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NAME

       gprofng display text - Display the performance data in plain text format

SYNOPSIS

       gprofng display text [option(s)] [commands] [-script script-file] experiment(s)

DESCRIPTION

       Print a plain text version of the various displays supported by gprofng.

       The input consists of one or more experiment directories.  Through commands, the user
       controls the output.

       There is a rich set of commands to control the display of the data. The NOTES section
       lists the most common ones. The gprofng user guide lists all the commands supported.

       Commands specified on the command line need to be prepended with the dash ('-') symbol.

       In this example, a function overview will be shown, followed by the source code listing of
       function my-func, annotated with the performance metrics that have been recorded during
       the data collection and stored in experiment directory my-exp.er:

               $ gprofng display text -functions -source my-func my-exp.er

       Instead of, or in addition to, specifying these commands on the command line, commands may
       also be included in a file called the script-file.

       Note that the commands are processed and interpreted from left to right, so the order
       matters.

       If this tool is invoked without options, commands, or a script file, it starts in
       interpreter mode. The user can then issue the commands interactively.  The session is
       terminated with the exit command in the interpreter.

OPTIONS

       --version
           Print the version number and exit.

       --help
           Print usage information and exit.

       -script script-file
           Execute the commands stored in the script file.  This feature may be combined with
           commands specified at the command line.

NOTES

       Many commands are supported. Below, the more common ones are listed in mostly alphabetical
       order, because sometimes it is more logical to swap the order of two entries.

       There are many more commands. These are documented in the user guide.

       "callers-callees"
           In a callers-callees panel, it is shown which function(s) call the target function
           (the callers) and what functions it is calling (the callees).  This command prints the
           callers-callees panel for each of the functions, in the order specified by the
           function sort metric.

       "calltree"
           Display the dynamic call graph from the experiment, showing the hierarchical metrics
           at each level.

       "compare {on | off | delta | ratio}"
           By default, the results for multiple experiments are aggregated. This command changes
           this to enable the comparison of experiments for certain views (e.g. the function
           view).  The first experiment specified is defined to be the reference.  The following
           options are supported:

           "on"
               For each experiment specified on the command line, print the values for the
               metrics that have been activated for the experiment.

           "off"
               Disable the comparison of experiments.  This is the default.

           "delta"
               Print the values for the reference experiment.  The results for the other
               experiments are shown as a delta relative to the reference (current-reference).

           "ratio"
               Print the values for the reference experiment.  The results for the other
               experiments are shown as a ratio relative to the reference (current/reference).

       "disasm function-name"
           List the source code and instructions for the function specified. The instructions are
           annotated with the metrics used.

       "fsingle function-name [n]"
           Write a summary panel for the specified function.  The optional parameter n is needed
           for those cases where several functions have the same name.

       "fsummary"
           Write a summary panel for each function in the function list.

       "functions"
           Display a list of all functions executed.  For each function the used metrics (e.g.
           the CPU time) ar shown.

       "header"
           Shows several operational characteristics of the experiment(s) specified on the
           command line.

       "limit n"
           Limit the output to n lines.

       "lines"
           Write a list of source lines and their metrics, ordered by the current sort metric.

       "metric_list"
           Display the currently selected metrics in the function view and a list of all the
           metrics available for the target experiment(s).

       "metrics metric-spec"
           Define the metrics to be displayed in the function and callers-callees overviews.

           The metric-spec can either be the keyword default to restore the default metrics
           selection, or a colon separated list with metrics.

           The gprofng user guide has more details how to define metrics.

       "name {short | long | mangled}[:{soname | nosoname}]"
           Specify whether to use the short, long, or mangled form of function names.
           Optionally, the load object that the function is part of can be included in the output
           by adding the soname keyword.  It can also be ommitted (nosoname), which is the
           default.

           Whether there is an actual difference between these types of names depends on the
           language.

           Note that there should be no (white)space to the left and right of the colon (:).

       "overview"
           Shows a summary of the recorded performance data for the experiment(s) specified on
           the command line.

       "pcs"
           Write a list of program counters (PCs) and their metrics, ordered by the current sort
           metric.

       "sort metric-spec"
           Sort the function list on the metric-spec given.

           @IndexSubentry{Sort, Reverse order} The data can be sorted in reverse order by
           prepending the metric definition with a minus (-) sign.

           For example sort -e.totalcpu.

           @IndexSubentry{Sort, Reset to default} A default metric for the sort operation has
           been defined and since this is a persistent command, this default can be restored with
           "default" as the key (sort default).

       "source function-name"
           List the source code for the function specified, annotated with the metrics used.

       "viewmode {user | expert | machine}"
           This command is only relevant for Java programs.  For all other languages supported,
           the viewmode setting has no effect.

           The following options are supported:

           "user"
               Show the Java call stacks for Java threads, but do not show housekeeping threads.
               The function view includes a function called <JVM-System>.  This represents the
               aggregated time from non-Java threads.  In case the JVM software does not report a
               Java call stack, time is reported against the function <no Java callstack
               recorded>.

           "expert"
               Show the Java call stacks for Java threads when the user Java code is executed,
               and machine call stacks when JVM code is executed, or when the JVM software does
               not report a Java call stack.  Show the machine call stacks for housekeeping
               threads.

           "machine"
               Show the actual native call stacks for all threads.  This is the view mode for C,
               C++, and Fortran.

SEE ALSO

       gprofng(1), gp-archive(1), gp-collect-app(1), gp-display-html(1), gp-display-src(1)

       The user guide for gprofng is maintained as a Texinfo manual.  If the info and gprofng
       programs are correctly installed, the command info gprofng should give access to this
       document.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2022-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

       Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of
       the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free
       Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no
       Back-Cover Texts.  A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free
       Documentation License".