Provided by: libdevel-nytprof-perl_5.06-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       Devel::NYTProf::Core - load internals of Devel::NYTProf

DESCRIPTION

       This module is not meant to be used directly.  See Devel::NYTProf, Devel::NYTProf::Data,
       and Devel::NYTProf::Reader.

       While it's not meant to be used directly, it is a handy place to document some internals.

SUBROUTINE PROFILER

       The subroutine profiler intercepts the "entersub" opcode which perl uses to invoke a
       subroutine, both XS subs (henceforth xsubs) and pure perl subs.

       The following sections outline the way the subroutine profiler works:

   Before the subroutine call
       The profiler records the current time, the current value of cumulative_subr_secs (as
       initial_subr_secs), and the current cumulative_overhead_ticks (as initial_overhead_ticks).

       The statement profiler measures time at the start and end of processing for each statement
       (so time spent in the profiler, writing to the file for example, is excluded.) It
       accumulates the measured overhead into the cumulative_overhead_ticks variable.

       In a similar way, the subroutine profiler measures the exclusive time spent in subroutines
       and accumulates it into the cumulative_subr_secs global.

   Make the subroutine call
       The call is made by executing the original perl internal code for the "entersub" opcode.

       Calling a perl subroutine

       If the sub being called is a perl sub then when the entersub opcode returns, back into the
       subroutine profiler, the subroutine has been 'entered' but the first opcode of the
       subroutine hasn't been executed yet.  Crucially though, a new scope has been entered by
       the entersub opcode.

       The subroutine profiler then pushes a destructor onto the context stack.  The destructor
       is effectively just inside the sub, like a "local", and so will be triggered when the
       subroutine exits by any means. Also, because it was the first thing push onto the context
       stack, it will be triggered after any activity caused by the subroutines scope exiting.

       When the destructor is invoked it calls a function which completes the measurement of the
       time spent in the sub (see below).

       In this way the profiling of perl subroutines is very accurate and robust.

       Calling an xsub

       If the sub being called is an xsub, then control doesn't return from the entersub opcode
       until the xsub has returned. The profiler detects this and calls the function which
       completes the measurement of the time spent in the xsub.

       So far so good, but there's a problem. What if the xsub doesn't return normally but throws
       an exception instead?

       In that case (currently) the profiler acts as if the xsub was never called.  Time spent
       inside the xsub will be allocated to the calling sub.

   Completing the measurement
       The function which completes the timing of a subroutine call does the following:

       It calculates the time spent in the statement profiler:

           overhead_ticks  = cumulative_overhead_ticks - initial_overhead_ticks

       and subtracts that from the total time spent 'inside' the subroutine:

           incl_subr_sec = (time now - time call was made) - overhead_ticks

       That gives us an accurate inclusive time. To get the exclusive time it calculates the time
       spent in subroutines called from the subroutine call we're measuring:

           called_sub_secs = cumulative_subr_secs - initial_subr_secs

       and subtracts that from the incl_subr_sec:

           excl_subr_sec = incl_subr_sec - called_sub_secs

       To make that easier to follow, consider a call to a sub that calls no others.  In that
       case cumulative_subr_secs remains unchanged during the call, so called_sub_secs is zero,
       and excl_subr_sec is the same as incl_subr_sec.

       Finally, it adds the exclusive time to the cumulative exclusive time:

           cumulative_subr_secs += excl_subr_sec

AUTHOR

       Tim Bunce, <http://www.tim.bunce.name> and <http://blog.timbunce.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

         Copyright (C) 2008, 2009 by Tim Bunce.

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option, any later version of
       Perl 5 you may have available.