Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
620f1f0ff0 build: fix build warnigns with Clang 2020-08-14 12:57:50 -07:00
16b7cb0a96 tests: include <errno.h> where appropriate 2020-08-08 10:50:56 -04:00
e19d70bca0 libsysprof-capture: Drop GError usage from SysprofCaptureReader
Use `errno` instead, which is icky, but given that all of the failure
modes are from POSIX I/O functions, it’s at least in keeping with them.

This is a major API break.

Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>

Helps: #40
2020-07-03 22:00:34 +01:00
5dea152c77 tests: use G_GSIZE_FORMAT instead of G_GUINT64_FORMAT for gsize
This fixes the build on 32-bit platforms with -Werror-format

fixes #32
2020-03-07 10:45:17 +01:00
1017fed467 tests: add missing locale.h include 2020-02-20 10:59:57 -08:00
33c81a3a9c memprof: add memory profiling using LD_PRELOAD
This brings over some of the techniques from the old memprof design.
Sysprof and memprof shared a lot of code, so it is pretty natural to
bring back the same callgraph view based on memory allocations.

This reuses the StackStash just like it did in memprof. While it
would be nice to reuse some existing tools out there, the fit of
memprof with sysprof is so naturally aligned, it's not really a
big deal to bring back the LD_PRELOAD. The value really comes
from seeing all this stuff together instead of multiple apps.

There are plenty of things we can implement on top of this that
we are not doing yet such as temporary allocations, cross-thread
frees, graphing the heap, and graphing differences between the
heap at to points in time. I'd like all of these things, given
enough time to make them useful.

This is still a bit slow though due to the global lock we take
to access the writer. To improve the speed here we need to get
rid of that lock and head towards a design that allows a thread
to request a new writer from Sysprof and save it in TLS (to be
destroyed when the thread exits).
2020-02-07 19:00:33 -08:00