""" readprofile - a tool to read kernel profiling information The readprofile command uses the /proc/profile information to print ascii data on standard output. The output is organized in three columns: the first is the number of clock ticks, the second is the name of the C function in the kernel where those many ticks occurred, and the third is the normalized `load' of the procedure, calculated as a ratio between the number of ticks and the length of the procedure. The output is filled with blanks to ease readability. """ import os, shutil from autotest_lib.client.bin import utils, profiler from autotest_lib.client.common_lib import error class readprofile(profiler.profiler): version = 1 # http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/util-linux-2.12r.tar.bz2 def setup(self, tarball = 'util-linux-2.12r.tar.bz2'): self.tarball = utils.unmap_url(self.bindir, tarball, self.tmpdir) utils.extract_tarball_to_dir(self.tarball, self.srcdir) os.chdir(self.srcdir) utils.configure() os.chdir('sys-utils') utils.make('readprofile') def initialize(self): self.job.require_gcc() try: utils.system('grep -iq " profile=" /proc/cmdline') except error.CmdError: raise error.AutotestError('readprofile not enabled') self.cmd = self.srcdir + '/sys-utils/readprofile' def start(self, test): utils.system(self.cmd + ' -r') def stop(self, test): # There's no real way to stop readprofile, so we stash the # raw data at this point instead. BAD EXAMPLE TO COPY! ;-) self.rawprofile = test.profdir + '/profile.raw' print "STOP" shutil.copyfile('/proc/profile', self.rawprofile) def report(self, test): args = ' -n' args += ' -m ' + utils.get_systemmap() args += ' -p ' + self.rawprofile cmd = self.cmd + ' ' + args txtprofile = test.profdir + '/profile.text' utils.system(cmd + ' | sort -nr > ' + txtprofile) utils.system('bzip2 ' + self.rawprofile)