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* Always define startProfTimer and stopProfTimerIan Lynagh2012-08-101-4/+4
| | | | This allows us to provide access to them in the base library.
* Make profiling work with multiple capabilities (+RTS -N)Simon Marlow2011-11-291-1/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This means that both time and heap profiling work for parallel programs. Main internal changes: - CCCS is no longer a global variable; it is now another pseudo-register in the StgRegTable struct. Thus every Capability has its own CCCS. - There is a new built-in CCS called "IDLE", which records ticks for Capabilities in the idle state. If you profile a single-threaded program with +RTS -N2, you'll see about 50% of time in "IDLE". - There is appropriate locking in rts/Profiling.c to protect the shared cost-centre-stack data structures. This patch does enough to get it working, I have cut one big corner: the cost-centre-stack data structure is still shared amongst all Capabilities, which means that multiple Capabilities will race when updating the "allocations" and "entries" fields of a CCS. Not only does this give unpredictable results, but it runs very slowly due to cache line bouncing. It is strongly recommended that you use -fno-prof-count-entries to disable the "entries" count when profiling parallel programs. (I shall add a note to this effect to the docs).
* Time handling overhaulSimon Marlow2011-11-251-3/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Terminology cleanup: the type "Ticks" has been renamed "Time", which is an StgWord64 in units of TIME_RESOLUTION (currently nanoseconds). The terminology "tick" is now used consistently to mean the interval between timer signals. The ticker now always ticks in realtime (actually CLOCK_MONOTONIC if we have it). Before it used CPU time in the non-threaded RTS and realtime in the threaded RTS, but I've discovered that the CPU timer has terrible resolution (at least on Linux) and isn't much use for profiling. So now we always use realtime. This should also fix The default tick interval is now 10ms, except when profiling where we drop it to 1ms. This gives more accurate profiles without affecting runtime too much (<1%). Lots of cleanups - the resolution of Time is now in one place only (Rts.h) rather than having calculations that depend on the resolution scattered all over the RTS. I hope I found them all.
* Overhaul of infrastructure for profiling, coverage (HPC) and breakpointsSimon Marlow2011-11-021-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | User visible changes ==================== Profilng -------- Flags renamed (the old ones are still accepted for now): OLD NEW --------- ------------ -auto-all -fprof-auto -auto -fprof-exported -caf-all -fprof-cafs New flags: -fprof-auto Annotates all bindings (not just top-level ones) with SCCs -fprof-top Annotates just top-level bindings with SCCs -fprof-exported Annotates just exported bindings with SCCs -fprof-no-count-entries Do not maintain entry counts when profiling (can make profiled code go faster; useful with heap profiling where entry counts are not used) Cost-centre stacks have a new semantics, which should in most cases result in more useful and intuitive profiles. If you find this not to be the case, please let me know. This is the area where I have been experimenting most, and the current solution is probably not the final version, however it does address all the outstanding bugs and seems to be better than GHC 7.2. Stack traces ------------ +RTS -xc now gives more information. If the exception originates from a CAF (as is common, because GHC tends to lift exceptions out to the top-level), then the RTS walks up the stack and reports the stack in the enclosing update frame(s). Result: +RTS -xc is much more useful now - but you still have to compile for profiling to get it. I've played around a little with adding 'head []' to GHC itself, and +RTS -xc does pinpoint the problem quite accurately. I plan to add more facilities for stack tracing (e.g. in GHCi) in the future. Coverage (HPC) -------------- * derived instances are now coloured yellow if they weren't used * likewise record field names * entry counts are more accurate (hpc --fun-entry-count) * tab width is now correct (markup was previously off in source with tabs) Internal changes ================ In Core, the Note constructor has been replaced by Tick (Tickish b) (Expr b) which is used to represent all the kinds of source annotation we support: profiling SCCs, HPC ticks, and GHCi breakpoints. Depending on the properties of the Tickish, different transformations apply to Tick. See CoreUtils.mkTick for details. Tickets ======= This commit closes the following tickets, test cases to follow: - Close #2552: not a bug, but the behaviour is now more intuitive (test is T2552) - Close #680 (test is T680) - Close #1531 (test is result001) - Close #949 (test is T949) - Close #2466: test case has bitrotted (doesn't compile against current version of vector-space package)
* RTS tidyup sweep, first phaseSimon Marlow2009-08-021-3/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The first phase of this tidyup is focussed on the header files, and in particular making sure we are exposinng publicly exactly what we need to, and no more. - Rts.h now includes everything that the RTS exposes publicly, rather than a random subset of it. - Most of the public header files have moved into subdirectories, and many of them have been renamed. But clients should not need to include any of the other headers directly, just #include the main public headers: Rts.h, HsFFI.h, RtsAPI.h. - All the headers needed for via-C compilation have moved into the stg subdirectory, which is self-contained. Most of the headers for the rest of the RTS APIs have moved into the rts subdirectory. - I left MachDeps.h where it is, because it is so widely used in Haskell code. - I left a deprecated stub for RtsFlags.h in place. The flag structures are now exposed by Rts.h. - Various internal APIs are no longer exposed by public header files. - Various bits of dead code and declarations have been removed - More gcc warnings are turned on, and the RTS code is more warning-clean. - More source files #include "PosixSource.h", and hence only use standard POSIX (1003.1c-1995) interfaces. There is a lot more tidying up still to do, this is just the first pass. I also intend to standardise the names for external RTS APIs (e.g use the rts_ prefix consistently), and declare the internal APIs as hidden for shared libraries.
* Basic heap profile support without -profSimon Marlow2007-04-271-4/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | Now that constructor info tables contain the name of the constructor, we can generate useful heap profiles without requiring the whole program and libraries to be compiled with -prof. So now, "+RTS -hT" generates a heap profile for any program, dividing the profile by constructor. It wouldn't be hard to add support for grouping constructors by module, or to restrict the profile to certain constructors/modules/packages. This means that for the first time we can get heap profiles for GHCi, which was previously impossible because the byte-code interpreter and linker don't work with -prof.
* new RTS flag: -V to modify the resolution of the RTS timerIan Lynagh2006-09-051-3/+0
| | | | | | | | | Fixed version of an old patch by Simon Marlow. His description read: Also, now an arbitrarily short context switch interval may now be specified, as we increase the RTS ticker's resolution to match the requested context switch interval. This also applies to +RTS -i (heap profiling) and +RTS -I (the idle GC timer). +RTS -V is actually only required for increasing the resolution of the profile timer.
* Reorganisation of the source treeSimon Marlow2006-04-071-0/+85
Most of the other users of the fptools build system have migrated to Cabal, and with the move to darcs we can now flatten the source tree without losing history, so here goes. The main change is that the ghc/ subdir is gone, and most of what it contained is now at the top level. The build system now makes no pretense at being multi-project, it is just the GHC build system. No doubt this will break many things, and there will be a period of instability while we fix the dependencies. A straightforward build should work, but I haven't yet fixed binary/source distributions. Changes to the Building Guide will follow, too.