Provided by: scons_4.5.2+dfsg-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       scons-time - generate and display SCons timing information

SYNOPSIS

       scons-time subcommand [options...] [arguments...]

GENERATING TIMING INFORMATION

       scons-time run [-hnqv] [-f FILE] [--number=NUMBER] [--outdir=OUTDIR] [-p STRING]
       [--python=PYTHON] [-s DIR] [--scons=SCONS] [--svn=URL] [ARGUMENTS]

   Extracting Function Timings
       scons-time func [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [--func=NAME] [-p STRING] [-t
       NUMBER] [--title= TITLE] [ARGUMENTS]

   Extracting Memory Statistics
       scons-time mem [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [-p STRING] [--stage=STAGE] [-t
       NUMBER] [--title=TITLE] [ARGUMENTS]

   Extracting Object Counts
       scons-time obj [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [-p STRING] [--stage=STAGE] [-t
       NUMBER] [--title=TITLE] [ARGUMENTS]

   Extracting Execution Times
       scons-time time [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [-p STRING] [-t NUMBER]
       [--title=TITLE] [--which=WHICH] [ARGUMENTS]

   Help Text
       scons-time help SUBCOMMAND [...]

DESCRIPTION

       The scons-time command runs an SCons configuration through a standard set of profiled
       timings and can extract and graph information from the resulting profiles and log files of
       those timings. The action to be performed by the scons-time script is specified by a
       subcommand, the first argument on the command line. See the SUBCOMMANDS section below for
       information about the operation of specific subcommands.

       The basic way to use scons-time is to run the scons-time run subcommand (possibly multiple
       times) to generate profile and log file output, and then use one of the other subcommands
       to display the results captured in the profiles and log files for a particular kind of
       information: function timings (the scons-time func subcommand), total memory used (the
       scons-time mem subcommand), object counts (the scons-time obj subcommand) and overall
       execution time (the scons-time time subcommand). Options exist to place and find the
       profiles and log files in separate directories, to generate the output in a format
       suitable for graphing with the gnuplot(1) program, and so on.

       There are two basic ways the scons-time run subcommand is intended to be used to gather
       timing statistics for a configuration. One is to use the --svn= option to test a
       configuration against a list of revisions from the SCons Subversion repository. This will
       generate a profile and timing log file for every revision listed with the --number=
       option, and can be used to look at the impact of committed changes to the SCons code base
       on a particular configuration over time.

       The other way is to profile incremental changes to a local SCons code base during a
       development cycle--that is, to look at the performance impact of changes you're making in
       the local tree. In this mode, you run the scons-time run subcommand without the --svn=
       option, in which case it simply looks in the profile/log file output directory (the
       current directory by default) and automatically figures out the next run number for the
       output profile and log file. Used in this way, the development cycle goes something like:
       make a change to SCons; run scons-time run to profile it against a specific configuration;
       make another change to SCons; run scons-time run again to profile it; etc.

OPTIONS

       The scons-time command only supports a few global options:

       -h, --help
           Displays the global help text and exits, identical to the scons-time help subcommand.

       -V, --version
           Displays the scons-time version and exits.

       Most functionality is controlled by options to the individual subcommands. See the next
       section for information about individual subcommand options.

SUBCOMMANDS

       The scons-time command supports the following individual subcommands.

   The func Subcommand
       scons-time func [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [--func=NAME] [-p STRING] [-t
       NUMBER] [--title= TITLE] [ARGUMENTS]

       The scons-time func subcommand displays timing information for a specific Python function
       within SCons. By default, it extracts information about the _main() function, which
       includes the Python profiler timing for all of SCons.

       The scons-time func subcommand extracts function timing information from all the specified
       file arguments, which should be Python profiler output files. (Normally, these would be
       *.prof files generated by the scons-time run subcommand, but they can actually be
       generated by any Python profiler invocation.) All file name arguments will be globbed for
       on-disk files.

       If no arguments are specified, then function timing information will be extracted from all
       *.prof files, or the subset of them with a prefix specified by the -p option.

       Options include:

       -C DIRECTORY, --chdir=DIRECTORY
           Changes to the specified DIRECTORY before looking for the specified files (or files
           that match the specified patterns).

       -f FILE, --file=FILE
           Reads configuration information from the specified FILE.

