Difference between revisions of "Profiling"

From Notes_Wiki
m (Undo revision 1531 by Saurabh (talk))
m
 
Line 1: Line 1:
<yambe:breadcrumb>Erlang|Erlang</yambe:breadcrumb>
[[Main_Page|Home]] > [[Erlang]] > [[Profiling]]
=Profiling=


==Function call time profiling==
==Function call time profiling==
Line 24: Line 23:


Use "<tt>erl -man fprof</tt>" and see analysis example at end of man page for more details.
Use "<tt>erl -man fprof</tt>" and see analysis example at end of man page for more details.
[[Main_Page|Home]] > [[Erlang]] > [[Profiling]]

Latest revision as of 13:45, 7 April 2022

Home > Erlang > Profiling

Function call time profiling

To profile Erlang programs for function call time use:

1> fprof:apply(fun mod:name/arity, [Args]).
2> fprof:profile().
3> fprof:analyse().

This is useful for sequential programs so that time taken by each function can be compared.


Concurrency profiling

To profile Erlang programs for concurrency use:

1> percept:profile("test.dat", {Mod, Fun, Args_list}, [procs]).
2> percept:analyze("test.dat").
3> percept:start_webserver(8888).

and then open http://localhost:8888/ to see the concurrency profile with number of processes spawned and runnable time for each process. For more information refer to percept app tutorial at http://www.erlang.org/doc/apps/percept/percept.pdf


Use "erl -man fprof" and see analysis example at end of man page for more details.


Home > Erlang > Profiling