NYTPROFHTML(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation NYTPROFHTML(1)NAMEnytprofhtml - Generate reports from Devel::NYTProf data
SYNOPSIS
Typical usage:
$ perl -d:NYTProf some_perl_app.pl
$ nytprofhtml--open
Options synopsis:
$ nytprofhtml [-h] [-d] [-m] [-o <output directory>] [-f <input file>] [--open]
DESCRIPTION
Devel::NYTProf is a powerful feature-rich Perl source code profiler.
See Devel::NYTProf for details.
"nytprofhtml" generates a set of html reports from a single data file
generated by Devel::NYTProf. (If your process forks you'll probably
have multiple files. See Devel::NYTProf and nytprofmerge.)
The reports include dynamic runtime analysis wherein each line and each
file is analyzed based on the performance of the other lines and files.
As a result, you can quickly find the slowest module and the slowest
line in a module. Slowness is measured in three ways: total calls,
total time, and average time per call.
Coloring is based on absolute deviations from the median. See
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median_absolute_deviation> for more
details.
That might sound complicated, but in reality you can just run the
command and enjoy your report!
COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-f, --file <filename>
Specifies the location of the file generated by Devel::NYTProf.
Default: ./nytprof.out
-o, --out <dir>
The directory in which to place the generated report files.
Default: ./nytprof/
-d, --delete
Purge any existing contents of the report output directory.
-l, --lib <dir>
Add a path to the beginning of @INC to help nytprofhtml find the
source files used by the code. Should not be needed in practice.
--open
Make your web browser visit the report after it has been generated.
If this doesn't work well for you, try installing the Browser::Open
module.
-m, --minimal
Don't generate graphviz .dot files or block/sub-level reports.
--no-flame
Disable generation of the flamegraph on the index page. Also
disables calculation of distinct call stacks that are used to
produce the flamegraph.
-h, --help
Print the help message.
SAMPLE OUTPUT
You can see a complete report for a large application (over 200 files
and 2000 subroutines) at
<https://www.me.com/ix/tim.bunce/Public/perl/nytprof/nytprof-perlcritic-demo/index.html>
The report was generated by profiling perlcritic 1.106 checking its own
source code using perl 5.12.1.
DIAGNOSTICS
"Unable to open '... (autosplit into ...)'"
The profiled application executed code in a module that used AutoLoader
to load the code from a separate .al file. NYTProf automatically
recognises this situation and tries to determine the 'parent' module
file so it can associate the profile data with it. In order to do that
the parent module file must already be 'known' to NYTProf, typically by
already having some code profiled.
You're only likely to see this warning if you're using the "start"
option to start profiling after compile-time. The effect is that times
spent in autoloaded subs won't be associated with the parent module
file and you won't get annotated reports for them.
You can avoid this by using the default "start=begin" option, or by
ensuring you execute some non-autoloaded code in the parent module,
while the profiler is running, before an autoloaded sub is called.
HISTORY
A bit of history and a shameless plug...
NYTProf stands for 'New York Times Profiler'. Indeed, this module was
initially developed from Devel::FastProf by The New York Times Co. to
help our developers quickly identify bottlenecks in large Perl
applications. The NY Times loves Perl and we hope the community will
benefit from our work as much as we have from theirs.
Please visit <http://open.nytimes.com>, our open source blog to see
what we are up to, <http://code.nytimes.com> to see some of our open
projects and then check out <http://nytimes.com> for the latest news!
Background
Subroutine-level profilers:
Devel::DProf | 1995-10-31 | ILYAZ
Devel::AutoProfiler | 2002-04-07 | GSLONDON
Devel::Profiler | 2002-05-20 | SAMTREGAR
Devel::Profile | 2003-04-13 | JAW
Devel::DProfLB | 2006-05-11 | JAW
Devel::WxProf | 2008-04-14 | MKUTTER
Statement-level profilers:
Devel::SmallProf | 1997-07-30 | ASHTED
Devel::FastProf | 2005-09-20 | SALVA
Devel::NYTProf | 2008-03-04 | AKAPLAN
Devel::Profit | 2008-05-19 | LBROCARD
Devel::NYTProf is a (now distant) fork of Devel::FastProf, which was
itself an evolution of Devel::SmallProf.
Adam Kaplan took Devel::FastProf and added html report generation
(based on Devel::Cover) and a test suite - a tricky thing to do for a
profiler. Meanwhile Tim Bunce had been extending Devel::FastProf to
add novel per-sub and per-block timing, plus subroutine caller
tracking.
When Devel::NYTProf was released Tim switched to working on
Devel::NYTProf because the html report would be a good way to show the
extra profile data, and the test suite made development much easier and
safer.
Then he went a little crazy and added a slew of new features, in
addition to per-sub and per-block timing and subroutine caller
tracking. These included the 'opcode interception' method of profiling,
ultra-fast and robust inclusive subroutine timing, doubling
performance, plus major changes to html reporting to display all the
extra profile call and timing data in richly annotated and cross-linked
reports.
Steve Peters came on board along the way with patches for portability
and to keep NYTProf working with the latest development Perl versions.
Adam's work is sponsored by The New York Times Co.
<http://open.nytimes.com>. Tim's work was partly sponsored by
Shopzilla. <http://www.shopzilla.com>.
SEE ALSO
Mailing list and discussion at
<http://groups.google.com/group/develnytprof-dev>
Public SVN Repository and hacking instructions at
<http://code.google.com/p/perl-devel-nytprof/>
Devel::NYTProf, Devel::NYTProf::Reader, nytprofcsv
AUTHOR
Adam Kaplan, "<akaplan at nytimes.com>". Tim Bunce,
<http://www.tim.bunce.name> and <http://blog.timbunce.org>. Steve
Peters, "<steve at fisharerojo.org>".
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at
your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
perl v5.20.2 2015-08-03 NYTPROFHTML(1)