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gcprof - garbage collection profiler

gcprof is a tool to measure garbage collection in a production system. For every message a process receives, gcprof tells you how much time was spent in garbage collection and how many passes were done.

How does it work

gcprof:trace(pid(), identity_f()) triggers tracing of garbage collection in the specified process. Every time the process receives a message, the resulting garbage collections is associated with that message. The identity fun is used to identify that message.

The runtime of garbage collections is aggregated and grouped on the identity. The results can be retrieved by calling gcprof_aggregator:get_stats/0. This will reset the current stats, so it is suitable for periodic polling.

The convenience method gcprof:trace_me(identity_f()) can be used from within the process you wish to trace.

Identity

The identity fun is given the message your process received and must produce an identity. The results will be grouped by identity, so it makes sense to keep the number of unique ids low. The identity will be the key in gcprof_aggregator:get_stats/0.

For example:

fun ({'$gen_call', {_, _}, do_some_stuff}) ->
        my_identity;
    ({'$gen_call', {_, _}, {request, Arg1, Arg2}) ->
        {request, Arg1};
    (init) ->
        init;
    (_) ->
        undefined
end

There is one special message you may also handle and that is init. Any garbage collection done after triggering the trace, but before your process received any messages is associated with this identity. Please note that as starting a trace is asynchronous, some information might be lost.

Stats

This is an example of stats created by running the provided example_server.

{ok,[[{key,{create_garbage,invocations}},
      {observations,20},
      {min,1},
      {mean,9.0},
      {max,17},
      {sd,8.207826816681232},
      {quantile_25,0.5},
      {quantile_75,16.5},
      {quantile_99,16.98},
      {quantile_999,16.998}],
     [{key,{create_garbage,runtime}},
      {observations,20},
      {min,690},
      {mean,4220.85},
      {max,8728},
      {sd,2898.8413706350443},
      {quantile_25,1062.0},
      {quantile_75,5974.0},
      {quantile_99,8727.8},
      {quantile_999,8727.98}]]}

Sampling

As you may not want to trace all processes executing the code that triggers tracing, there is a very simple way of deciding which processes to sample.

Example:

IdentityF = fun ...,
Id = 1000000,
Divisor = 100,
gcprof:sample_me(IdentityF, Id rem Divisor)

sample_me/2 only samples if the second argument is 0. So in the above case, given an even distribution of ids, only 1% of the processes will be sampled.

Impact on your system

gcprof:trace/2 uses a gen_server:cast/2 under the hood so your process does not have to wait for gcprof. This also means that if gcprof is not running, nothing happens.

If gcprof would crash, the processes would be restarted. When the gcprof tracer process goes away, the VM stops whatever traces were active.

Ideas for the future

At the moment, there are some race conditions in some of the tests that makes them occasionally fail. This should be fixed.

To trace code without modifying the target, a future version of gcprof could trace a specific function call and start tracing of the process invoking that function. Superuseful for the init/1 gen_server callback for example.

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Garbage Collection profiler for Erlang

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