PMCANNOTATE(8) |
FreeBSD System Manager's Manual |
PMCANNOTATE(8) |
NAME
pmcannotate —
sources printout with inlined profiling
SYNOPSIS
pmcannotate |
[ -a][ -h][ -k pathname][ -l level] pmcout.out binaryobj |
DESCRIPTION
The
pmcannotate utility can produce both C sources or assembly sources of a program with a line-by-line based profiling. The profiling information is retrieved through a
pmcstat(8) raw output while the program operations are retrieved through the
objdump(1) tool.
When calling pmcannotate the raw output is passed through the pmcout.out argument, while the program is passed through the binaryobj argument.
As long as pmcannotate relies on objdump(1) and pmcstat(8) to work, it will fail if one of them is not available.
OPTIONS
The following options are available:
-
-a
-
Shows the program profiling inlined in the assembly code only. No C information involving C sources is provided.
-
-h
-
Prints out information about the usage of the tool.
-
-l
level
-
Changes the lower bound (expressed in percentage) for traced functions that will be printed out in the report. The default value is 0.5%.
-
-k
kerneldir
-
Set the pathname of the kernel directory to argument
kerneldir. This directory specifies where
pmcannotate should look for the kernel and its modules. The default is
/boot/kernel.
LIMITATIONS
As long as
pmcannotate relies on the
objdump(1) utility to retrieve the C code, the program needs to be compiled with debugging options. Sometimes, in particular with heavy optimization levels, the
objdump(1) utility embeds the code of inlining functions directly in the callers, making an output difficult to read. The x86 version reports the sampling from pmcstat collecting the following instruction in regard of the interrupted one. This means that the samples may be attributed to the line below the one of interest.
AUTHORS
Attilio Rao <attilio@FreeBSD.org>