profiler === > Generate a flame graph using [async-profiler](https://github.com/jvm-profiling-tools/async-profiler) The `profiler` command supports generate flame graph for application hotspots. The basic usage of the `profiler` command is `profiler action [actionArg]` ### Start profiler ``` $ profiler start Started [cpu] profiling ``` > By default, the sample event is `cpu`. Can be specified with the `--event` parameter. ### Get the number of samples collected ``` $ profiler getSamples 23 ``` ### View profiler status ```bash $ profiler status [cpu] profiling is running for 4 seconds ``` Can view which `event` and sampling time. ### Stop profiler #### Generate svg format results ``` $ profiler stop profiler output file: /tmp/demo/arthas-output/20191125-135546.svg OK ``` By default, the generated results are saved to the `arthas-output` directory under the application's `working directory`. The output result path can be specified by the `--file` parameter. such as: ```bash $ profiler stop --file /tmp/output.svg profiler output file: /tmp/output.svg OK ``` #### Generating html format results By default, the result file is `svg` format. If you want to generate the `html` format, you can specify it with the `--format` parameter: ```bash $ profiler stop --format html profiler output file: /tmp/test/arthas-output/20191125-143329.html OK ``` Or use the file name name format in the `--file` parameter. For example, `--file /tmp/result.html`. ### View profiler results under arthas-output via browser By default, arthas uses port 3658, which can be opened: [http://localhost:3658/arthas-output/](http://localhost:3658/arthas-output/) View the `arthas-output` directory below Profiler results: ![](_static/arthas-output.jpg) Click to view specific results: ![](_static/arthas-output-svg.jpg) > If using the chrome browser, may need to be refreshed multiple times. ### Profiler supported events Under different platforms and different OSs, the supported events are different. For example, under macos: ```bash $ profiler list Basic events: cpu alloc lock wall itimer ``` Under linux ```bash $ profiler list Basic events: cpu alloc lock wall itimer Perf events: page-faults context-switches cycles instructions cache-references cache-misses branches branch-misses bus-cycles L1-dcache-load-misses LLC-load-misses dTLB-load-misses mem:breakpoint trace:tracepoint ``` If you encounter the permissions/configuration issues of the OS itself and then missing some events, you can refer to the [async-profiler](https://github.com/jvm-profiling-tools/async-profiler) documentation. You can use the `--event` parameter to specify the event to sample, such as sampling the `alloc` event: ```bash $ profiler start --event alloc ``` ### Resume sampling ```bash $ profiler resume Started [cpu] profiling ``` The difference between `start` and `resume` is: `start` is the new start sampling, `resume` will retain the data of the last `stop`. You can verify the number of samples by executing `profiler getSamples`. ### Use `execute` action to execute complex commands For example, start sampling: ```bash profiler execute 'start' ``` Stop sampling and save to the specified file: ```bash profiler execute 'stop,file=/tmp/result.svg' ``` Specific format reference: [arguments.cpp#L34](https://github.com/jvm-profiling-tools/async-profiler/blob/v1.6/src/arguments.cpp#L34) ### View all supported actions ```bash $ profiler actions Supported Actions: [resume, dumpCollapsed, getSamples, start, list, execute, version, stop, load, dumpFlat, actions, dumpTraces, status] ``` ### View version ```bash $ profiler version Async-profiler 1.6 built on Sep 9 2019 Copyright 2019 Andrei Pangin ```