1
0
mirror of https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/emacs.git synced 2024-12-26 10:49:33 +00:00
emacs/lisp/emacs-lisp/elp.el
Richard M. Stallman f2f22d26ed Comment change.
2001-12-27 03:23:50 +00:00

607 lines
22 KiB
EmacsLisp
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters

This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

;;; elp.el --- Emacs Lisp Profiler
;; Copyright (C) 1994,1995,1997,1998, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Barry A. Warsaw
;; Maintainer: FSF
;; Created: 26-Feb-1994
;; Keywords: debugging lisp tools
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
;; any later version.
;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
;;; Commentary:
;;
;; If you want to profile a bunch of functions, set elp-function-list
;; to the list of symbols, then do a M-x elp-instrument-list. This
;; hacks those functions so that profiling information is recorded
;; whenever they are called. To print out the current results, use
;; M-x elp-results. If you want output to go to standard-output
;; instead of a separate buffer, setq elp-use-standard-output to
;; non-nil. With elp-reset-after-results set to non-nil, profiling
;; information will be reset whenever the results are displayed. You
;; can also reset all profiling info at any time with M-x
;; elp-reset-all.
;;
;; You can also instrument all functions in a package, provided that
;; the package follows the GNU coding standard of a common textual
;; prefix. Use M-x elp-instrument-package for this.
;;
;; If you want to sort the results, set elp-sort-by-function to some
;; predicate function. The three most obvious choices are predefined:
;; elp-sort-by-call-count, elp-sort-by-average-time, and
;; elp-sort-by-total-time. Also, you can prune from the output, all
;; functions that have been called fewer than a given number of times
;; by setting elp-report-limit.
;;
;; Elp can instrument byte-compiled functions just as easily as
;; interpreted functions, but it cannot instrument macros. However,
;; when you redefine a function (e.g. with eval-defun), you'll need to
;; re-instrument it with M-x elp-instrument-function. This will also
;; reset profiling information for that function. Elp can handle
;; interactive functions (i.e. commands), but of course any time spent
;; idling for user prompts will show up in the timing results.
;;
;; You can also designate a `master' function. Profiling times will
;; be gathered for instrumented functions only during execution of
;; this master function. Thus, if you have some defuns like:
;;
;; (defun foo () (do-something-time-intensive))
;; (defun bar () (foo))
;; (defun baz () (bar) (foo))
;;
;; and you want to find out the amount of time spent in bar and foo,
;; but only during execution of bar, make bar the master. The call of
;; foo from baz will not add to foo's total timing sums. Use M-x
;; elp-set-master and M-x elp-unset-master to utilize this feature.
;; Only one master function can be set at a time.
;; You can restore any function's original function definition with
;; elp-restore-function. The other instrument, restore, and reset
;; functions are provided for symmetry.
;; Here is a list of variable you can use to customize elp:
;; elp-function-list
;; elp-reset-after-results
;; elp-sort-by-function
;; elp-report-limit
;;
;; Here is a list of the interactive commands you can use:
;; elp-instrument-function
;; elp-restore-function
;; elp-instrument-list
;; elp-restore-list
;; elp-instrument-package
;; elp-restore-all
;; elp-reset-function
;; elp-reset-list
;; elp-reset-all
;; elp-set-master
;; elp-unset-master
;; elp-results
;; Note that there are plenty of factors that could make the times
;; reported unreliable, including the accuracy and granularity of your
;; system clock, and the overhead spent in lisp calculating and
;; recording the intervals. I figure the latter is pretty constant,
;; so while the times may not be entirely accurate, I think they'll
;; give you a good feel for the relative amount of work spent in the
;; various lisp routines you are profiling. Note further that times
;; are calculated using wall-clock time, so other system load will
;; affect accuracy too.
;;; Background:
;; This program was inspired by the only two existing Emacs Lisp
;; profilers that I'm aware of, Boaz Ben-Zvi's profile.el, and Root
;; Boy Jim's profiler.el. Both were written for Emacs 18 and both were
;; pretty good first shots at profiling, but I found that they didn't
;; provide the functionality or interface that I wanted, so I wrote
;; this. I've tested elp in XEmacs 19 and Emacs 19. There's no point
;; in even trying to make this work with Emacs 18.
