The Profile
module provides tools to help developers improve the performance of their code. When used, it takes measurements on running code, and produces output that helps you understand how much time is spent on individual line(s). The most common usage is to identify “bottlenecks” as targets for optimization.
Profile
implements what is known as a “sampling” or statistical profiler. It works by periodically taking a backtrace during the execution of any task. Each backtrace captures the currently-running function and line number, plus the complete chain of function calls that led to this line, and hence is a “snapshot” of the current state of execution.
If much of your run time is spent executing a particular line of code, this line will show up frequently in the set of all backtraces. In other words, the “cost” of a given line—or really, the cost of the sequence of function calls up to and including this line—is proportional to how often it appears in the set of all backtraces.
A sampling profiler does not provide complete line-by-line coverage, because the backtraces occur at intervals (by default, 1 ms on Unix systems and 10 ms on Windows, although the actual scheduling is subject to operating system load). Moreover, as discussed further below, because samples are collected at a sparse subset of all execution points, the data collected by a sampling profiler is subject to statistical noise.
Despite these limitations, sampling profilers have substantial strengths:
For these reasons, it’s recommended that you try using the built-in sampling profiler before considering any alternatives.
Let’s work with a simple test case:
function myfunc() A = rand(100, 100, 200) maximum(A) end
It’s a good idea to first run the code you intend to profile at least once (unless you want to profile Julia’s JIT-compiler):
julia> myfunc() # run once to force compilation
Now we’re ready to profile this function:
julia> @profile myfunc()
To see the profiling results, there is a graphical browser available, but here we’ll use the text-based display that comes with the standard library:
julia> Profile.print() 23 client.jl; _start; line: 373 23 client.jl; run_repl; line: 166 23 client.jl; eval_user_input; line: 91 23 profile.jl; anonymous; line: 14 8 none; myfunc; line: 2 8 dSFMT.jl; dsfmt_gv_fill_array_close_open!; line: 128 15 none; myfunc; line: 3 2 reduce.jl; max; line: 35 2 reduce.jl; max; line: 36 11 reduce.jl; max; line: 37
Each line of this display represents a particular spot (line number) in the code. Indentation is used to indicate the nested sequence of function calls, with more-indented lines being deeper in the sequence of calls. In each line, the first “field” indicates the number of backtraces (samples) taken at this line or in any functions executed by this line. The second field is the file name, followed by a semicolon; the third is the function name followed by a semicolon, and the fourth is the line number. Note that the specific line numbers may change as Julia’s code changes; if you want to follow along, it’s best to run this example yourself.
In this example, we can see that the top level is client.jl
‘s _start
function. This is the first Julia function that gets called when you launch Julia. If you examine line 373 of client.jl
, you’ll see that (at the time of this writing) it calls run_repl()
, mentioned on the second line. This in turn calls eval_user_input()
. These are the functions in client.jl
that interpret what you type at the REPL, and since we’re working interactively these functions were invoked when we entered @profile myfunc()
. The next line reflects actions taken in the @profile
macro.
The first line shows that 23 backtraces were taken at line 373 of client.jl
, but it’s not that this line was “expensive” on its own: the second line reveals that all 23 of these backtraces were actually triggered inside its call to run_repl
, and so on. To find out which operations are actually taking the time, we need to look deeper in the call chain.
The first “important” line in this output is this one:
8 none; myfunc; line: 2
none
refers to the fact that we defined myfunc
in the REPL, rather than putting it in a file; if we had used a file, this would show the file name. Line 2 of myfunc()
contains the call to rand
, and there were 8 (out of 23) backtraces that occurred at this line. Below that, you can see a call to dsfmt_gv_fill_array_close_open!()
inside dSFMT.jl
. You might be surprised not to see the rand
function listed explicitly: that’s because rand
is inlined, and hence doesn’t appear in the backtraces.
A little further down, you see:
15 none; myfunc; line: 3
Line 3 of myfunc
contains the call to max
, and there were 15 (out of 23) backtraces taken here. Below that, you can see the specific places in base/reduce.jl
that carry out the time-consuming operations in the max
function for this type of input data.
Overall, we can tentatively conclude that finding the maximum element is approximately twice as expensive as generating the random numbers. We could increase our confidence in this result by collecting more samples:
julia> @profile (for i = 1:100; myfunc(); end) julia> Profile.print() 3121 client.jl; _start; line: 373 3121 client.jl; run_repl; line: 166 3121 client.jl; eval_user_input; line: 91 3121 profile.jl; anonymous; line: 1 848 none; myfunc; line: 2 842 dSFMT.jl; dsfmt_gv_fill_array_close_open!; line: 128 1510 none; myfunc; line: 3 74 reduce.jl; max; line: 35 122 reduce.jl; max; line: 36 1314 reduce.jl; max; line: 37
In general, if you have N
samples collected at a line, you can expect an uncertainty on the order of sqrt(N)
(barring other sources of noise, like how busy the computer is with other tasks). The major exception to this rule is garbage collection, which runs infrequently but tends to be quite expensive. (Since Julia’s garbage collector is written in C, such events can be detected using the C=true
output mode described below, or by using ProfileView.jl.)
