhere within the respective function.
  1382. However, when profiling at the line-level, it is better if the addresses
  1383. are as close to the call-site/entry-point as possible. This will ensure
  1384. that the line-level call-graph is able to identify exactly which line of
  1385. source code performed calls to a function.
  1386. 9.2.3 Basic-Block Execution Count Records
  1387. -----------------------------------------
  1388. Basic-block execution count records consist of a header followed by a
  1389. sequence of address/count pairs. The header simply specifies the length
  1390. of the sequence. In an address/count pair, the address identifies a
  1391. basic-block and the count specifies the number of times that basic-block
  1392. was executed. Any address within the basic-address can be used.
  1393. 
  1394. File: gprof.info, Node: Internals, Next: Debugging, Prev: File Format, Up: Details
  1395. 9.3 'gprof''s Internal Operation
  1396. ================================
  1397. Like most programs, 'gprof' begins by processing its options. During
  1398. this stage, it may building its symspec list ('sym_ids.c:sym_id_add'),
  1399. if options are specified which use symspecs. 'gprof' maintains a single
  1400. linked list of symspecs, which will eventually get turned into 12 symbol
  1401. tables, organized into six include/exclude pairs--one pair each for the
  1402. flat profile (INCL_FLAT/EXCL_FLAT), the call graph arcs
  1403. (INCL_ARCS/EXCL_ARCS), printing in the call graph
  1404. (INCL_GRAPH/EXCL_GRAPH), timing propagation in the call graph
  1405. (INCL_TIME/EXCL_TIME), the annotated source listing
  1406. (INCL_ANNO/EXCL_ANNO), and the execution count listing
  1407. (INCL_EXEC/EXCL_EXEC).
  1408. After option processing, 'gprof' finishes building the symspec list
  1409. by adding all the symspecs in 'default_excluded_list' to the exclude
  1410. lists EXCL_TIME and EXCL_GRAPH, and if line-by-line profiling is
  1411. specified, EXCL_FLAT as well. These default excludes are not added to
  1412. EXCL_ANNO, EXCL_ARCS, and EXCL_EXEC.
  1413. Next, the BFD library is called to open the object file, verify that
  1414. it is an object file, and read its symbol table ('core.c:core_init'),
  1415. using 'bfd_canonicalize_symtab' after mallocing an appropriately sized
  1416. array of symbols. At this point, function mappings are read (if the
  1417. '--file-ordering' option has been specified), and the core text space is
  1418. read into memory (if the '-c' option was given).
  1419. 'gprof''s own symbol table, an array of Sym structures, is now built.
  1420. This is done in one of two ways, by one of two routines, depending on
  1421. whether line-by-line profiling ('-l' option) has been enabled. For
  1422. normal profiling, the BFD canonical symbol table is scanned. For
  1423. line-by-line profiling, every text space address is examined, and a new
  1424. symbol table entry gets created every time the line number changes. In
  1425. either case, two passes are made through the symbol table--one to count
  1426. the size of the symbol table required, and the other to actually read
  1427. the symbols. In between the two passes, a single array of type 'Sym' is
  1428. created of the appropriate length. Finally, 'symtab.c:symtab_finalize'
  1429. is called to sort the symbol table and remove duplicate entries (entries
  1430. with the same memory address).
  1431. The symbol table must be a contiguous array for two reasons. First,
  1432. the 'qsort' library function (which sorts an array) will be used to sort
  1433. the symbol table. Also, the symbol lookup routine
  1434. ('symtab.c:sym_lookup'), which finds symbols based on memory address,
  1435. uses a binary search algorithm which requires the symbol table to be a
  1436. sorted array. Function symbols are indicated with an 'is_func' flag.
  1437. Line number symbols have no special flags set. Additionally, a symbol
  1438. can have an 'is_static' flag to indicate that it is a local symbol.
  1439. With the symbol table read, the symspecs can now be translated into
  1440. Syms ('sym_ids.c:sym_id_parse'). Remember that a single symspec can
  1441. match multiple symbols. An array of symbol tables ('syms') is created,
  1442. each entry of which is a symbol table of Syms to be included or excluded
  1443. from a particular listing. The master symbol table and the symspecs are
  1444. examined by nested loops, and every symbol that matches a symspec is
  1445. inserted into the appropriate syms table. This is done twice, once to
  1446. count the size of each required symbol table, and again to build the
  1447. tables, which have been malloced between passes. From now on, to
  1448. determine whether a symbol is on an include or exclude symspec list,
  1449. 'gprof' simply uses its standard symbol lookup routine on the
  1450. appropriate table in the 'syms' array.
