cpython/Lib/test/test_pstats.py

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Merged revisions 60143-60149 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r60143 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 15:50:05 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 3 lines Switch mmap from old Py_FindMethod to new PyObject_GenericGetAttr attribute access. Fixes #1087735. ........ r60145 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:40:58 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Add blurb about executable scripts on Windows. #760657. ........ r60146 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:48:40 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1219903: fix tp_richcompare docs. ........ r60147 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 22:10:08 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Fix markup. ........ r60148 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-01-21 08:11:11 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 14 lines Provide a sanity check during PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() and PyThreadState_Delete() to avoid an infinite loop when the tstate list is messed up and has somehow becomes circular and does not contain the current thread. I don't know how this happens but it does, *very* rarely. On more than one hardware platform. I have not been able to reproduce it manually. Attaching to a process where its happening: it has always been in an infinite loop over a single element tstate list that is not the tstate we're looking to delete. It has been in t_bootstrap()'s call to PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() as a pthread is exiting. ........ r60149 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-21 11:24:59 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1269: fix a bug in pstats.add_callers() and add a unit test file for pstats. ........
2008-01-21 07:20:28 -04:00
import unittest
bpo-37958: Adding get_profile_dict to pstats (GH-15495) pstats is really useful or profiling and printing the output of the execution of some block of code, but I've found on multiple occasions when I'd like to access this output directly in an easily usable dictionary on which I can further analyze or manipulate. The proposal is to add a function called get_profile_dict inside of pstats that'll automatically return this data the data in an easily accessible dict. The output of the following script: ``` import cProfile, pstats import pprint from pstats import func_std_string, f8 def fib(n): if n == 0: return 0 if n == 1: return 1 return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) pr = cProfile.Profile() pr.enable() fib(5) pr.create_stats() ps = pstats.Stats(pr).sort_stats('tottime', 'cumtime') def get_profile_dict(self, keys_filter=None): """ Returns a dict where the key is a function name and the value is a dict with the following keys: - ncalls - tottime - percall_tottime - cumtime - percall_cumtime - file_name - line_number keys_filter can be optionally set to limit the key-value pairs in the retrieved dict. """ pstats_dict = {} func_list = self.fcn_list[:] if self.fcn_list else list(self.stats.keys()) if not func_list: return pstats_dict pstats_dict["total_tt"] = float(f8(self.total_tt)) for func in func_list: cc, nc, tt, ct, callers = self.stats[func] file, line, func_name = func ncalls = str(nc) if nc == cc else (str(nc) + '/' + str(cc)) tottime = float(f8(tt)) percall_tottime = -1 if nc == 0 else float(f8(tt/nc)) cumtime = float(f8(ct)) percall_cumtime = -1 if cc == 0 else float(f8(ct/cc)) func_dict = { "ncalls": ncalls, "tottime": tottime, # time spent in this function alone "percall_tottime": percall_tottime, "cumtime": cumtime, # time spent in the function plus all functions that this function called, "percall_cumtime": percall_cumtime, "file_name": file, "line_number": line } func_dict_filtered = func_dict if not keys_filter else { key: func_dict[key] for key in keys_filter } pstats_dict[func_name] = func_dict_filtered return pstats_dict pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter(depth=6) pp.pprint(get_profile_dict(ps)) ``` will produce: ``` {"<method 'disable' of '_lsprof.Profiler' objects>": {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '~', 'line_number': 0, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'create_stats': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '/usr/local/Cellar/python/3.7.4/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.7/lib/python3.7/cProfile.py', 'line_number': 50, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'fib': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': 'get_profile_dict.py', 'line_number': 5, 'ncalls': '15/1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'total_tt': 0.0} ``` As an example, this can be used to generate a stacked column chart using various visualization tools which will assist in easily identifying program bottlenecks. https://bugs.python.org/issue37958 Automerge-Triggered-By: @gpshead
2020-01-15 18:51:54 -04:00
from test import support
from io import StringIO
from pstats import SortKey
from enum import StrEnum, _test_simple_enum
Merged revisions 60143-60149 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r60143 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 15:50:05 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 3 lines Switch mmap from old Py_FindMethod to new PyObject_GenericGetAttr attribute access. Fixes #1087735. ........ r60145 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:40:58 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Add blurb about executable scripts on Windows. #760657. ........ r60146 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:48:40 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1219903: fix tp_richcompare docs. ........ r60147 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 22:10:08 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Fix markup. ........ r60148 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-01-21 08:11:11 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 14 lines Provide a sanity check during PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() and PyThreadState_Delete() to avoid an infinite loop when the tstate list is messed up and has somehow becomes circular and does not contain the current thread. I don't know how this happens but it does, *very* rarely. On more than one hardware platform. I have not been able to reproduce it manually. Attaching to a process where its happening: it has always been in an infinite loop over a single element tstate list that is not the tstate we're looking to delete. It has been in t_bootstrap()'s call to PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() as a pthread is exiting. ........ r60149 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-21 11:24:59 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1269: fix a bug in pstats.add_callers() and add a unit test file for pstats. ........
