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py-perf

A Proof-of-concept low-overhead sampling CPU profiler written in Rust for Python implemented using eBPF. It is heavily "influenced" by rbperf and py-spy.

Warning

IT IS NOT READY FOR PRODUCTION USE AND IT IS NOT INTENDED TO BE A REPLACEMENT FOR EXISTING TOOLS. It is still considered experimental. Please feel free to contribute or provide feedback!

Important

If you are looking for a production-ready tool, please check out parca-agent instead.

Note

If you are curious how this tool works under the hood, check out the blog post!

Features

The main goals for py-perf are:

  • On-CPU profiling support
  • Low overhead
  • Profiled processes don't have to be restarted or modified in any way

Installation

The latest release is available here.

Usage

CPU sampling

sudo py-perf record --pid `pidof python` cpu

Some debug information will be printed, and a flame graph called py-perf_flame_$date will be written to disk 🎉

Supported Python versions

The currently supported Python (CPython) versions:

  • 2.7: 2.7.x
  • 3.x: 3.3.x, 3.5.x, 3.6.x, 3.7.x, 3.8.x, 3.9.x, 3.10.x, 3.11.x

Supported kernels

Linux kernel 4.18 is the minimum required version but 5.x and greater is recommended.

Building

To build py-perf you would need a modern Linux machine with:

  • The Rust toolchain
  • clang to compile the BPF code
  • elfutils and zlib installed
  • make and pkg-config to build libbpf

Once the dependencies are installed:

# As we are statically linking elfutils and zlib, we have to tell Rustc
# where are they located. On my Ubuntu system they are under
$ export RUSTFLAGS='-L /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu'
$ cargo build [--release]

The built binary can be found under target/(debug|release)/py-perf.

Developing and troubleshooting

Debug logs can be enabled with RUST_LOG=debug. The info subcommand, py-perf info shows the supported BPF features as well as other supported details.

Stability

py-perf is in active development and the CLI and APIs might change any time.

Bugs

If you encounter any bugs, feel free to open an issue on py-perf's repo.

Acknowledgments

py-perf wouldn't be possible without all the open-source projects that we benefit from, such as Rust, rbperf, py-spy and all the superb crates we use in this project, Python, the BPF ecosystem, and many others!

License

User-space code: Apache 2

Kernel-space code (eBPF profiler): GNU General Public License, version 2

TODO

  • TODO(kakkoyun): Add sections from parca-agent!
  • TODO(kakkoyun): Add reference to bcc, bcc/granulate and linux/tool examples from facebook.

Features

  • Supports profiling Python processes running in Docker containers. Tested using official Python Docker images (python:X.Y).
  • Supports glibc- and musl-based environments.
  • Supports Python compiled in both PIE and non-PIE configurations.
  • Supports Python running standalone and as a library (linked with libpythonX.Y).

Limitations

  • Architecture: x86_64.
  • Linux kernel version: oldest version tested is 4.14. Versions 4.11-4.14 may work. Required for bpf_probe_read_str.
  • BCC version: using BCC nightly is recommended. v0.17 is known to work.
  • Clang/LLVM: at least version 9.

Overview

PyPerf uses Linux's perf events subsystem to gather stack samples of running Python interpreters at a constant interval. Instead of capturing native execution stacks, PyPerf reads the information stored by the Python interpreter regarding the current state of execution. Unlike many existing tools however, the memory of the process is read from a kernel context. The advantages of this approach are mainly reduced system overhead and no intervention with the program being profiled.

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A Proof-of-concept, low-overhead, sampling CPU profiler for Python implemented using eBPF.

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