  1451. Now the profile data file(s) themselves are read
  1452. ('gmon_io.c:gmon_out_read'), first by checking for a new-style
  1453. 'gmon.out' header, then assuming this is an old-style BSD 'gmon.out' if
  1454. the magic number test failed.
  1455. New-style histogram records are read by 'hist.c:hist_read_rec'. For
  1456. the first histogram record, allocate a memory array to hold all the
  1457. bins, and read them in. When multiple profile data files (or files with
  1458. multiple histogram records) are read, the memory ranges of each pair of
  1459. histogram records must be either equal, or non-overlapping. For each
  1460. pair of histogram records, the resolution (memory region size divided by
  1461. the number of bins) must be the same. The time unit must be the same
  1462. for all histogram records. If the above containts are met, all
  1463. histograms for the same memory range are merged.
  1464. As each call graph record is read ('call_graph.c:cg_read_rec'), the
  1465. parent and child addresses are matched to symbol table entries, and a
  1466. call graph arc is created by 'cg_arcs.c:arc_add', unless the arc fails a
  1467. symspec check against INCL_ARCS/EXCL_ARCS. As each arc is added, a
  1468. linked list is maintained of the parent's child arcs, and of the child's
  1469. parent arcs. Both the child's call count and the arc's call count are
  1470. incremented by the record's call count.
  1471. Basic-block records are read ('basic_blocks.c:bb_read_rec'), but only
  1472. if line-by-line profiling has been selected. Each basic-block address
  1473. is matched to a corresponding line symbol in the symbol table, and an
  1474. entry made in the symbol's bb_addr and bb_calls arrays. Again, if
  1475. multiple basic-block records are present for the same address, the call
  1476. counts are cumulative.
  1477. A gmon.sum file is dumped, if requested ('gmon_io.c:gmon_out_write').
  1478. If histograms were present in the data files, assign them to symbols
  1479. ('hist.c:hist_assign_samples') by iterating over all the sample bins and
  1480. assigning them to symbols. Since the symbol table is sorted in order of
  1481. ascending memory addresses, we can simple follow along in the symbol
  1482. table as we make our pass over the sample bins. This step includes a
  1483. symspec check against INCL_FLAT/EXCL_FLAT. Depending on the histogram
  1484. scale factor, a sample bin may span multiple symbols, in which case a
  1485. fraction of the sample count is allocated to each symbol, proportional
  1486. to the degree of overlap. This effect is rare for normal profiling, but
  1487. overlaps are more common during line-by-line profiling, and can cause
  1488. each of two adjacent lines to be credited with half a hit, for example.
  1489. If call graph data is present, 'cg_arcs.c:cg_assemble' is called.
  1490. First, if '-c' was specified, a machine-dependent routine ('find_call')
  1491. scans through each symbol's machine code, looking for subroutine call
  1492. instructions, and adding them to the call graph with a zero call count.
  1493. A topological sort is performed by depth-first numbering all the symbols
  1494. ('cg_dfn.c:cg_dfn'), so that children are always numbered less than
  1495. their parents, then making a array of pointers into the symbol table and
  1496. sorting it into numerical order, which is reverse topological order
  1497. (children appear before parents). Cycles are also detected at this
  1498. point, all members of which are assigned the same topological number.
  1499. Two passes are now made through this sorted array of symbol pointers.
  1500. The first pass, from end to beginning (parents to children), computes
  1501. the fraction of child time to propagate to each parent and a print flag.
  1502. The print flag reflects symspec handling of INCL_GRAPH/EXCL_GRAPH, with
  1503. a parent's include or exclude (print or no print) property being
  1504. propagated to its children, unless they themselves explicitly appear in
  1505. INCL_GRAPH or EXCL_GRAPH. A second pass, from beginning to end (children
  1506. to parents) actually propagates the timings along the call graph,
  1507. subject to a check against INCL_TIME/EXCL_TIME. With the print flag,
  1508. fractions, and timings now stored in the symbol structures, the
  1509. topological sort array is now discarded, and a new array of pointers is
  1510. assembled, this time sorted by propagated time.
  1511. Finally, print the various outputs the user requested, which is now
  1512. fairly straightforward. The call graph ('cg_print.c:cg_print') and flat
  1513. profile ('hist.c:hist_print') are regurgitations of values already
  1514. computed. The annotated source listing
  1515. ('basic_blocks.c:print_annotated_source') uses basic-block information,
  1516. if present, to label each line of code with call counts, otherwise only
  1517. the function call counts are presented.