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import os
bpo-37958: Adding get_profile_dict to pstats (GH-15495) pstats is really useful or profiling and printing the output of the execution of some block of code, but I've found on multiple occasions when I'd like to access this output directly in an easily usable dictionary on which I can further analyze or manipulate. The proposal is to add a function called get_profile_dict inside of pstats that'll automatically return this data the data in an easily accessible dict. The output of the following script: ``` import cProfile, pstats import pprint from pstats import func_std_string, f8 def fib(n): if n == 0: return 0 if n == 1: return 1 return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) pr = cProfile.Profile() pr.enable() fib(5) pr.create_stats() ps = pstats.Stats(pr).sort_stats('tottime', 'cumtime') def get_profile_dict(self, keys_filter=None): """ Returns a dict where the key is a function name and the value is a dict with the following keys: - ncalls - tottime - percall_tottime - cumtime - percall_cumtime - file_name - line_number keys_filter can be optionally set to limit the key-value pairs in the retrieved dict. """ pstats_dict = {} func_list = self.fcn_list[:] if self.fcn_list else list(self.stats.keys()) if not func_list: return pstats_dict pstats_dict["total_tt"] = float(f8(self.total_tt)) for func in func_list: cc, nc, tt, ct, callers = self.stats[func] file, line, func_name = func ncalls = str(nc) if nc == cc else (str(nc) + '/' + str(cc)) tottime = float(f8(tt)) percall_tottime = -1 if nc == 0 else float(f8(tt/nc)) cumtime = float(f8(ct)) percall_cumtime = -1 if cc == 0 else float(f8(ct/cc)) func_dict = { "ncalls": ncalls, "tottime": tottime, # time spent in this function alone "percall_tottime": percall_tottime, "cumtime": cumtime, # time spent in the function plus all functions that this function called, "percall_cumtime": percall_cumtime, "file_name": file, "line_number": line } func_dict_filtered = func_dict if not keys_filter else { key: func_dict[key] for key in keys_filter } pstats_dict[func_name] = func_dict_filtered return pstats_dict pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter(depth=6) pp.pprint(get_profile_dict(ps)) ``` will produce: ``` {"<method 'disable' of '_lsprof.Profiler' objects>": {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '~', 'line_number': 0, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'create_stats': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '/usr/local/Cellar/python/3.7.4/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.7/lib/python3.7/cProfile.py', 'line_number': 50, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'fib': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': 'get_profile_dict.py', 'line_number': 5, 'ncalls': '15/1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'total_tt': 0.0} ``` As an example, this can be used to generate a stacked column chart using various visualization tools which will assist in easily identifying program bottlenecks. https://bugs.python.org/issue37958 Automerge-Triggered-By: @gpshead
2020-01-15 18:51:54 -04:00
import pstats
import tempfile
bpo-37958: Adding get_profile_dict to pstats (GH-15495) pstats is really useful or profiling and printing the output of the execution of some block of code, but I've found on multiple occasions when I'd like to access this output directly in an easily usable dictionary on which I can further analyze or manipulate. The proposal is to add a function called get_profile_dict inside of pstats that'll automatically return this data the data in an easily accessible dict. The output of the following script: ``` import cProfile, pstats import pprint from pstats import func_std_string, f8 def fib(n): if n == 0: return 0 if n == 1: return 1 return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) pr = cProfile.Profile() pr.enable() fib(5) pr.create_stats() ps = pstats.Stats(pr).sort_stats('tottime', 'cumtime') def get_profile_dict(self, keys_filter=None): """ Returns a dict where the key is a function name and the value is a dict with the following keys: - ncalls - tottime - percall_tottime - cumtime - percall_cumtime - file_name - line_number keys_filter can be optionally set to limit the key-value pairs in the retrieved dict. """ pstats_dict = {} func_list = self.fcn_list[:] if self.fcn_list else list(self.stats.keys()) if not func_list: return pstats_dict pstats_dict["total_tt"] = float(f8(self.total_tt)) for func in func_list: cc, nc, tt, ct, callers = self.stats[func] file, line, func_name = func ncalls = str(nc) if nc == cc else (str(nc) + '/' + str(cc)) tottime = float(f8(tt)) percall_tottime = -1 if nc == 0 else float(f8(tt/nc)) cumtime = float(f8(ct)) percall_cumtime = -1 if cc == 0 else float(f8(ct/cc)) func_dict = { "ncalls": ncalls, "tottime": tottime, # time spent in this function alone "percall_tottime": percall_tottime, "cumtime": cumtime, # time spent in the function plus all functions that this function called, "percall_cumtime": percall_cumtime, "file_name": file, "line_number": line } func_dict_filtered = func_dict if not keys_filter else { key: