This creates a SysprofCallgraph object which is a GListModel of
SysprofCallgraphFrame. The SysprofCallgraphFrame is also a GListModel of
SysprofCallgraphFrame so that we can map this all into a GtkListView in
the future for tree-like visibility.
The augmentation allows for the same callgraph code to be used for multiple
scenarios such as CPU sampling as well as memory allocation tracking.
If your augmentation size is <=sizeof(void*) then you do not occur an extra
allocation and you can use the inline augmentation space.
The test-callgraph clearly shows that we still need to do the shuffling
of -- Kernel -- and -- User -- like the old callgraph code did. But that
will come soon enough.
This just ensures that we can parse the contents of the superblock options
that we get for "overlay" mounts via toolbox/podman. These still need to
be handled from SysprofMountNamespace when translating though.
Additionally, this stuff seems very brittle for parsing, unless it is
getting escaped somewhere I'm missing currently.
This adds a specific frame type for the Jitmap frames in the capture files.
You can iterate them without having to bswap as well, which is why this
does not use the SysprofCaptureJitmapIter (which does require bswap'd
frames).
This uses an augmented red-black tree to create an interval tree with
non-interval lookups. That amounts to storing address ranges within the
red-black tree, but looking up by single address.
This also indexes the first position of a file by filename so that we can
skip items in the capture file. Generally, embedded files are a single
frame so that will only be one frame to look at. But even when it is a
few frames, they are generally sequential so this vastly reduces how many
frames we'll need to look at for files.
The goal here is to break up libsysprof into a library for recording
profiles (using libsysprof-capture) and a library for analyzing profiles
(both used by the sysprof UI).