       -fmt=FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
           Reports the output in the specified FORMAT. The formats currently supported are ascii
           (the default) and gnuplot.

       --func=NAME
           Extracts timings for the specified function NAME. The default is to report cumulative
           timings for the _main() function, which contains the entire SCons run.

       -h, --help
           Displays help text for the scons-time func subcommand.

       -p STRING, --prefix=STRING
           Specifies the prefix string for profiles from which to extract function timing
           information. This will be used to search for profiles if no arguments are specified on
           the command line.

       -t NUMBER, --tail=NUMBER
           Only extracts function timings from the last NUMBER files.

   The help Subcommand
       scons-time help SUBCOMMAND [...] The help subcommand prints help text for any other
       subcommands listed as later arguments on the command line.

   The mem Subcommand
       scons-time mem [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [-p STRING] [--stage=STAGE] [-t
       NUMBER] [--title=TITLE] [ARGUMENTS]

       The scons-time mem subcommand displays how much memory SCons uses.

       The scons-time mem subcommand extracts memory use information from all the specified file
       arguments, which should be files containing output from running SCons with the
       --debug=memory option. (Normally, these would be *.log files generated by the scons-time
       run subcommand.) All file name arguments will be globbed for on-disk files.

       If no arguments are specified, then memory information will be extracted from all *.log
       files, or the subset of them with a prefix specified by the -p option.

       -C DIR, --chdir=DIR
           Changes to the specified DIRECTORY before looking for the specified files (or files
           that match the specified patterns).

       -f FILE, --file=FILE
           Reads configuration information from the specified FILE.

       -fmt=FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
           Reports the output in the specified FORMAT. The formats currently supported are ascii
           (the default) and gnuplot.

       -h, --help
           Displays help text for the scons-time mem subcommand.

       -p STRING, --prefix=STRING
           Specifies the prefix string for log files from which to extract memory usage
           information. This will be used to search for log files if no arguments are specified
           on the command line.

       --stage=STAGE
           Prints the memory used at the end of the specified STAGE: pre-read (before the
           SConscript files are read), post-read , (after the SConscript files are read),
           pre-build (before any targets are built) or post-build (after any targets are built).
           If no --stage option is specified, the default behavior is post-build, which reports
           the final amount of memory used by SCons during each run.

       -t NUMBER, --tail=NUMBER
           Only reports memory statistics from the last NUMBER files.

   The obj Subcommand
       scons-time obj [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [-p STRING] [--stage=STAGE] [-t
       NUMBER] [--title=TITLE] [ARGUMENTS]

       The scons-time obj subcommand displays how many objects of a specific named type are
       created by SCons.

       The scons-time obj subcommand extracts object counts from all the specified file
       arguments, which should be files containing output from running SCons with the
       --debug=count option. (Normally, these would be *.log files generated by the scons-time
       run subcommand.) All file name arguments will be globbed for on-disk files.

       If no arguments are specified, then object counts will be extracted from all *.log files,
       or the subset of them with a prefix specified by the -p option.

       -C DIR, --chdir=DIR
           Changes to the specified DIRECTORY before looking for the specified files (or files
           that match the specified patterns).

       -f FILE, --file=FILE
           Reads configuration information from the specified FILE.

       -fmt=FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
           Reports the output in the specified FORMAT. The formats currently supported are ascii
           (the default) and gnuplot.

       -h, --help
           Displays help text for the scons-time obj subcommand.

       -p STRING, --prefix=STRING
           Specifies the prefix string for log files from which to extract object counts. This
           will be used to search for log files if no arguments are specified on the command
           line.

       --stage=STAGE
           Prints the object count at the end of the specified STAGE: pre-read (before the
           SConscript files are read), post-read , (after the SConscript files are read),
           pre-build (before any targets are built) or post-build (after any targets are built).
           If no --stage option is specified, the default behavior is post-build, which reports
           the final object count during each run.

       -t NUMBER, --tail=NUMBER
           Only reports object counts from the last NUMBER files.

   The run Subcommand
       scons-time run [-hnqv] [-f FILE] [--number=NUMBER] [--outdir=OUTDIR] [-p STRING]
       [--python=PYTHON] [-s DIR] [--scons=SCONS] [--svn=URL] [ARGUMENTS] The scons-time run
       subcommand is the basic subcommand for profiling a specific configuration against a
       version of SCons.