func_dict[key] for key in keys_filter } pstats_dict[func_name] = func_dict_filtered return pstats_dict pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter(depth=6) pp.pprint(get_profile_dict(ps)) ``` will produce: ``` {"<method 'disable' of '_lsprof.Profiler' objects>": {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '~', 'line_number': 0, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'create_stats': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '/usr/local/Cellar/python/3.7.4/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.7/lib/python3.7/cProfile.py', 'line_number': 50, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'fib': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': 'get_profile_dict.py', 'line_number': 5, 'ncalls': '15/1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'total_tt': 0.0} ``` As an example, this can be used to generate a stacked column chart using various visualization tools which will assist in easily identifying program bottlenecks. https://bugs.python.org/issue37958 Automerge-Triggered-By: @gpshead
2020-01-15 18:51:54 -04:00
import cProfile
Merged revisions 60143-60149 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r60143 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 15:50:05 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 3 lines Switch mmap from old Py_FindMethod to new PyObject_GenericGetAttr attribute access. Fixes #1087735. ........ r60145 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:40:58 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Add blurb about executable scripts on Windows. #760657. ........ r60146 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:48:40 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1219903: fix tp_richcompare docs. ........ r60147 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 22:10:08 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Fix markup. ........ r60148 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-01-21 08:11:11 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 14 lines Provide a sanity check during PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() and PyThreadState_Delete() to avoid an infinite loop when the tstate list is messed up and has somehow becomes circular and does not contain the current thread. I don't know how this happens but it does, *very* rarely. On more than one hardware platform. I have not been able to reproduce it manually. Attaching to a process where its happening: it has always been in an infinite loop over a single element tstate list that is not the tstate we're looking to delete. It has been in t_bootstrap()'s call to PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() as a pthread is exiting. ........ r60149 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-21 11:24:59 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1269: fix a bug in pstats.add_callers() and add a unit test file for pstats. ........
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class AddCallersTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
"""Tests for pstats.add_callers helper."""
def test_combine_results(self):
# pstats.add_callers should combine the call results of both target
# and source by adding the call time. See issue1269.
# new format: used by the cProfile module
Merged revisions 60143-60149 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r60143 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 15:50:05 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 3 lines Switch mmap from old Py_FindMethod to new PyObject_GenericGetAttr attribute access. Fixes #1087735. ........ r60145 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:40:58 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Add blurb about executable scripts on Windows. #760657. ........ r60146 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:48:40 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1219903: fix tp_richcompare docs. ........ r60147 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 22:10:08 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Fix markup. ........ r60148 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-01-21 08:11:11 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 14 lines Provide a sanity check during PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() and PyThreadState_Delete() to avoid an infinite loop when the tstate list is messed up and has somehow becomes circular and does not contain the current thread. I don't know how this happens but it does, *very* rarely. On more than one hardware platform. I have not been able to reproduce it manually. Attaching to a process where its happening: it has always been in an infinite loop over a single element tstate list that is not the tstate we're looking to delete. It has been in t_bootstrap()'s call to PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() as a pthread is exiting. ........ r60149 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-21 11:24:59 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1269: fix a bug in pstats.add_callers() and add a unit test file for pstats. ........
