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rbspy

Have a running Ruby program that you want to profile without restarting it? Want to profile a Ruby command line program really easily? You want rbspy! rbspy can profile any Ruby program just by running 1 simple command.

rbspy lets you profile Ruby processes that are already running. You give it a PID, and it starts profiling. It's a sampling profiler, which means it's low overhead and safe to run in production.

rbspy lets you record profiling data, save the raw profiling data to disk, and then analyze it in a variety of different ways later on.

only wall-clock profiling

There are 2 main ways to profile code -- you can either profile everything the application does (including waiting), or only profile when the application is using the CPU.

rbspy profiles everything the program does (including waiting) -- there's no option to just profile when the program is using the CPU.

Documentation

=> https://rbspy.github.io

Requirements

rbspy supports Linux*, Mac, and Windows.

* kernel version 3.2+ required. For Ubuntu, this means Ubuntu 12.04 or newer.

Add a testimonial

Did rbspy help you make your program faster? An awesome way to thank the project is to add a success story to this GitHub issue where people talk about ways rbspy has helped them! Hearing that rbspy is working for people is good motivation :)

Installing

On Mac, you can install with Homebrew: brew install rbspy.

On Linux:

  1. Download recent release of rbspy from the GitHub releases page
  2. Unpack it
  3. Move the rbspy binary to /usr/local/bin

Or have a look at Installing rbspy on our documentation.

Contributing

Pull requests that improve usability, fix bugs, or help rbspy support more operating systems are very welcome. If you have a question, the best way to ask is to create a GitHub issue!

If you're not a very experienced Rust programmer, you're very welcome to contribute. A major reason rbspy is written in Rust is that Rust is more approachable for beginners than C/C++. https://www.rust-lang.org/ has great resources for learning Rust.

Building rbspy

  1. Install cargo from crates.io
  2. cargo build to build
  3. cargo test to test

The built binary will end up at target/debug/rbspy

Tagging a release

Here are the steps for maintainers to tag a new release:

  1. Update Cargo.toml with the new version, run cargo build to ensure Cargo.lock is updated.
  2. Open an MR for the version bump. You can generate a CHANGELOG via git log --pretty='- %s' v0.3.10...HEAD.
  3. After the MR was merged, tag the new release, e.g. git tag v0.3.11, and push it: git push --tags.
  4. Travis will publish the tarballs to GitHub.

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Sampling profiler for Ruby

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