perf Module

Since Origin / Contributor Maintainer Source
2016-02-26 Philip Gladstone Philip Gladstone perf.c

This module provides simple performance measurement for an application. It samples the program counter roughly every 50 microseconds and builds a histogram of the values that it finds. Since there is only a small amount of memory to store the histogram, the user can specify which area of code is of interest. The default is the entire flash which contains code. Once the hotspots are identified, then the run can then be repeated with different areas and at different resolutions to get as much information as required.

perf.start()

Starts a performance monitoring session.

Syntax

perf.start([start[, end[, nbins]]])

Parameters

  • start (optional) The lowest PC address for the histogram. Default is 0x40000000.
  • end (optional) The highest address for the histogram. Default is the end of the used space in the flash memory.
  • nbins (optional) The number of bins in the histogram. Keep this reasonable otherwise you will run out of memory. Default is 1024.

Note that the number of bins is an upper limit. The size of each bin is set to be the smallest power of two such that the number of bins required is less than or equal to the provided number of bins.

Returns

Nothing

perf.stop()

Terminates a performance monitoring session and returns the histogram.

Syntax

total, outside, histogram, binsize = perf.stop()

Returns

  • total The total number of samples captured in this run
  • outside The number of samples that were outside the histogram range
  • histogram The histogram represented as a table indexed by address where the value is the number of samples. The address is the lowest address for the bin.
  • binsize The number of bytes per histogram bin.

Example

perf.start()

for j = 0, 100 do
  str = "str"..j
end

tot, out, tbl, binsize = perf.stop()

print(tot, out)
local keyset = {}
local n = 0
for k,v in pairs(tbl) do
  n=n+1
  keyset[n]=k
end
table.sort(keyset)
for kk,k in ipairs(keyset) do print(string.format("%x - %x",k, k + binsize - 1),tbl[k]) end

This runs a loop creating strings 100 times and then prints out the histogram (after sorting it). This takes around 2,500 samples and provides a good indication of where all the CPU time is being spent.