focal (1) operf.1.gz

Provided by: oprofile_1.3.0-0ubuntu13_amd64 bug

NAME

       operf - Performance profiler tool for Linux

SYNOPSIS

       operf [ options ] [ --system-wide | --pid <pid> | [ command [ args ] ] ]

DESCRIPTION

       Operf is the profiler tool provided with OProfile. Operf uses the Linux Performance Events Subsystem and,
       thus, does not require the obsolete oprofile kernel driver.

       By default, operf uses <current_dir>/oprofile_data as the session-dir and stores  profiling  data  there.
       You  can  change this by way of the --session-dir option. The usual post-profiling analysis tools such as
       opreport(1) and opannotate(1) can be used to generate profile reports. Unless a session-dir is specified,
       the  post-processing analysis tools will search for samples in <current_dir>/oprofile_data first. If that
       directory does not exist, the post-processing tools use the standard session-dir of /var/lib/oprofile.

       Statistics, such as total samples received and lost samples, are written to the operf.log file  that  can
       be found in the <session_dir>/samples directory.

RUN MODES

       One (and only one) of the following run modes must be specified:

       command[args]
              The  command  or  application  to  be  profiled.  args are the input arguments that the command or
              application requires.

       --pid / -p PID
              This option enables operf to profile a running application.  PID should be the process ID  of  the
              process  you  wish  to  profile.   When finished profiling (e.g., when the profiled process ends),
              press Ctrl-c to stop operf. If you run operf --pid as a background job (i.e.,  with  the  &),  you
              must  stop it in a controlled manner in order for it to process the profile data it has collected.
              Use kill -SIGINT <operf-PID> for this purpose.

              Limitation: When using this option to profile a multi-threaded application  that  also  forks  new
              processes, be aware that samples for processes that are forked before profiling is started may not
              be recorded (depending on timing of thread creation and when operf is started).

       --system-wide / -s
              This option is for performing a system-wide profile.  You must have root authority to run operf in
              this  mode.   When  finished  profiling, Ctrl-c to stop operf. If you run operf --system-wide as a
              background job (i.e., with the &), you must stop it in a controlled manner  in  order  for  it  to
              process  the profile data it has collected.  Use kill -SIGINT <operf-PID> for this purpose.  It is
              recommended that when running operf with this option, the user's current working directory  should
              be  /root or a subdirectory of /root to avoid storing sample data files in locations accessible by
              regular users.

OTHER OPTIONS

       --vmlinux / -k vmlinux_path
              A vmlinux file that matches the running kernel that has symbol and/or debuginfo.   Kernel  samples
              will  be  attributed  to  this binary, allowing post-processing tools (like opreport) to attribute
              samples to the appropriate kernel symbols.

              The kernel symbol information may be obtained from /proc/kallsyms if the user does not  specify  a
              vmlinux  file.   The  symbol  addresses are given in /proc/kallsyms if permitted by the setting of
              /proc/sys/kernel/kptr_restrict.

              If the --vmlinux option is not used and kernel symbols cannot  be  obtained  from  /proc/kallsyms,
              then  all  kernel  samples  are  attributed  to "no-vmlinux", which is simply a bucket to hold the
              samples and not an actual file.

       --events / -e event1[,event2[,...]]
              This option is for passing a comma-separated list of  event  specifications  for  profiling.  Each
              event spec is of the form:
                 name:count[:unitmask[:kernel[:user]]]

              The  count value is used to control the sampling rate for profiling; it is the number of events to
              occur between samples. The rate is lowered by specifying a higher count value  —  i.e.,  a  higher
              number of events to occur between samples.

              You  can  specify unitmask values using either a numerical value (hex values must begin with "0x")
              or a symbolic name (if the name=<um_name> field is shown in the ophelp  output).  For  some  named
              unit  masks,  the hex value is not unique; thus, OProfile tools enforce specifying such unit masks
              value by name.  If no unit mask is specified, the default unit mask value for the event is used.

              The kernel and user parts of the event specification are binary values  ('1'  or  '0')  indicating
              whether or not to collect samples for kernel space and user space.
              Note:  In  order  to specify the kernel/user bits, you must also specify a unitmask value, even if
              the processor type (or the specified event) does not use unit masks — in which case, use the value
              '0' to signify a null unit mask; for example:
                 -e INST_RETIRED_ANY_P:100000:0:1:0
                                       ^      ^ ^ ^
                                       |      | | |--- '0': do not record user space samples
                                       |      | |-- '1': record kernel space samples
                                       |      |-- '0': the null unit mask
                                       |--count value

              Event  names  for  some  IBM PowerPC systems include a _GRP<n> (group number) suffix. You can pass
              either the full event name or the base event name (i.e., without the suffix)  to  operf.   If  the
              base  event name is passed, operf will automatically choose an appropriate group number suffix for
              the event; thus, OProfile post-processing tools will always show real event names that include the
              group number suffix.

              When  no  event  specification  is given, the default event for the running processor type will be
              used for profiling.  Use ophelp to list the available events for your processor type.

       --callgraph / -g
              This option enables the callgraph to be saved  during  profiling.  NOTE:  The  full  callchain  is
              recorded, so there is no depth limit.

       --separate-thread / -t
              This  option  categorizes samples by thread group ID (tgid) and thread ID (tid).  The '--separate-
              thread' option is useful for seeing per-thread samples in multi-threaded applications.  When  used
              in  conjunction with the '--system-wide' option, the '--separate-thread' option is also useful for
              seeing per-process (i.e., per-thread group) samples for the  case  where  multiple  processes  are
              executing the same program during a profiling run.

       --separate-cpu / -c
              This option categorizes samples by cpu.

       --session-dir / -d path
              This  option  specifies  the  session  path to hold the sample data. If not specified, the data is
              saved in the oprofile_data directory on the current path.

       --lazy-conversion / -l
              Use this option to reduce the overhead of operf during profiling. Normally, profile data  received
              from  the  kernel  is converted to OProfile format during profiling time. This is typically not an
              issue when profiling a single application. But when using the --system-wide option,  this  on-the-
              fly  conversion  process  can  cause  noticeable  overhead,  particularly  on busy multi-processor
              systems. The --lazy-conversion option directs operf to wait until profiling is completed to do the
              conversion of profile data.

              Note: This option is not recommended to be used in conjunction with the --pid option for profiling
              multi-threaded processes. Depending on the order of thread creation (or forking of new processes),
              you may not get any samples for the new threads/processes.

       --append / -a
              By    default,    operf   moves   old   profile   data   from   <session_dir>/samples/current   to
              <session_dir>/samples/previous.  If a 'previous' profile already existed, it will be replaced.  If
              the  --append  option  is  passed,  old profile data is left in place and new profile data will be
              added to it, and the 'previous' profile (if one existed) will remain  untouched.   To  access  the
              'previous'  profile, simply add a session specification to the normal invocation of oprofile post-
              processing tools.  For example:
                 opreport session:previous

       --verbose / -V level
              A comma-separated list of debugging control values, used to increase the verbosity of the  output.
              Valid values are:  debug, record, convert, misc, sfile, arcs, or the special value, 'all'.

       --version / -v
              Show operf version.

       --help / -h
              Display brief usage message.

       --usage / -u
              Display brief usage message.

EXAMPLE

       $ operf make

VERSION

       This man page is current for oprofile-1.3.0.

SEE ALSO

       opreport(1), opannotate(1).