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target = {"a": (1, 2, 3, 4)}
source = {"a": (1, 2, 3, 4), "b": (5, 6, 7, 8)}
new_callers = pstats.add_callers(target, source)
self.assertEqual(new_callers, {'a': (2, 4, 6, 8), 'b': (5, 6, 7, 8)})
# old format: used by the profile module
target = {"a": 1}
source = {"a": 1, "b": 5}
new_callers = pstats.add_callers(target, source)
self.assertEqual(new_callers, {'a': 2, 'b': 5})
Merged revisions 60143-60149 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r60143 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 15:50:05 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 3 lines Switch mmap from old Py_FindMethod to new PyObject_GenericGetAttr attribute access. Fixes #1087735. ........ r60145 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:40:58 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Add blurb about executable scripts on Windows. #760657. ........ r60146 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:48:40 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1219903: fix tp_richcompare docs. ........ r60147 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 22:10:08 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Fix markup. ........ r60148 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-01-21 08:11:11 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 14 lines Provide a sanity check during PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() and PyThreadState_Delete() to avoid an infinite loop when the tstate list is messed up and has somehow becomes circular and does not contain the current thread. I don't know how this happens but it does, *very* rarely. On more than one hardware platform. I have not been able to reproduce it manually. Attaching to a process where its happening: it has always been in an infinite loop over a single element tstate list that is not the tstate we're looking to delete. It has been in t_bootstrap()'s call to PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() as a pthread is exiting. ........ r60149 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-21 11:24:59 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1269: fix a bug in pstats.add_callers() and add a unit test file for pstats. ........
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class StatsTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
stats_file = support.findfile('pstats.pck')
self.stats = pstats.Stats(stats_file)
def test_add(self):
stream = StringIO()
stats = pstats.Stats(stream=stream)
stats.add(self.stats, self.stats)
def test_dump_and_load_works_correctly(self):
temp_storage_new = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(delete=False)
try:
self.stats.dump_stats(filename=temp_storage_new.name)
tmp_stats = pstats.Stats(temp_storage_new.name)
self.assertEqual(self.stats.stats, tmp_stats.stats)
finally:
temp_storage_new.close()
os.remove(temp_storage_new.name)
def test_load_equivalent_to_init(self):
stats = pstats.Stats()
self.temp_storage = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(delete=False)
try:
cProfile.run('import os', filename=self.temp_storage.name)
stats.load_stats(self.temp_storage.name)
created = pstats.Stats(self.temp_storage.name)
self.assertEqual(stats.stats, created.stats)
finally:
self.temp_storage.close()
os.remove(self.temp_storage.name)
def test_loading_wrong_types(self):
stats = pstats.Stats()
with self.assertRaises(TypeError):
stats.load_stats(42)
def test_sort_stats_int(self):
valid_args = {-1: 'stdname',
0: 'calls',
1: 'time',
2: 'cumulative'}
for arg_int, arg_str in valid_args.items():
self.stats.sort_stats(arg_int)
self.assertEqual(self.stats.sort_type,
self.stats.sort_arg_dict_default[arg_str][-1])
def test_sort_stats_string(self):
for sort_name in ['calls', 'ncalls', 'cumtime', 'cumulative',
'filename', 'line', 'module', 'name', 'nfl', 'pcalls',
'stdname', 'time', 'tottime']:
self.stats.sort_stats(sort_name)
self.assertEqual(self.stats.sort_type,
self.stats.sort_arg_dict_default[sort_name][-1])
def test_sort_stats_partial(self):
sortkey = 'filename'
for sort_name in ['f', 'fi', 'fil', 'file', 'filen', 'filena',
'filenam', 'filename']:
self.stats.sort_stats(sort_name)
self.assertEqual(self.stats.sort_type,
self.stats.sort_arg_dict_default[sortkey][-1])
def test_sort_stats_enum(self):
for member in SortKey:
self.stats.sort_stats(member)
self.assertEqual(
self.stats.sort_type,
self.stats.sort_arg_dict_default[member.value][-1])
class CheckedSortKey(StrEnum):
CALLS = 'calls', 'ncalls'
CUMULATIVE = 'cumulative', 'cumtime'
FILENAME = 'filename', 'module'
LINE = 'line'
NAME = 'name'
NFL = 'nfl'
PCALLS = 'pcalls'
STDNAME = 'stdname'
TIME = 'time', 'tottime'
def __new__(cls, *values):
value = values[0]
obj = str.__new__(cls, value)
obj._value_ = value
for other_value in values[1:]:
cls._value2member_map_[other_value] = obj
obj._all_values = values
return obj
_test_simple_enum(CheckedSortKey, SortKey)
def test_sort_starts_mix(self):
self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.stats.sort_stats,
'calls',
SortKey.TIME)
self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.stats.sort_stats,
SortKey.TIME,
'calls')