       The configuration to be tested is specified as a list of files or directories that will be
       unpacked or copied into a temporary directory in which SCons will be invoked. The
       scons-time run subcommand understands file suffixes like .tar, .tar.gz, .tgz and .zip and
       will unpack their contents into a temporary directory. If more than one argument is
       specified, each one will be unpacked or copied into the temporary directory "on top of"
       the previous archives or directories, so the expectation is that multiple specified
       archives share the same directory layout.

       Once the file or directory arguments are unpacked or copied to the temporary directory,
       the scons-time run subcommand runs the requested version of SCons against the
       configuration three times:

       Startup
           SCons is run with the --help option so that just the SConscript files are read, and
           then the default help text is printed. This profiles just the perceived "overhead" of
           starting up SCons and processing the SConscript files.

       Full build
           SCons is run to build everything specified in the configuration. Specific targets to
           be passed in on the command l ine may be specified by the targets keyword in a
           configuration file; see below for details.

       Rebuild
           SCons is run again on the same just-built directory. If the dependencies in the SCons
           configuration are correct, this should be an up-to-date, "do nothing" rebuild.

       Each invocation captures the output log file and a profile.

       The scons-time run subcommand supports the following options:

       -f FILE, --file=FILE
           Reads configuration information from the specified FILE. This often provides a more
           convenient way to specify and collect parameters associated with a specific timing
           configuration than specifying them on the command line. See the CONFIGURATION FILE
           section below for information about the configuration file parameters.

       -h, --help
           Displays help text for the scons-time run subcommand.

       -n, --no-exec
           Do not execute commands, just printing the command-line equivalents of what would be
           executed. Note that the scons-time script actually executes its actions in Python,
           where possible, for portability. The commands displayed are UNIX equivalents of what
           it's doing.

       --number=NUMBER
           Specifies the run number to be used in the names of the log files and profile outputs
           generated by this run.

       When used in conjunction with the --svn=URL option, NUMBER specifies one or more
       comma-separated Subversion revision numbers that will be retrieved automatically from the
       Subversion repository at the specified URL. Ranges of delta or revision numbers may be
       specified be separating two numbers with a hyphen (-).

       Example:

           % scons-time run --svn=http://scons.tigris.org/svn/trunk --num=1247,1249-1252 .

       -p STRING, --prefix=STRING
           Specifies the prefix string to be used for all of the log files and profiles generated
           by this run. The default is derived from the first specified argument: if the first
           argument is a directory, the default prefix is the name of the directory; if the first
           argument is an archive (tar or zip file), the default prefix is the the base name of
           the archive, that is, what remains after stripping the archive suffix (.tgz, .tar.gz
           or .zip).

       --python=PYTHON
           Specifies a path to the Python executable to be used for the timing runs. The default
           is to use the same Python executable that is running the scons-time command itself.

       -q, --quiet
           Suppresses display of the command lines being executed.

       -s DIR, --subdir=DIR
           Specifies the name of directory or subdirectory from which the commands should be
           executed. The default is XXX

       --scons=SCONS
           Specifies a path to the SCons script to be used for the timing runs. The default is
           XXX

       --svn=URL, --subversion=URL
           Specifies the URL of the Subversion repository from which the version(s) of scons
           being timed will be extracted. When --svn is specified, the --number=NUMBER option
           specifies revision numbers that will be tested. Output from each invocation run will
           be placed in file names that match the Subversion revision numbers. If the --number=
           option is not specified, then the default behavior is to time the HEAD of the
           specified URL.

       -v, --verbose
           Displays the output from individual commands to the screen (in addition to capturing
           the output in log files).

   The time Subcommand
       scons-time time [-h] [--chdir=DIR] [-f FILE] [--fmt=FORMAT] [-p STRING] [-t NUMBER]
       [--title=TITLE] [--which=WHICH] [ARGUMENTS]

       The scons-time time subcommand displays SCons execution times as reported by the scons
       --debug=time option.

       The scons-time time subcommand extracts SCons timing from all the specified file
       arguments, which should be files containing output from running SCons with the
       --debug=time option. (Normally, these would be *.log files generated by the scons-time run
       subcommand.) All file name arguments will be globbed for on-disk files.

       If no arguments are specified, then execution timings will be extracted from all *.log
       files, or the subset of them with a prefix specified by the -p option.