;; Unlike previous profilers, elp uses Emacs 19's built-in function
;; current-time to return interval times. This obviates the need for
;; both an external C program and Emacs processes to communicate with
;; such a program, and thus simplifies the package as a whole.
;; TBD:
;; Make this act like a real profiler, so that it records time spent
;; in all branches of execution.
;;; Code:
;; start of user configuration variables
;; vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
(defgroup elp nil
"Emacs Lisp Profiler"
:group 'lisp)
(defcustom elp-function-list nil
"*List of functions to profile.
Used by the command `elp-instrument-list'."
:type '(repeat function)
:group 'elp)
(defcustom elp-reset-after-results t
"*Non-nil means reset all profiling info after results are displayed.
Results are displayed with the `elp-results' command."
:type 'boolean
:group 'elp)
(defcustom elp-sort-by-function 'elp-sort-by-total-time
"*Non-nil specifies elp results sorting function.
These functions are currently available:
elp-sort-by-call-count -- sort by the highest call count
elp-sort-by-total-time -- sort by the highest total time
elp-sort-by-average-time -- sort by the highest average times
You can write you're own sort function. It should adhere to the
interface specified by the PRED argument for the `sort' defun. Each
\"element of LIST\" is really a 4 element vector where element 0 is
the call count, element 1 is the total time spent in the function,
element 2 is the average time spent in the function, and element 3 is
the symbol's name string."
:type 'function
:group 'elp)
(defcustom elp-report-limit 1
"*Prevents some functions from being displayed in the results buffer.
If a number, no function that has been called fewer than that number
of times will be displayed in the output buffer. If nil, all
functions will be displayed."
:type '(choice integer
(const :tag "Show All" nil))
:group 'elp)
(defcustom elp-use-standard-output nil
"*Non-nil says to output to `standard-output' instead of a buffer."
:type 'boolean
:group 'elp)
(defcustom elp-recycle-buffers-p t
"*nil says to not recycle the `elp-results-buffer'.
In other words, a new unique buffer is create every time you run
\\[elp-results]."
:type 'boolean
:group 'elp)
;; ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
;; end of user configuration variables
(defvar elp-results-buffer "*ELP Profiling Results*"
"Buffer name for outputting profiling results.")
(defconst elp-timer-info-property 'elp-info
"ELP information property name.")
(defvar elp-all-instrumented-list nil
"List of all functions currently being instrumented.")
(defvar elp-record-p t
"Controls whether functions should record times or not.
This variable is set by the master function.")
(defvar elp-master nil
"Master function symbol.")
(defvar elp-not-profilable
'(elp-wrapper elp-elapsed-time error call-interactively apply current-time interactive-p)
"List of functions that cannot be profiled.
Those functions are used internally by the profiling code and profiling
them would thus lead to infinite recursion.")
(defun elp-not-profilable-p (fun)
(or (memq fun elp-not-profilable)
(keymapp fun)
(condition-case nil
(when (subrp (symbol-function fun))
(eq 'unevalled (cdr (subr-arity (symbol-function fun)))))
(error nil))))
;;;###autoload
(defun elp-instrument-function (funsym)
"Instrument FUNSYM for profiling.
FUNSYM must be a symbol of a defined function."
(interactive "aFunction to instrument: ")
;; restore the function. this is necessary to avoid infinite
;; recursion of already instrumented functions (i.e. elp-wrapper
;; calling elp-wrapper ad infinitum). it is better to simply
;; restore the function than to throw an error. this will work
;; properly in the face of eval-defun because if the function was
;; redefined, only the timer info will be nil'd out since
;; elp-restore-function is smart enough not to trash the new
;; definition.
(elp-restore-function funsym)
(let* ((funguts (symbol-function funsym))
(infovec (vector 0 0 funguts))
(newguts '(lambda (&rest args))))
;; We cannot profile functions used internally during profiling.