  1518. The function ordering code is marginally well documented in the
  1519. source code itself ('cg_print.c'). Basically, the functions with the
  1520. most use and the most parents are placed first, followed by other
  1521. functions with the most use, followed by lower use functions, followed
  1522. by unused functions at the end.
  1523. 
  1524. File: gprof.info, Node: Debugging, Prev: Internals, Up: Details
  1525. 9.4 Debugging 'gprof'
  1526. =====================
  1527. If 'gprof' was compiled with debugging enabled, the '-d' option triggers
  1528. debugging output (to stdout) which can be helpful in understanding its
  1529. operation. The debugging number specified is interpreted as a sum of
  1530. the following options:
  1531. 2 - Topological sort
  1532. Monitor depth-first numbering of symbols during call graph analysis
  1533. 4 - Cycles
  1534. Shows symbols as they are identified as cycle heads
  1535. 16 - Tallying
  1536. As the call graph arcs are read, show each arc and how the total
  1537. calls to each function are tallied
  1538. 32 - Call graph arc sorting
  1539. Details sorting individual parents/children within each call graph
  1540. entry
  1541. 64 - Reading histogram and call graph records
  1542. Shows address ranges of histograms as they are read, and each call
  1543. graph arc
  1544. 128 - Symbol table
  1545. Reading, classifying, and sorting the symbol table from the object
  1546. file. For line-by-line profiling ('-l' option), also shows line
  1547. numbers being assigned to memory addresses.
  1548. 256 - Static call graph
  1549. Trace operation of '-c' option
  1550. 512 - Symbol table and arc table lookups
  1551. Detail operation of lookup routines
  1552. 1024 - Call graph propagation
  1553. Shows how function times are propagated along the call graph
  1554. 2048 - Basic-blocks
  1555. Shows basic-block records as they are read from profile data (only
  1556. meaningful with '-l' option)
  1557. 4096 - Symspecs
  1558. Shows symspec-to-symbol pattern matching operation
  1559. 8192 - Annotate source
  1560. Tracks operation of '-A' option
  1561. 
  1562. File: gprof.info, Node: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Details, Up: Top
  1563. Appendix A GNU Free Documentation License
  1564. *****************************************
  1565. Version 1.3, 3 November 2008
  1566. Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  1567. <http://fsf.org/>
  1568. Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
  1569. of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
  1570. 0. PREAMBLE
  1571. The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
  1572. functional and useful document "free" in the sense of freedom: to
  1573. assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it,
  1574. with or without modifying it, either commercially or
  1575. noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the
  1576. author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not
  1577. being considered responsible for modifications made by others.
  1578. This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative
  1579. works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense.
  1580. It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
  1581. license designed for free software.
  1582. We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for
  1583. free software, because free software needs free documentation: a
  1584. free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms
  1585. that the software does. But this License is not limited to
  1586. software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless
  1587. of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We
  1588. recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is
  1589. instruction or reference.
  1590. 1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS
  1591. This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium,
  1592. that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can
  1593. be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice
  1594. grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration,
  1595. to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The
  1596. "Document", below, refers to any such manual or work. Any member
  1597. of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as "you". You accept
  1598. the license if you copy, modify or distribute the work in a way
  1599. requiring permission under copyright law.
  1600. A "Modified Version" of the Document means any work containing the
  1601. Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with
  1602. modifications and/or translated into another language.
  1603. A "Secondary Section" is a named appendix or a front-matter section
  1604. of the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the
  1605. publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall
  1606. subject (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could
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  1609. explain any mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of
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  1611. of legal, commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position
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  1613. The "Invariant Sections" are certain Secondary Sections whose
  1614. titles are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the
  1615. notice that says that the Document is released under this License.
  1616. If a section does not fit the above definition of Secondary then it
  1617. is not allowed to be designated as Invariant. The Document may
  1618. contain zero Invariant Sections. If the Document does not identify
  1619. any Invariant Sections then there are none.
  1620. The "Cover Texts" are certain short passages of text that are
  1621. listed, as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice
  1622. that says that the Document is released under this License. A
  1623. Front-Cover Text may be at most 5 words, and a Back-Cover Text may
  1624. be at most 25 words.
