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Last Update of this page: March/25/2001
Action controlled measurement:
Measurement can be switched on and off
dynamically by entering and finishing a procedure or function. This can
be activated user friendly by a selection form (for fast changing the activation
points), by special comments and by API-calls in the source files (if permanently
the same points shall be used for a long period).
All-in-one-profiling:
With one profiling session the number
of calls for a method (call count profiling), the average runtime
of a method (function profiling), function coverage profiling
and emulation profiling can be performed. When developing ProKylix,
the philosophy was (and is) to develop a high precision profiling tool
(thats why it is neither a sampling nor a machine code instrumenting
profiler) and to produce a minimum of overhead (that's why there is no
line profiling mode). See also Profiler type.
Compiler versions:
ProKylix supports Kylix 1.0. Upgrades
for future Linux versions of Kylix will be cost free.
Conditional compilation:
Fully supported. Compiler symbols and
switches are read from the compilers option file (DOF).
Coverage profiling:
A browser can display all methods which
were not called. (For a line-by-line coverage tool have a look at my link
page).
Documentation:
ProKylix comes with a real User Guide
(and not with slim online help).
Exclusion of parts of the program from measurement:
Directories:
Granularity:
ProKylix measure in CPU-cycles. The
smallest measurable unit is 1 CPU-cycle. This means that on a Pentium
with 1000 MHz the smallest measurable duration is 0.001 µs = 1ns.
Handling of idle times:
Idle times produced by some Linux-API
calls are not measured, also idle times of some Kylix calls. See list of
handled functions in the manual.
Hardware:
ProKylix supports Pentium and Pentium
compatible processors.
For the profiling session 16 MB RAM is
used additionally by ProKylix.
History function:
ProKylix comes with a built-in history
function. The viewer shows by a colored grid, which functions got faster
and which got slower since the last storing of results into the history
file. By a mouse click on a result line of the viewers grid, the time from
the history file is displayed for the selected procedure.
History of ProKylix:
ProKylix is a ported version of ProDelphi
(see there).
Industrial approvement:
The windows version of ProKylix (ProDelphi)
was first used to optimize the
SIEMENS
- SCADA-system VICOS P500 for the projects Metro Guang Zhou, Shen
Zhen and Sixth Railways in China. Other projects followed later (e.g. Melbourne).
Integration into the Kylix
tools menu:
If ProKylix is installed with the setup
program, it is automatically integrated into the Kylix tools menu.
Limitations:
There are no limitations regarding size
or accuracy: Even the smallest procedures are measured accurate, there
is no minimum size required for a procedure to be measured.
Line profiling:
Line profiling is not supported. This
has two reasons: Counting runtimes for lines changes the instruction processing
of the CPU so much, that no useful results can be expected. Counting runtime
for lines also slows down a program too much.
Local Procedures:
Can optionally be excluded from measurement..
Measuring runtimes in
shared object libraries:
Not supported yet due to a bug in Kylix.
Measurement accuracy:
ProKylix measures very accurately. The
measurement overhead is automatically removed from the measured times.
A sophisticated algorithym calculates the runtime used for measurement
at initialization time. Nested function calls are no problem for ProKylix.
You can easily check the accuracy of ProKylix with the included example
programs.
One measures automatically the run-time
of a few procedures and displays the result. The second program uses the
same procedures without measuring, it has to be profiled.
Measurement results:
The measured durations are displayed either
in CPU-Cycles or in a variable time format. Following time formats are
automatically selected:
Multiple profiling directories:
Fully supported. ProKylix reads the options
file (*.kof) of Kylix and automatically scans all directories in the search
path + the directory of the dpr-file.
Object orientation:
Specially supported by the optional feature
of adding the runtimes of all methods with the same name (if the used object
is the same).
Example: A method 'LoadFromDisk' calls
the method 'LoadFromDisk' of the inherited class. In this case the runtimes
of both classes will be added.
Online operating the measurement:
Measurement can be switched on and off
at the programs runtime, also results can be stored online.
Operating systems:
ProKylix is compatible to Suse 7.1. Other
platforms supported by Kylix should also work.
Optimization option:
The optimization of the Kylix compiler
is automatically deactivated if the user forgets this. This guaranties
high measurement accuracy.
Overhead:
Measurement of runtime costs measurement
overhead. This is another point (like accuracy) where ProKylix shows its
outstanding quality: by a very low measurement overhead. All measurement
routines are extremely optimized.
Post Mortem Review:
Instead of vaccinating (instrumenting)
the sources with statements for runtime measurement, it can be vaccinated
with statements for exception trapping. In case of an exception occuring
the call stack is stored into a file inclusive the name of the exception.
The program can be delivered in an instrumented
form to a customer. This could be done in case of sporadic exceptions.
The source code does not have to be given to the customer (together with
the Kylix-IDE).
Printing reports:
Optionally a printable file can be stored
(see also 'Viewing of measurement results').
Professional mode:
There is only one version of ProKylix.
After downloading it, it runs in the Freeware mode. By entering the registration
information it automatically runs in the Professional mode (see also 'Differences
between Freeware- and Professional mode').
Profiler
type:
ProKylix is a source
code instrumenting profiler. Source instrumenting
versus machine code instrumenting has the
big advantage, that at the best position possible a time stamp can be taken:
At the start and the end of the procedure body. No profiler internal code
outside the procedure is called before taking the time stamp. No profiler
code has possibly to be copied into the processor cache before taking the
time stamp (which destroys the accuracy). The normal instruction flow (nearly
identical as without profiling) is kept. This is one of the reasons for
ProKylix's outstanding accuaracy.
Another advantage of a source instrumenting
profiler is, that idle times (caused e.g. by opening a message box) can
be handled. Before calling the Linux- or CLX-function, the measurement
is deactivated.
The only disadvantage of a source instrumenting
profiler is that the source files are changed by the vaccination (instrumentation)
process. To avoid the risk of impacting the sources, they should be saved
before.
Sampling profilers: with a low sampling rate small procedures can not be measured, with a high sampling rate the profiled program has to be interrupted very often, what means, that the runtime behaviour of the tested program is changed very much. Sampling profilers also cannot handle idle times.
Programming-API:
Measurement can be switched on and off
at runtime. Intermediate results can be stored on disk.
Security:
ProKylix inserts statements into the source
files. If this process has a bug or in case of power failure, the sources
might be destroyed. It is strongly recommended to save all source code
files before profiling (e.g. by zip or tar).
Setup:
ProKylix is delivered with a easy to use
setup program. It copies all files into the appropriate directories, integrates
ProKylix into the Kylix tools menu.
Switching off of all measurement:
Simply done by deleting a compiler symbol
and recompilation.
Threads:
ProKylix has special settings for single
threaded applications (low overhead, extremly accurate) and for multi threaded
applications (medium overhead, medium accurate).
Upgrading:
If you decide to use ProKylix, you can
download any upgrade or bug fix from my homepage. If you need ProKylix
for a larger project and 30 measured procedures are not enough for you,
you can order the key to upgrade to the professional mode via ShareIt registration
service. If you do so, any downloaded new version will automatically run
in the professional mode (Buy one - get many).
Viewing of measurement
results:
Results can be either displayed in CPU-cycles
or in a variable time format. On a pentium with 500 MHz the smallest time
unit is 0.002µs.
ProKylix has THREE possibilities of viewing
the measured runtimes:
Y2K compliance:
ProKylix is fully Year 2000 compliant
Differences between Freeware- and Professional mode: