ligo/docs/tutorials/profiling.rst
2018-02-07 11:30:59 +01:00

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Profiling the Tezos node
========================
Memory profiling the OCaml heap
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Install an OCaml switch with the statmemprof patch:
``4.04.2+statistical-memprof`` or ``4.06.0+statistical-memprof``
- Install ``statmemprof-emacs``.
- Enable loading statmemprof into the node.
Add the ``statmemprof-emacs`` package as a dependency to the main package, and add
``let () = Statmemprof_emacs.start 1E-4 30 5`` to the ``node_main.ml`` file.
Arguments:
- ``sampling_rate`` is the sampling rate of the profiler. Good value: ``1e-4``.
- ``callstack_size`` is the size of the fragment of the call stack which is captured for each sampled allocation.
- ``min_sample_print`` is the minimum number of samples under which the location of an allocation is not displayed.
- Load sturgeon into emacs, by adding this to your ``.emacs``:
::
(let ((opam-share (ignore-errors (car (process-lines "opam" "config" "var" "share")))))
(when (and opam-share (file-directory-p opam-share))
(add-to-list 'load-path (expand-file-name "emacs/site-lisp" opam-share))))
(require 'sturgeon)
- Launch the node then connect to it with sturgeon.
If the process is launched with pid ``1234`` then
::
M-x sturgeon-connect
tezos-nodememprof.1234.sturgeon
(tab-completion works for finding the socket name)
Memory profiling the C heap
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Install ``valgrind`` and ``massif-visualizer``
::
valgrind --tool=massif tezos-node run ...
- Stop with `Ctrl-C` then display with
::
massif-visualizer massif.out.pid
Performance profiling
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Install perf (The ``linux-perf`` package for debian.
If the package does not exist for your current kernel, a previous
version can be used. substitute the ``perf`` command to ``perf_4.9``
if your kernel is 4.9).
- Run the node, find the pid.
- Attach perf with ``perf record -p pid --call-stack dwarf``.
Then stop capturing with ``Ctrl-C``. This can represent a lot of
data. Don't do that for too long. If this is too much you can remove
the ``--call-stack dwarf`` to get something more manageable, but
interpreting the information can be harder.
- display the result with ``perf report``