  1625. A "Transparent" copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy,
  1626. represented in a format whose specification is available to the
  1627. general public, that is suitable for revising the document
  1628. straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images composed
  1629. of pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some widely
  1630. available drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to text
  1631. formatters or for automatic translation to a variety of formats
  1632. suitable for input to text formatters. A copy made in an otherwise
  1633. Transparent file format whose markup, or absence of markup, has
  1634. been arranged to thwart or discourage subsequent modification by
  1635. readers is not Transparent. An image format is not Transparent if
  1636. used for any substantial amount of text. A copy that is not
  1637. "Transparent" is called "Opaque".
  1638. Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain
  1639. ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format,
  1640. SGML or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming
  1641. simple HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for human modification.
  1642. Examples of transparent image formats include PNG, XCF and JPG.
  1643. Opaque formats include proprietary formats that can be read and
  1644. edited only by proprietary word processors, SGML or XML for which
  1645. the DTD and/or processing tools are not generally available, and
  1646. the machine-generated HTML, PostScript or PDF produced by some word
  1647. processors for output purposes only.
  1648. The "Title Page" means, for a printed book, the title page itself,
  1649. plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the
  1650. material this License requires to appear in the title page. For
  1651. works in formats which do not have any title page as such, "Title
  1652. Page" means the text near the most prominent appearance of the
  1653. work's title, preceding the beginning of the body of the text.
  1654. The "publisher" means any person or entity that distributes copies
  1655. of the Document to the public.
  1656. A section "Entitled XYZ" means a named subunit of the Document
  1657. whose title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses
  1658. following text that translates XYZ in another language. (Here XYZ
  1659. stands for a specific section name mentioned below, such as
  1660. "Acknowledgements", "Dedications", "Endorsements", or "History".)
  1661. To "Preserve the Title" of such a section when you modify the
  1662. Document means that it remains a section "Entitled XYZ" according
  1663. to this definition.
  1664. The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice
  1665. which states that this License applies to the Document. These
  1666. Warranty Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in
  1667. this License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other
  1668. implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and
  1669. has no effect on the meaning of this License.
  1670. 2. VERBATIM COPYING
  1671. You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
  1672. commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
  1673. copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License
  1674. applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you
  1675. add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You
  1676. may not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading
  1677. or further copying of the copies you make or distribute. However,
  1678. you may accept compensation in exchange for copies. If you
  1679. distribute a large enough number of copies you must also follow the
  1680. conditions in section 3.
  1681. You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above,
  1682. and you may publicly display copies.
  1683. 3. COPYING IN QUANTITY
  1684. If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly
  1685. have printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and
  1686. the Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must
  1687. enclose the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all
  1688. these Cover Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and
  1689. Back-Cover Texts on the back cover. Both covers must also clearly
  1690. and legibly identify you as the publisher of these copies. The
  1691. front cover must present the full title with all words of the title
  1692. equally prominent and visible. You may add other material on the
  1693. covers in addition. Copying with changes limited to the covers, as
  1694. long as they preserve the title of the Document and satisfy these
  1695. conditions, can be treated as verbatim copying in other respects.
  1696. If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit
  1697. legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit
  1698. reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto
  1699. adjacent pages.
  1700. If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document
  1701. numbering more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable
  1702. Transparent copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with
  1703. each Opaque copy a computer-network location from which the general
  1704. network-using public has access to download using public-standard
  1705. network protocols a complete Transparent copy of the Document, free
  1706. of added material. If you use the latter option, you must take
  1707. reasonably prudent steps, when you begin distribution of Opaque
  1708. copies in quantity, to ensure that this Transparent copy will
  1709. remain thus accessible at the stated location until at least one
  1710. year after the last time you distribute an Opaque copy (directly or
  1711. through your agents or retailers) of that edition to the public.
  1712. It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of
  1713. the Document well before redistributing any large number of copies,
  1714. to give them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the
  1715. Document.
  1716. 4. MODIFICATIONS
  1717. You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document
  1718. under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you
  1719. release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the
  1720. Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing
  1721. distribution and modification of the Modified Version to whoever
  1722. possesses a copy of it. In addition, you must do these things in
  1723. the Modified Version:
  1724. A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title
  1725. distinct from that of the Document, and from those of previous
  1726. versions (which should, if there were any, be listed in the
  1727. History section of the Document). You may use the same title
  1728. as a previous version if the original publisher of that
  1729. version gives permission.
