5.7 KiB
profiler
::: tip Generate a flame graph using async-profiler :::
The profiler
command supports generate flame graph for application hotspots.
The basic usage of the profiler
command is profiler action [actionArg]
Supported Options
Name | Specification |
---|---|
action | Action to execute |
actionArg | Attribute name pattern |
[i:] | sampling interval in ns (default: 10'000'000, i.e. 10 ms) |
[f:] | dump output to specified directory |
[d:] | run profiling for specified seconds |
[e:] | which event to trace (cpu, alloc, lock, cache-misses etc.), default value is cpu |
Start profiler
$ profiler start
Started [cpu] profiling
::: tip
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
$ profiler status
[cpu] profiling is running for 4 seconds
Can view which event
and sampling time.
Stop profiler
Generating html format results
By default, the result file is html
format. You can also specify it with the --format
parameter:
$ profiler stop --format html
profiler output file: /tmp/test/arthas-output/20211207-111550.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/ View the arthas-output
directory below Profiler results:
Click to view specific results:
::: tip 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:
$ profiler list
Basic events:
cpu
alloc
lock
wall
itimer
Under linux
$ 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 documentation.
You can use the --event
parameter to specify the event to sample, such as sampling the alloc
event:
$ profiler start --event alloc
Resume sampling
$ 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:
profiler execute 'start,framebuf=5000000'
Stop sampling and save to the specified file:
profiler execute 'stop,file=/tmp/result.html'
Specific format reference: arguments.cpp
View all supported actions
$ profiler actions
Supported Actions: [resume, dumpCollapsed, getSamples, start, list, execute, version, stop, load, dumpFlat, actions, dumpTraces, status]
View version
$ profiler version
Async-profiler 1.6 built on Sep 9 2019
Copyright 2019 Andrei Pangin
Configure framebuf option
::: tip
you encounter [frame_buffer_overflow]
in the generated result, you need to increase the framebuf (the default value is 1'000'000), which can be configured explicitly, such as:
:::
profiler start --framebuf 5000000
Configure include/exclude to filter data
If the application is complex and generates a lot of content, and you want to focus on only part of the data, you can filter by include/exclude. such as
profiler start --include'java/*' --include'demo/*' --exclude'*Unsafe.park*'
Both include/exclude support setting multiple values, but need to be configured at the end of the command line.
Specify execution time
For example, if you want the profiler to automatically end after 300 seconds, you can specify it with the -d
/--duration
parameter:
profiler start --duration 300
Generate jfr format result
Note that jfr only supports configuration at
start
. If it is specified atstop
, it will not take effect.
profiler start --file /tmp/test.jfr
The file
parameter supports some variables:
- Timestamp:
--file /tmp/test-%t.jfr
- Process ID:
--file /tmp/test-%p.jfr
The generated results can be viewed with tools that support the jfr format. such as:
- JDK Mission Control: https://github.com/openjdk/jmc
- JProfiler: https://github.com/alibaba/arthas/issues/1416