bpo-37958: Adding get_profile_dict to pstats (GH-15495) pstats is really useful or profiling and printing the output of the execution of some block of code, but I've found on multiple occasions when I'd like to access this output directly in an easily usable dictionary on which I can further analyze or manipulate. The proposal is to add a function called get_profile_dict inside of pstats that'll automatically return this data the data in an easily accessible dict. The output of the following script: ``` import cProfile, pstats import pprint from pstats import func_std_string, f8 def fib(n): if n == 0: return 0 if n == 1: return 1 return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) pr = cProfile.Profile() pr.enable() fib(5) pr.create_stats() ps = pstats.Stats(pr).sort_stats('tottime', 'cumtime') def get_profile_dict(self, keys_filter=None): """ Returns a dict where the key is a function name and the value is a dict with the following keys: - ncalls - tottime - percall_tottime - cumtime - percall_cumtime - file_name - line_number keys_filter can be optionally set to limit the key-value pairs in the retrieved dict. """ pstats_dict = {} func_list = self.fcn_list[:] if self.fcn_list else list(self.stats.keys()) if not func_list: return pstats_dict pstats_dict["total_tt"] = float(f8(self.total_tt)) for func in func_list: cc, nc, tt, ct, callers = self.stats[func] file, line, func_name = func ncalls = str(nc) if nc == cc else (str(nc) + '/' + str(cc)) tottime = float(f8(tt)) percall_tottime = -1 if nc == 0 else float(f8(tt/nc)) cumtime = float(f8(ct)) percall_cumtime = -1 if cc == 0 else float(f8(ct/cc)) func_dict = { "ncalls": ncalls, "tottime": tottime, # time spent in this function alone "percall_tottime": percall_tottime, "cumtime": cumtime, # time spent in the function plus all functions that this function called, "percall_cumtime": percall_cumtime, "file_name": file, "line_number": line } func_dict_filtered = func_dict if not keys_filter else { key: func_dict[key] for key in keys_filter } pstats_dict[func_name] = func_dict_filtered return pstats_dict pp = pprint.PrettyPrinter(depth=6) pp.pprint(get_profile_dict(ps)) ``` will produce: ``` {"<method 'disable' of '_lsprof.Profiler' objects>": {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '~', 'line_number': 0, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'create_stats': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': '/usr/local/Cellar/python/3.7.4/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.7/lib/python3.7/cProfile.py', 'line_number': 50, 'ncalls': '1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'fib': {'cumtime': 0.0, 'file_name': 'get_profile_dict.py', 'line_number': 5, 'ncalls': '15/1', 'percall_cumtime': 0.0, 'percall_tottime': 0.0, 'tottime': 0.0}, 'total_tt': 0.0} ``` As an example, this can be used to generate a stacked column chart using various visualization tools which will assist in easily identifying program bottlenecks. https://bugs.python.org/issue37958 Automerge-Triggered-By: @gpshead
2020-01-15 18:51:54 -04:00
def test_get_stats_profile(self):
def pass1(): pass
def pass2(): pass
def pass3(): pass
pr = cProfile.Profile()
pr.enable()
pass1()
pass2()
pass3()
pr.create_stats()
ps = pstats.Stats(pr)
stats_profile = ps.get_stats_profile()
funcs_called = set(stats_profile.func_profiles.keys())
self.assertIn('pass1', funcs_called)
self.assertIn('pass2', funcs_called)
self.assertIn('pass3', funcs_called)
def test_SortKey_enum(self):
self.assertEqual(SortKey.FILENAME, 'filename')
self.assertNotEqual(SortKey.FILENAME, SortKey.CALLS)
Merged revisions 60143-60149 via svnmerge from svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk ........ r60143 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 15:50:05 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 3 lines Switch mmap from old Py_FindMethod to new PyObject_GenericGetAttr attribute access. Fixes #1087735. ........ r60145 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:40:58 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Add blurb about executable scripts on Windows. #760657. ........ r60146 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 20:48:40 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1219903: fix tp_richcompare docs. ........ r60147 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-20 22:10:08 +0100 (Sun, 20 Jan 2008) | 2 lines Fix markup. ........ r60148 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-01-21 08:11:11 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 14 lines Provide a sanity check during PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() and PyThreadState_Delete() to avoid an infinite loop when the tstate list is messed up and has somehow becomes circular and does not contain the current thread. I don't know how this happens but it does, *very* rarely. On more than one hardware platform. I have not been able to reproduce it manually. Attaching to a process where its happening: it has always been in an infinite loop over a single element tstate list that is not the tstate we're looking to delete. It has been in t_bootstrap()'s call to PyThreadState_DeleteCurrent() as a pthread is exiting. ........ r60149 | georg.brandl | 2008-01-21 11:24:59 +0100 (Mon, 21 Jan 2008) | 2 lines #1269: fix a bug in pstats.add_callers() and add a unit test file for pstats. ........
2008-01-21 07:20:28 -04:00
if __name__ == "__main__":
unittest.main()