  1730. B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or
  1731. entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in
  1732. the Modified Version, together with at least five of the
  1733. principal authors of the Document (all of its principal
  1734. authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you
  1735. from this requirement.
  1736. C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the
  1737. Modified Version, as the publisher.
  1738. D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
  1739. E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications
  1740. adjacent to the other copyright notices.
  1741. F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license
  1742. notice giving the public permission to use the Modified
  1743. Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in
  1744. the Addendum below.
  1745. G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant
  1746. Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document's
  1747. license notice.
  1748. H. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
  1749. I. Preserve the section Entitled "History", Preserve its Title,
  1750. and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new
  1751. authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on the
  1752. Title Page. If there is no section Entitled "History" in the
  1753. Document, create one stating the title, year, authors, and
  1754. publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page, then add
  1755. an item describing the Modified Version as stated in the
  1756. previous sentence.
  1757. J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document
  1758. for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and
  1759. likewise the network locations given in the Document for
  1760. previous versions it was based on. These may be placed in the
  1761. "History" section. You may omit a network location for a work
  1762. that was published at least four years before the Document
  1763. itself, or if the original publisher of the version it refers
  1764. to gives permission.
  1765. K. For any section Entitled "Acknowledgements" or "Dedications",
  1766. Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the section
  1767. all the substance and tone of each of the contributor
  1768. acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein.
  1769. L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document, unaltered
  1770. in their text and in their titles. Section numbers or the
  1771. equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.
  1772. M. Delete any section Entitled "Endorsements". Such a section
  1773. may not be included in the Modified Version.
  1774. N. Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled
  1775. "Endorsements" or to conflict in title with any Invariant
  1776. Section.
  1777. O. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers.
  1778. If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
  1779. appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no
  1780. material copied from the Document, you may at your option designate
  1781. some or all of these sections as invariant. To do this, add their
  1782. titles to the list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version's
  1783. license notice. These titles must be distinct from any other
  1784. section titles.
  1785. You may add a section Entitled "Endorsements", provided it contains
  1786. nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various
  1787. parties--for example, statements of peer review or that the text
  1788. has been approved by an organization as the authoritative
  1789. definition of a standard.
  1790. You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text,
  1791. and a passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of
  1792. the list of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one passage
  1793. of Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or
  1794. through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the Document
  1795. already includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added
  1796. by you or by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on
  1797. behalf of, you may not add another; but you may replace the old
  1798. one, on explicit permission from the previous publisher that added
  1799. the old one.
  1800. The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this
  1801. License give permission to use their names for publicity for or to
  1802. assert or imply endorsement of any Modified Version.
  1803. 5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS
  1804. You may combine the Document with other documents released under
  1805. this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for
  1806. modified versions, provided that you include in the combination all
  1807. of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents,
  1808. unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your
  1809. combined work in its license notice, and that you preserve all
  1810. their Warranty Disclaimers.
  1811. The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and
  1812. multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single
  1813. copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name
  1814. but different contents, make the title of each such section unique
  1815. by adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the
  1816. original author or publisher of that section if known, or else a
  1817. unique number. Make the same adjustment to the section titles in
  1818. the list of Invariant Sections in the license notice of the
  1819. combined work.
  1820. In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled
  1821. "History" in the various original documents, forming one section
  1822. Entitled "History"; likewise combine any sections Entitled
  1823. "Acknowledgements", and any sections Entitled "Dedications". You
  1824. must delete all sections Entitled "Endorsements."
  1825. 6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS
  1826. You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other
  1827. documents released under this License, and replace the individual
  1828. copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy
  1829. that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the
  1830. rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the documents
  1831. in all other respects.
  1832. You may extract a single document from such a collection, and
  1833. distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert
  1834. a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow this
  1835. License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of that
  1836. document.
  1837. 7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS
  1838. A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other
  1839. separate and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of a
  1840. storage or distribution medium, is called an "aggregate" if the
  1841. copyright resulting from the compilation is not used to limit the
  1842. legal rights of the compilation's users beyond what the individual
  1843. works permit. When the Document is included in an aggregate, this
  1844. License does not apply to the other works in the aggregate which
  1845. are not themselves derivative works of the Document.
  1846. If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
  1847. copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half
  1848. of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed
  1849. on covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the
  1850. electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic
  1851. form. Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket
  1852. the whole aggregate.