This illustrates the default “tree” dump; an alternative is the “flat” dump, which accumulates counts independent of their nesting:
julia> Profile.print(format=:flat) Count File Function Line 3121 client.jl _start 373 3121 client.jl eval_user_input 91 3121 client.jl run_repl 166 842 dSFMT.jl dsfmt_gv_fill_array_close_open! 128 848 none myfunc 2 1510 none myfunc 3 3121 profile.jl anonymous 1 74 reduce.jl max 35 122 reduce.jl max 36 1314 reduce.jl max 37
If your code has recursion, one potentially-confusing point is that a line in a “child” function can accumulate more counts than there are total backtraces. Consider the following function definitions:
dumbsum(n::Integer) = n == 1 ? 1 : 1 + dumbsum(n-1) dumbsum3() = dumbsum(3)
If you were to profile dumbsum3
, and a backtrace was taken while it was executing dumbsum(1)
, the backtrace would look like this:
dumbsum3 dumbsum(3) dumbsum(2) dumbsum(1)
Consequently, this child function gets 3 counts, even though the parent only gets one. The “tree” representation makes this much clearer, and for this reason (among others) is probably the most useful way to view the results.
Results from @profile
accumulate in a buffer; if you run multiple pieces of code under @profile
, then Profile.print()
will show you the combined results. This can be very useful, but sometimes you want to start fresh; you can do so with Profile.clear()
.
Profile.print()
has more options than we’ve described so far. Let’s see the full declaration:
function print(io::IO = STDOUT, data = fetch(); format = :tree, C = false, combine = true, cols = tty_cols(), maxdepth = typemax(Int), sortedby = :filefuncline)
Let’s discuss these arguments in order:
STDOUT
(the console). The second argument contains the data you want to analyze; by default that is obtained from Profile.fetch()
, which pulls out the backtraces from a pre-allocated buffer. For example, if you want to profile the profiler, you could say:
data = copy(Profile.fetch()) Profile.clear() @profile Profile.print(STDOUT, data) # Prints the previous results Profile.print() # Prints results from Profile.print()
format
, was introduced above. The possible choices are :tree
and :flat
. C
, if set to true
, allows you to see even the calls to C code. Try running the introductory example with Profile.print(C =
true)
. This can be extremely helpful in deciding whether it’s Julia code or C code that is causing a bottleneck; setting C=true
also improves the interpretability of the nesting, at the cost of longer profile dumps. s +=
A[i]
contains both an array reference (A[i]
) and a sum operation. These correspond to different lines in the generated machine code, and hence there may be two or more different addresses captured during backtraces on this line. combine=true
lumps them together, and is probably what you typically want, but you can generate an output separately for each unique instruction pointer with combine=false
. cols
allows you to control the number of columns that you are willing to use for display. When the text would be wider than the display, you might see output like this:
33 inference.jl; abstract_call; line: 645 33 inference.jl; abstract_call; line: 645 33 ...rence.jl; abstract_call_gf; line: 567 33 ...nce.jl; typeinf; line: 1201 +1 5 ...nce.jl; ...t_interpret; line: 900 +3 5 ...ence.jl; abstract_eval; line: 758 +4 5 ...ence.jl; ...ct_eval_call; line: 733 +6 5 ...ence.jl; abstract_call; line: 645
File/function names are sometimes truncated (with ...
), and indentation is truncated with a +n
at the beginning, where n
is the number of extra spaces that would have been inserted, had there been room. If you want a complete profile of deeply-nested code, often a good idea is to save to a file and use a very wide cols
setting:
s = open("/tmp/prof.txt","w") Profile.print(s,cols = 500) close(s)
maxdepth
can be used to limit the size of the output in :tree
format (it nests only up to level maxdepth
) sortedby = :count
sorts the :flat
format in order of increasing counts @profile
just accumulates backtraces, and the analysis happens when you call Profile.print()
. For a long-running computation, it’s entirely possible that the pre-allocated buffer for storing backtraces will be filled. If that happens, the backtraces stop but your computation continues. As a consequence, you may miss some important profiling data (you will get a warning when that happens).
You can obtain and configure the relevant parameters this way:
Profile.init() # returns the current settings Profile.init(n, delay) Profile.init(delay = 0.01)
n
is the total number of instruction pointers you can store, with a default value of 10^6
. If your typical backtrace is 20 instruction pointers, then you can collect 50000 backtraces, which suggests a statistical uncertainty of less than 1%. This may be good enough for most applications.
Consequently, you are more likely to need to modify delay
, expressed in seconds, which sets the amount of time that Julia gets between snapshots to perform the requested computations. A very long-running job might not need frequent backtraces. The default setting is delay = 0.001
. Of course, you can decrease the delay as well as increase it; however, the overhead of profiling grows once the delay becomes similar to the amount of time needed to take a backtrace (~30 microseconds on the author’s laptop).
© 2009–2016 Jeff Bezanson, Stefan Karpinski, Viral B. Shah, and other contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
http://docs.julialang.org/en/release-0.5/manual/profile/