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crofiler: Easier C++ build profiling

Continuous Integration Requires rustc 1.72.0+

Understanding why C++ builds get slow and end up using a lot of RAM has become a lot easier since clang introduced their -ftime-trace build tracing feature.

However, it is not easy enough yet because currently available -ftime-trace visualizations (Chrome's about:tracing and to a lesser extent Speedscope) remain too focused on the raw temporal sequence of activities that were undertaken by clang, and not enough on actual build profiling questions such as which source tres, C++ namespaces, individual class and function templates... account for the highest share of expended compilation time.

crofiler, the clang C++ compilation profiler, aims to provide more immediate answers to such questions.

What does this do?

On a suitably prepared build (more on this later), crofiler can measure and display an overview of which compilation units take a lot of time to build or use up a lot of RAM in the process.

Full-build profile

For each compilation unit, a detailed hierarchical time profile can then be measured and displayed, allowing quick insight on which codebase components account for the highest share of compilation time.

Compilation unit profile

Because there is a strong correlation between compilation time and memory consumption, such time-based insight may also be used to optimize the memory overhead of a C++ build.

Significant effort has been expended to keep the display readable even in the presence of very long C++ type names, which are often seen in the presence of popular build-hostile programming techniques like expression templates or indiscriminate replacement of inheritance with templating.

How do I use it?

Prerequisites

Mandatory

At present, crofiler has only been tested on Linux. It is expected to be fully functional on other Unices like macOS or FreeBSD, but not on Windows as it currently makes some Unixey assumptions (VT100 terminal, filesystem root is /...).

To be able to profile compilation units, you will need a clang version newer than 9 (to have the -ftime-trace feature) and otherwise suitable for building your project.

Your build system also needs to be able to export a JSON compilation database. We will assume usage of CMake in the remainder of this tutorial, which can do this, otherwise please refer to your build system's manual.

Optional

You will additionally need a recent Rust toolchain in order to build crofiler from source.

Installing crofiler

You will find pre-built crofiler binaries for Linux and macOS in the "Releases" section of this github repository.

If you want to build crofiler from source code instead, you can do it as follows:

git clone https://github.com/HadrienG2/crofiler.git
cd crofiler
cargo install --path .

Profiling your build

Make sure all the utilities mentioned are in your PATH, then export a compilation database for your build. With CMake, that is done by re-running your cmake configuration command with the -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON option.

Then, in your build directory, run crofiler as you would run make or ninja, and a TUI wizard will walk you through the next steps. If you find any message or interaction to be hard to understand, please report this as a bug.

Also, please note that due to the technical constraints of textual user interfaces, most warnings and error messages of unbounded verbosity are emitted over syslog. In systemd-based Linux distributions, you can monitor them by setting up a separate terminal with this command:

journalctl -f

Anything else?

The algorithm used to simplify C++ entity names can also be used via a separate standalone utility called simpp, which you can install like so:

cd /path/to/crofiler/simpp
cargo install --path .

It is subsequently usable by specifying the number of terminal columns you want via the --cols flag, abbreviated as -c. For example, this command...

simpp -c80 'Acts::EigenStepper<Acts::StepperExtensionList<Acts::detail::GenericDefaultExtension<double> >, Acts::detail::VoidAuctioneer>::step<Acts::Propagator<Acts::EigenStepper<>, Acts::Navigator>::State<Acts::PropagatorOptions<Acts::ActionList<ActsFatras::detail::SimulationActor<std::mersenne_twister_engine<long unsigned int, 32, 624, 397, 31, 2567483615, 11, 4294967295, 7, 2636928640, 15, 4022730752, 18, 1812433253>, ActsFatras::NoDecay, ActsFatras::InteractionList<ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::detail::ScatteringImpl<ActsFatras::detail::Highland>, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::EveryParticle, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheBloch, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheHeitler, ActsFatras::AbsPdgSelector<(Acts::PdgParticle)11>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P> > >, (anonymous namespace)::HitSurfaceSelector> >, Acts::AbortList<ActsFatras::detail::SimulationActor<std::mersenne_twister_engine<long unsigned int, 32, 624, 397, 31, 2567483615, 11, 4294967295, 7, 2636928640, 15, 4022730752, 18, 1812433253>, ActsFatras::NoDecay, ActsFatras::InteractionList<ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::detail::ScatteringImpl<ActsFatras::detail::Highland>, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::EveryParticle, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheBloch, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheHeitler, ActsFatras::AbsPdgSelector<(Acts::PdgParticle)11>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P> > >, (anonymous namespace)::HitSurfaceSelector>::ParticleNotAlive, Acts::EndOfWorldReached, Acts::PathLimitReached> > > >(Acts::Propagator<Acts::EigenStepper<Acts::StepperExtensionList<Acts::detail::GenericDefaultExtension<double> >, Acts::detail::VoidAuctioneer>, Acts::Navigator>::State<Acts::PropagatorOptions<Acts::ActionList<ActsFatras::detail::SimulationActor<std::mersenne_twister_engine<unsigned long, 32, 624, 397, 31, 2567483615, 11, 4294967295, 7, 2636928640, 15, 4022730752, 18, 1812433253>, ActsFatras::NoDecay, ActsFatras::InteractionList<ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::detail::ScatteringImpl<ActsFatras::detail::Highland>, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::EveryParticle, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheBloch, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheHeitler, ActsFatras::AbsPdgSelector<(Acts::PdgParticle)11>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P> > >, (anonymous namespace)::HitSurfaceSelector> >, Acts::AbortList<ActsFatras::detail::SimulationActor<std::mersenne_twister_engine<unsigned long, 32, 624, 397, 31, 2567483615, 11, 4294967295, 7, 2636928640, 15, 4022730752, 18, 1812433253>, ActsFatras::NoDecay, ActsFatras::InteractionList<ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::detail::ScatteringImpl<ActsFatras::detail::Highland>, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::EveryParticle, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheBloch, ActsFatras::ChargedSelector, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::EveryParticle>, ActsFatras::ContinuousProcess<ActsFatras::BetheHeitler, ActsFatras::AbsPdgSelector<(Acts::PdgParticle)11>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P>, ActsFatras::Min<ActsFatras::Casts::P> > >, (anonymous namespace)::HitSurfaceSelector>::ParticleNotAlive, Acts::EndOfWorldReached, Acts::PathLimitReached> > > &) const'

...would output this result:

Acts::EigenStepper<…>::step<…::State<…>>(…) const

Output from stdin is also accepted, which can be convenient when an entity name is very long or contains single quotes. For example, assuming an entity.txt file containing a C++ entity name is present in the working directory, this command would work:

simpp -c80 <entity.txt

Any C++ entity name emitted by clang should be supported by this utility, so if you find an entity name that doesn't simplify correctly, please report it as a bug.

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A better visualization of clang's -ftime-trace output

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