  1853. 8. TRANSLATION
  1854. Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may
  1855. distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section
  1856. 4. Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special
  1857. permission from their copyright holders, but you may include
  1858. translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the
  1859. original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a
  1860. translation of this License, and all the license notices in the
  1861. Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also
  1862. include the original English version of this License and the
  1863. original versions of those notices and disclaimers. In case of a
  1864. disagreement between the translation and the original version of
  1865. this License or a notice or disclaimer, the original version will
  1866. prevail.
  1867. If a section in the Document is Entitled "Acknowledgements",
  1868. "Dedications", or "History", the requirement (section 4) to
  1869. Preserve its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the
  1870. actual title.
  1871. 9. TERMINATION
  1872. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document
  1873. except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
  1874. otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute it is void,
  1875. and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
  1876. However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your
  1877. license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a)
  1878. provisionally, unless and until the copyright holder explicitly and
  1879. finally terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the
  1880. copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some
  1881. reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation.
  1882. Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is
  1883. reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notifies you of the
  1884. violation by some reasonable means, this is the first time you have
  1885. received notice of violation of this License (for any work) from
  1886. that copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days
  1887. after your receipt of the notice.
  1888. Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate
  1889. the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights from you
  1890. under this License. If your rights have been terminated and not
  1891. permanently reinstated, receipt of a copy of some or all of the
  1892. same material does not give you any rights to use it.
  1893. 10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE
  1894. The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of
  1895. the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new
  1896. versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
  1897. differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See
  1898. <http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/>.
  1899. Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version
  1900. number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered
  1901. version of this License "or any later version" applies to it, you
  1902. have the option of following the terms and conditions either of
  1903. that specified version or of any later version that has been
  1904. published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the
  1905. Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may
  1906. choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free
  1907. Software Foundation. If the Document specifies that a proxy can
  1908. decide which future versions of this License can be used, that
  1909. proxy's public statement of acceptance of a version permanently
  1910. authorizes you to choose that version for the Document.
  1911. 11. RELICENSING
  1912. "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site" (or "MMC Site") means any
  1913. World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also
  1914. provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A
  1915. public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server.
  1916. A "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration" (or "MMC") contained in the
  1917. site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC
  1918. site.
  1919. "CC-BY-SA" means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
  1920. license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit
  1921. corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco,
  1922. California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license
  1923. published by that same organization.
  1924. "Incorporate" means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or
  1925. in part, as part of another Document.
  1926. An MMC is "eligible for relicensing" if it is licensed under this
  1927. License, and if all works that were first published under this
  1928. License somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently
  1929. incorporated in whole or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover
  1930. texts or invariant sections, and (2) were thus incorporated prior
  1931. to November 1, 2008.
  1932. The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the
  1933. site under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1,
  1934. 2009, provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing.
  1935. ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents
  1936. ====================================================
  1937. To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
  1938. the License in the document and put the following copyright and license
  1939. notices just after the title page:
  1940. Copyright (C) YEAR YOUR NAME.
  1941. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  1942. under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
  1943. or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
  1944. with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover
  1945. Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
  1946. Free Documentation License''.
  1947. If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover
  1948. Texts, replace the "with...Texts." line with this:
  1949. with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with
  1950. the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts
  1951. being LIST.
  1952. If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other
  1953. combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the
  1954. situation.
  1955. If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
  1956. recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free
  1957. software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit
  1958. their use in free software.
  1959. 
  1960. Tag Table:
  1961. Node: Top719
  1962. Node: Introduction2042
  1963. Node: Compiling4533
  1964. Node: Executing8589
  1965. Node: Invoking11377
  1966. Node: Output Options12792
  1967. Node: Analysis Options19884
  1968. Node: Miscellaneous Options23804
  1969. Node: Deprecated Options25058
  1970. Node: Symspecs27121
  1971. Node: Output28947
  1972. Node: Flat Profile29987
  1973. Node: Call Graph34940
  1974. Node: Primary38172
  1975. Node: Callers40760
  1976. Node: Subroutines42878
  1977. Node: Cycles44719
  1978. Node: Line-by-line51496
  1979. Node: Annotated Source55572
  1980. Node: Inaccuracy58570
  1981. Node: Sampling Error58828
  1982. Node: Assumptions61732
  1983. Node: How do I?63202
  1984. Node: Incompatibilities64759
  1985. Node: Details66253
  1986. Node: Implementation66646
  1987. Node: File Format72545
  1988. Node: Internals76833
  1989. Node: Debugging85323
  1990. Node: GNU Free Documentation License86913
  1991. 
  1992. End Tag Table