       -C DIR, --chdir=DIR
           Changes to the specified DIRECTORY before looking for the specified files (or files
           that match the specified patterns).

       -f FILE, --file=FILE
           Reads configuration information from the specified FILE.

       -fmt=FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
           Reports the output in the specified FORMAT. The formats currently supported are ascii
           (the default) and gnuplot.

       -h, --help
           Displays help text for the scons-time time subcommand.

       -p STRING, --prefix=STRING
           Specifies the prefix string for log files from which to extract execution timings.
           This will be used to search for log files if no arguments are specified on the command
           line.

       -t NUMBER, --tail=NUMBER
           Only reports object counts from the last NUMBER files.

       --which=WHICH
           Prints the execution time for the specified WHICH value: total (the total execution
           time), SConscripts (total execution time for the SConscript files themselves), SCons
           (exectuion time in SCons code itself) or commands (execution time of the commands and
           other actions used to build targets). If no --which option is specified, the default
           behavior is total, which reports the total execution time for each run.

CONFIGURATION FILE

       Various scons-time subcommands can read information from a specified configuration file
       when passed the -f or --file options. The configuration file is actually executed as a
       Python script. Setting Python variables in the configuration file controls the behavior of
       the scons-time script more conveniently than having to specify command-line options or
       arguments for every run, and provides a handy way to "shrink-wrap" the necessary
       information for producing (and reporting) consistent timing runs for a given
       configuration.

       archive_list
           A list of archives (files or directories) that will be copied to the temporary
           directory in which SCons will be invoked.  .tar, .tar.gz, .tgz and .zip files will
           have their contents unpacked in the temporary directory. Directory trees and files
           will be copied as-is.

       initial_commands
           A list of commands that will be executed before the actual timed scons runs. This can
           be used for commands that are necessary to prepare the source tree-for example,
           creating a configuration file that should not be part of the timed run.

       key_location
           The location of the key on Gnuplot graphing information generated with the
           --format=gnuplot option. The default is bottom left.

       prefix
           The file name prefix to be used when running or extracting timing for this
           configuration.

       python
           The path name of the Python executable to be used when running or extracting
           information for this configuration. The default is the same version of Python used to
           run the SCons

       scons
           The path name of the SCons script to be used when running or extracting information
           for this configuration. The default is simply scons.

       scons_flags
           The scons flags used when running SCons to collect timing information. The default
           value is --debug=count --debug=memory --debug=time --debug=memoizer.

       scons_lib_dir, scons_wrapper, startup_targets, subdir
           The subdirectory of the project into which the scons-time script should change before
           executing the SCons commands to time.

       subversion_url
           The Subversion URL from

       svn
           The subversion executable used to check out revisions of SCons to be timed. The
           default is simple svn.

       svn_co_flag, tar, targets
           A string containing the targets that should be added to the command line of every
           timed scons run. This can be used to restrict what's being timed to a subset of the
           full build for the configuration.

       targets0, targets1, targets2, title, unzip, verbose, vertical_bars

   Example
       Here is an example scons-time configuration file for a hypothetical sample project:

           # The project doesn't use SCons natively (yet), so we're
           # timing a separate set of SConscript files that we lay
           # on top of the vanilla unpacked project tarball.
           arguments = ['project-1.2.tgz', 'project-SConscripts.tar']

           # The subdirectory name contains the project version number,
           # so tell scons-time to chdir there before building.
           subdir = 'project-1.2'

           # Set the prefix so output log files and profiles are named:
           #     project-000-[012].{log,prof}
           #     project-001-[012].{log,prof}
           # etc.
           prefix = 'project'

           # The SConscript files being tested don't do any SConf
           # configuration, so run their normal ./configure script
           # before we invoke SCons.
           initial_commands = [
               './configure',
           ]

           # Only time building the bin/project executable.
           targets = 'bin/project'

           # Time against SCons revisions of the branches/core branch
           subversion_url = 'http://scons.tigris.org/svn/scons/branches/core'

ENVIRONMENT

       The scons-time script uses the following environment variables:

       PRESERVE
           If this value is set, the scons-time script will not remove the temporary directory or
           directories in which it builds the specified configuration or downloads a specific
           version of SCons.

SEE ALSO

       gnuplot(1), scons(1)

AUTHORS

       Steven Knight <knight at baldmt dot com>