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Commit Graph

17 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Philippe Charnier
97fa9b7739 Remove done() which was just exit() so use of warn()/err() can be made. Abort
on allocation failure instead of displaying a warning and deferencing NULL
pointer after. Spelling. Add prototypes. Add list of option in synopsis section
of man page, -d is not referenced because available as a compile option. It
should be made a runtime option btw.
2002-10-16 13:50:09 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
e043516d4d Check for defined(__i386__) instead of just defined(i386) since the compiler
will be updated to only define(__i386__) for ANSI cleanliness.
2002-05-30 07:00:42 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
9f5bcb6350 Make this build on sparc64. 2002-03-10 01:25:47 +00:00
Bruce Evans
275ffbc6e6 Support runtime specification of the history counter type by whatever
generated the gmon data.  The support is currently limited to what is
easy to implement and/or needed:

    signedess: signed or insigned
    size: 8, 16, 32 or 64 bits
    format: a binary integer in gprof's format (gprof is not a cross-tool).

High-resolution kernel profiling uses signed 64-bit counters.  Normal
kernel profiling and user profiling use unsigned 16-bit counters but
should use 32-bit ones.
2002-03-06 11:25:58 +00:00
Bruce Evans
8109a9af1f Fixed some misspellings of 2 as sizeof(UNIT) so that they won't break
things when sizeof(UNIT) becomes a runtime parameter.  The relevant 2
is the one in profil(2)'s scaling of pc's to bucket numbers:

	   bucket = (pc - offset) / 2 * profil_scale / 65536

gprof(1) must duplicate this scaling, bug for bug compatibly, so it
must first do an integer division by 2 although this mainly makes
scales larger than 65536 useless.  sizeof(UNIT) was already wrong in
gprof4, but there were no problems because the fake profil scale is a
multiple of 2.

There are also some rounding bugs in the scaling, but these are only
problems if profil(2) is used directly to create unusual (and not
useful) scales.
2002-03-06 09:47:36 +00:00
Bruce Evans
4cd016e8fd Moved the definition of the machine-independent macro UNITS_TO_CODE
from <number of machines> machine-dependent headers to the one
non-header here it is used so that it is easier to fix.  This macro
just divides the machine-dependent offset OFFSET_OF_CODE by the
machine-independent scale factor sizeof(UNIT), as required for bug
for bug compatibility with the scaling of pc's in gprof.c.  UNIT is
the type of a profiling counter, and its size has nothing to do with
the correct scale factor except both are usually 2.
2002-02-21 07:12:57 +00:00
Brian Feldman
3fc980b135 Add -K support to gprof(1), which enables dynamic symbol resolution from
the currently-running kernel (and supercedes an executable file argument
given).  With this change, properly-compiled KLD modules are now
able to be profiled.

Obtained from:	NAI Labs CBOSS project
Funded by:	DARPA
2001-10-30 15:54:09 +00:00
Peter Wemm
5b29dc6b1f Add ia64 support (stubs, just like i386, alpha) 2001-10-23 10:12:10 +00:00
Hidetoshi Shimokawa
13a29a8a17 Enable gprof on alpha.
* alpha.{c,h} are same as i386.{c,h}.
* Force address calculation to be done in long precision(64bit on alpha)
  rather than double precision(52bit).
1999-07-16 07:22:10 +00:00
Jean-Marc Zucconi
7e74cac42e Construct the profile file name from the name of the executable. A program
compiled with -pg and run will generate a file <executable-filename>.gmon,
not gmon.out.

PR:		bin/8426
1999-05-23 00:37:56 +00:00
John Polstra
5584f22bb3 Make profiling work for ELF. gprof now autodetects the format of
the executable file, so it will work for both a.out and ELF format
files.  I have split the object format specific code into separate
source files.  It's cleaner than it was before, but it's still
pretty crufty.

Don't cheat on your make world for this update.  A lot of things
have to be rebuilt for it to work, including the compiler and all
of the profiled libraries.
1998-09-07 23:32:00 +00:00
Bruce Evans
ffbce11fea 32-bit counters aren't large enough for 100+MHz clocks. Use 64-bit
counters.  `4' in GPROF4 and gprof4 now means 8.  gprof4 needs to be
recompiled to match the kernel.
1997-07-13 16:38:39 +00:00
Philippe Charnier
b34f7debd8 Use err(3). 1997-07-10 06:45:02 +00:00
Bruce Evans
db6a4b8826 Use a (signed) int32_t counter instead of an `unsigned int' counter
for the GPROF4 case.  This allows a simpler method to be used for
non-statistical profiling (it allows overhead adjustments to be
subtracted from one counter without harm if that counter goes
negative; otherwise the adjustment would have to be distributed).

32 bit counters were already too small for GPROF4 with a 200MHz
clock.  int64_t counters should be used.
1996-10-16 21:02:49 +00:00
Bruce Evans
e6c645fad2 Implemented non-statistical kernel profiling. This is based on
looking at a high resolution clock for each of the following events:
function call, function return, interrupt entry, interrupt exit,
and interesting branches.  The differences between the times of
these events are added at appropriate places in a ordinary histogram
(as if very fast statistical profiling sampled the pc at those
places) so that ordinary gprof can be used to analyze the times.

gmon.h:
Histogram counters need to be 4 bytes for microsecond resolutions.
They will need to be larger for the 586 clock.
The comments were vax-centric and wrong even on vaxes.  Does anyone
disagree?

gprof4.c:
The standard gprof should support counters of all integral sizes
and the size of the counter should be in the gmon header.  This
hack will do until then.  (Use gprof4 -u to examine the results
of non-statistical profiling.)

config/*:
Non-statistical profiling is configured with `config -pp'.
`config -p' still gives ordinary profiling.

kgmon/*:
Non-statistical profiling is enabled with `kgmon -B'.  `kgmon -b'
still enables ordinary profiling (and distables non-statistical
profiling) if non-statistical profiling is configured.
1995-12-29 15:46:59 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes
7799f52a32 Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 06:41:30 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes
9b50d90275 BSD 4.4 Lite Usr.bin Sources 1994-05-27 12:33:43 +00:00