NAME

Devel::NYTProf::ReadStream - Read Devel::NYTProf data file as a stream

SYNOPSIS

use Devel::NYTProf::ReadStream qw(for_chunks);

for_chunks {
    my $tag = shift;
    print "$tag\n";
    # examine @_
    ....
}

# quickly dump content of a file
use Data::Dump;
for_chunks(\&dd);

DESCRIPTION

This module provide a low level interface for reading the contents of nytprof.out files (Devel::NYTProf data files) as a stream of chunks.

Currently the module only provide a single function:

for_chunks( \&callback, %opts )

This function will read the nytprof.out file and invoke the given callback function for each chunk in the file.

The first argument passed to the callback is the chunk tag. The rest of the arguments passed depend on the tag. See "Chunks" for the details. The return value of the callback function is ignored.

The for_chunks() function will croak if the file can't be opened or if the file format isn't recognized. The global $. variable is made to track the chunk sequence numbers and can be inspected in the callback.

The behaviour of the function can be modified by passing key/value pairs after the callback. The contents of %opts are passed to "new" in Devel::NYTProf::Data.

The function is prototyped as (&%) which means that it can be invoked with a bare block representing the callback function. In that case there should be no comma before any options. Example:

for_chunk { say $_[0] } filename => "myprof.out";

Chunks

The nytprof.out file contains a sequence of tagged chunks that are streamed out as the profiled program runs. This documents how the chunks appear when presented to the callback function of the for_chunks() function for version 4.0 of the file format.

Note that the chunks and their arguments are liable to change between versions as NYTProf evolves.

VERSION => $major, $minor

The first chunk in the file declare what version of the file format was used for the current file.

COMMENT => $text

This chunk is just some textual content that can be ignored.

ATTRIBUTE => $key, $value

This chunk type is repeated at the beginning of the file and used to declare various facts about the profiling run. The only one that's really interesting is ticks_per_sec that tell you how to convert the $ticks values into seconds.

The attributes reported are:

basetime => $time

The time (epoch based) when the profiled perl process started. It's the same value as $^T.

xs_version => $ver

The version of the Devel::NYTProf used for profiling.

perl_version => $ver

The version of perl used for profiling. This is a string like "5.10.1".

clock_id => $num

What kind of clock was used to profile the program. Will be -1 for the default clock.

ticks_per_sec => $num

Divide the $ticks values in TIME_BLOCK/TIME_LINE by this number to convert the time to seconds.

nv_size => 8

The $Config{nv_size} of the perl that wrote this file. This value must match for the perl that reads the file as well.

application => $string

The path to the program that ran; same as $0 in the program itself.

OPTION => $key, $value

This chunk type is repeated at the beginning of the file and used to record the options, e.g. set via the NYTPROF env var, that were effect during the profiling run.

START_DEFLATE

This chunk just say that from now on all chunks have been compressed in the file.

PID_START => $pid, $parent_pid, $start_time

The process with the given $pid starts running (under the profiler).

Dates from the way forking used to be supported. Likely to get deprecated when we get better support for tracking the time the sub profiler and statement profiler were actually active. (Which is needed to calculate percentages.)

NEW_FID => $fid, $eval_fid, $eval_line, $flags, $size, $mtime, $name

Files are represented by integers called 'fid' (File IDs) and this chunk declares the mapping between these numbers and file path names.

TIME_BLOCK => $ticks, $fid, $line, $block_line, $sub_line
TIME_LINE => $ticks, $fid, $line

A TIME_BLOCK or TIME_LINE chunk is output each time the execution of the program leaves a statement.

DISCOUNT

Indicates that the next TIME_BLOCK or TIME_LINE should not increment the "number of times the statement was executed". See the 'leave' option.

SUB_INFO => $fid, $first_line, $last_line, $name

At the end of the run the profiler will output chunks that report on the perl subroutines defined in all the files visited while profiling. See also %DB::sub in perldebguts.

SUB_CALLERS => $fid, $line, $count, $incl_time, $excl_time, $reci_time, $rec_depth, $name, $caller_name

At the end of the run the profiler will output chunks that report on where subroutines were called from.

SRC_LINE => $fid, $line, $text

Used to reproduce the source code of the files and evals profiled. Requires perl 5.8.9+ or 5.10.1+ or 5.12 or later. For earlier versions of perl the source code of perl -e '...' and perl - 'files' is available if the use_db_sub=1 option was used when profiling.

PID_END => $pid, $end_time

The process with the given $pid is done running. See the description of PID_START above.

SEE ALSO

Devel::NYTProf, Devel::NYTProf::Data

AUTHOR

Gisle Aas

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2008 by Adam Kaplan and The New York Times Company.
Copyright (C) 2008 by Tim Bunce, Ireland.
Copyright (C) 2008 by Gisle Aas

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.