(when (elp-not-profilable-p funsym)
(error "ELP cannot profile the function: %s" funsym))
;; we cannot profile macros
(and (eq (car-safe funguts) 'macro)
(error "ELP cannot profile macro: %s" funsym))
;; TBD: at some point it might be better to load the autoloaded
;; function instead of throwing an error. if we do this, then we
;; probably want elp-instrument-package to be updated with the
;; newly loaded list of functions. i'm not sure it's smart to do
;; the autoload here, since that could have side effects, and
;; elp-instrument-function is similar (in my mind) to defun-ish
;; type functionality (i.e. it shouldn't execute the function).
(and (eq (car-safe funguts) 'autoload)
(error "ELP cannot profile autoloaded function: %s" funsym))
;; put rest of newguts together
(if (commandp funsym)
(setq newguts (append newguts '((interactive)))))
(setq newguts (append newguts `((elp-wrapper
(quote ,funsym)
,(when (commandp funsym)
'(interactive-p))
args))))
;; to record profiling times, we set the symbol's function
;; definition so that it runs the elp-wrapper function with the
;; function symbol as an argument. We place the old function
;; definition on the info vector.
;;
;; The info vector data structure is a 3 element vector. The 0th
;; element is the call-count, i.e. the total number of times this
;; function has been entered. This value is bumped up on entry to
;; the function so that non-local exists are still recorded. TBD:
;; I haven't tested non-local exits at all, so no guarantees.
;;
;; The 1st element is the total amount of time in usecs that have
;; been spent inside this function. This number is added to on
;; function exit.
;;
;; The 2nd element is the old function definition list. This gets
;; funcall'd in between start/end time retrievals. I believe that
;; this lets us profile even byte-compiled functions.
;; put the info vector on the property list
(put funsym elp-timer-info-property infovec)
;; Set the symbol's new profiling function definition to run
;; elp-wrapper.
(let ((advice-info (get funsym 'ad-advice-info)))
(if advice-info
(progn
;; If function is advised, don't let Advice change
;; its definition from under us during the `fset'.
(put funsym 'ad-advice-info nil)
(fset funsym newguts)
(put funsym 'ad-advice-info advice-info))
(fset funsym newguts)))
;; add this function to the instrumentation list
(unless (memq funsym elp-all-instrumented-list)
(push funsym elp-all-instrumented-list))))
(defun elp-restore-function (funsym)
"Restore an instrumented function to its original definition.
Argument FUNSYM is the symbol of a defined function."
(interactive "aFunction to restore: ")
(let ((info (get funsym elp-timer-info-property)))
;; delete the function from the all instrumented list
(setq elp-all-instrumented-list
(delq funsym elp-all-instrumented-list))
;; if the function was the master, reset the master
(if (eq funsym elp-master)
(setq elp-master nil
elp-record-p t))
;; zap the properties
(put funsym elp-timer-info-property nil)
;; restore the original function definition, but if the function
;; wasn't instrumented do nothing. we do this after the above
;; because its possible the function got un-instrumented due to
;; circumstances beyond our control. Also, check to make sure
;; that the current function symbol points to elp-wrapper. If
;; not, then the user probably did an eval-defun, or loaded a
;; byte-compiled version, while the function was instrumented and
;; we don't want to destroy the new definition. can it ever be
;; the case that a lisp function can be compiled instrumented?
(and info
(functionp funsym)
(not (byte-code-function-p (symbol-function funsym)))
(assq 'elp-wrapper (symbol-function funsym))
(fset funsym (aref info 2)))))
;;;###autoload
(defun elp-instrument-list (&optional list)
"Instrument for profiling, all functions in `elp-function-list'.
Use optional LIST if provided instead."
(interactive "PList of functions to instrument: ")
(let ((list (or list elp-function-list)))
(mapcar 'elp-instrument-function list)))
;;;###autoload
(defun elp-instrument-package (prefix)
"Instrument for profiling, all functions which start with PREFIX.
For example, to instrument all ELP functions, do the following:
\\[elp-instrument-package] RET elp- RET"
(interactive "sPrefix of package to instrument: ")
(if (zerop (length prefix))
(error "Instrumenting all Emacs functions would render Emacs unusable"))
(elp-instrument-list
(mapcar
'intern
(all-completions
prefix obarray
(lambda (sym)
(and (fboundp sym)
(not (or (memq (car-safe (symbol-function sym)) '(autoload macro))
(elp-not-profilable-p sym)))))))))
(defun elp-restore-list (&optional list)
"Restore the original definitions for all functions in `elp-function-list'.
Use optional LIST if provided instead."
(interactive "PList of functions to restore: ")
(let ((list (or list elp-function-list)))
(mapcar 'elp-restore-function list)))
(defun elp-restore-all ()
"Restores the original definitions of all functions being profiled."
(interactive)
(elp-restore-list elp-all-instrumented-list))
(defun elp-reset-function (funsym)
"Reset the profiling information for FUNSYM."
(interactive "aFunction to reset: ")
(let ((info (get funsym elp-timer-info-property)))
(or info
(error "%s is not instrumented for profiling" funsym))
(aset info 0 0) ;reset call counter
(aset info 1 0.0) ;reset total time
;; don't muck with aref 2 as that is the old symbol definition
))
(defun elp-reset-list (&optional list)
"Reset the profiling information for all functions in `elp-function-list'.
Use optional LIST if provided instead."
(interactive "PList of functions to reset: ")
(let ((list (or list elp-function-list)))
(mapcar 'elp-reset-function list)))
(defun elp-reset-all ()
"Reset the profiling information for all functions being profiled."
(interactive)
(elp-reset-list elp-all-instrumented-list))
(defun elp-set-master (funsym)
"Set the master function for profiling."
(interactive "aMaster function: ")
;; when there's a master function, recording is turned off by
;; default
(setq elp-master funsym
elp-record-p nil)
;; make sure master function is instrumented
(or (memq funsym elp-all-instrumented-list)
(elp-instrument-function funsym)))
(defun elp-unset-master ()
"Unsets the master function."
(interactive)
;; when there's no master function, recording is turned on by default.
(setq elp-master nil
elp-record-p t))
(defsubst elp-elapsed-time (start end)
(+ (* (- (car end) (car start)) 65536.0)
(- (car (cdr end)) (car (cdr start)))
(/ (- (car (cdr (cdr end))) (car (cdr (cdr start)))) 1000000.0)))
(defun elp-wrapper (funsym interactive-p args)
"This function has been instrumented for profiling by the ELP.
ELP is the Emacs Lisp Profiler. To restore the function to its
original definition, use \\[elp-restore-function] or \\[elp-restore-all]."
;; turn on recording if this is the master function
(if (and elp-master
(eq funsym elp-master))
(setq elp-record-p t))
;; get info vector and original function symbol
(let* ((info (get funsym elp-timer-info-property))
(func (aref info 2))
result)
(or func
(error "%s is not instrumented for profiling" funsym))
(if (not elp-record-p)
;; when not recording, just call the original function symbol
;; and return the results.
(setq result
(if interactive-p
(call-interactively func)
(apply func args)))
;; we are recording times
(let (enter-time exit-time)
;; increment the call-counter
(aset info 0 (1+ (aref info 0)))
;; now call the old symbol function, checking to see if it
;; should be called interactively. make sure we return the
;; correct value
(if interactive-p
(setq enter-time (current-time)
result (call-interactively func)
exit-time (current-time))
(setq enter-time (current-time)
result (apply func args)
exit-time (current-time)))
;; calculate total time in function
(aset info 1 (+ (aref info 1) (elp-elapsed-time enter-time exit-time)))
))
;; turn off recording if this is the master function
(if (and elp-master
(eq funsym elp-master))
(setq elp-record-p nil))
result))
;; shut the byte-compiler up
(defvar elp-field-len nil)
(defvar elp-cc-len nil)
(defvar elp-at-len nil)
(defvar elp-et-len nil)
(defun elp-sort-by-call-count (vec1 vec2)
;; sort by highest call count. See `sort'.
(>= (aref vec1 0) (aref vec2 0)))
(defun elp-sort-by-total-time (vec1 vec2)
;; sort by highest total time spent in function. See `sort'.
(>= (aref vec1 1) (aref vec2 1)))
(defun elp-sort-by-average-time (vec1 vec2)
;; sort by highest average time spent in function. See `sort'.
(>= (aref vec1 2) (aref vec2 2)))
(defsubst elp-pack-number (number width)
;; pack the NUMBER string into WIDTH characters, watching out for
;; very small or large numbers
(if (<= (length number) width)
number
;; check for very large or small numbers
(if (string-match "^\\(.*\\)\\(e[+-].*\\)$" number)
(concat (substring
(substring number (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))
0
(- width (match-end 2) (- (match-beginning 2)) 3))
"..."
(substring number (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2)))
(concat (substring number 0 width)))))
(defun elp-output-result (resultvec)
;; output the RESULTVEC into the results buffer. RESULTVEC is a 4 or
;; more element vector where aref 0 is the call count, aref 1 is the
;; total time spent in the function, aref 2 is the average time
;; spent in the function, and aref 3 is the symbol's string
;; name. All other elements in the vector are ignored.
(let* ((cc (aref resultvec 0))
(tt (aref resultvec 1))
(at (aref resultvec 2))
(symname (aref resultvec 3))
callcnt totaltime avetime)
(setq callcnt (number-to-string cc)
totaltime (number-to-string tt)
avetime (number-to-string at))
;; possibly prune the results
(if (and elp-report-limit
(numberp elp-report-limit)
(< cc elp-report-limit))
nil
(insert symname)
(insert-char 32 (+ elp-field-len (- (length symname)) 2))
;; print stuff out, formatting it nicely
(insert callcnt)
(insert-char 32 (+ elp-cc-len (- (length callcnt)) 2))
(let ((ttstr (elp-pack-number totaltime elp-et-len))
(atstr (elp-pack-number avetime elp-at-len)))
(insert ttstr)
(insert-char 32 (+ elp-et-len (- (length ttstr)) 2))
(insert atstr))
(insert "\n"))))
;;;###autoload
(defun elp-results ()
"Display current profiling results.
If `elp-reset-after-results' is non-nil, then current profiling
information for all instrumented functions are reset after results are
displayed."
(interactive)
(let ((curbuf (current-buffer))
(resultsbuf (if elp-recycle-buffers-p
(get-buffer-create elp-results-buffer)
(generate-new-buffer elp-results-buffer))))
(set-buffer resultsbuf)
(erase-buffer)
(beginning-of-buffer)
;; get the length of the longest function name being profiled
(let* ((longest 0)
(title "Function Name")
(titlelen (length title))
(elp-field-len titlelen)
(cc-header "Call Count")
(elp-cc-len (length cc-header))
(et-header "Elapsed Time")
(elp-et-len (length et-header))
(at-header "Average Time")
(elp-at-len (length at-header))
(resvec
(mapcar
(function
(lambda (funsym)
(let* ((info (get funsym elp-timer-info-property))
(symname (format "%s" funsym))
(cc (aref info 0))
(tt (aref info 1)))
(if (not info)
(insert "No profiling information found for: "
symname)
(setq longest (max longest (length symname)))
(vector cc tt (if (zerop cc)
0.0 ;avoid arithmetic div-by-zero errors
(/ (float tt) (float cc)))
symname)))))
elp-all-instrumented-list))
) ; end let*
(insert title)
(if (> longest titlelen)
(progn
(insert-char 32 (- longest titlelen))
(setq elp-field-len longest)))
(insert " " cc-header " " et-header " " at-header "\n")
(insert-char ?= elp-field-len)
(insert " ")
(insert-char ?= elp-cc-len)
(insert " ")
(insert-char ?= elp-et-len)
(insert " ")
(insert-char ?= elp-at-len)
(insert "\n")
;; if sorting is enabled, then sort the results list. in either
;; case, call elp-output-result to output the result in the
;; buffer
(if elp-sort-by-function
(setq resvec (sort resvec elp-sort-by-function)))
(mapcar 'elp-output-result resvec))
;; now pop up results buffer
(set-buffer curbuf)
(pop-to-buffer resultsbuf)
;; copy results to standard-output?
(if (or elp-use-standard-output noninteractive)
(princ (buffer-substring (point-min) (point-max))))
;; reset profiling info if desired
(and elp-reset-after-results
(elp-reset-all))))
(defun elp-unload-hook ()
(elp-restore-all))
(provide 'elp)
;;; elp.el ends here