The fix to profile semantics broke the miserable but advertised way to

derive Profile subclasses.  This patch repairs that, restoring
negative tuple indices.  Yuck?  You bet.
This commit is contained in:
Tim Peters 2001-10-05 23:15:10 +00:00
parent 23d192e652
commit df5cfd884d
1 changed files with 25 additions and 24 deletions

View File

@ -109,21 +109,22 @@ class Profile:
avoid contaminating the program that we are profiling. (old profiler
used to write into the frames local dictionary!!) Derived classes
can change the definition of some entries, as long as they leave
[3:] intact.
[-2:] intact (frame and previous tuple). In case an internal error is
detected, the -3 element is used as the function name.
[0] = Time that needs to be charged to the parent frame's function.
It is used so that a function call will not have to access the
timing data for the parent frame.
[1] = Total time spent in this frame's function, excluding time in
subfunctions
[2] = Cumulative time spent in this frame's function, including time in
all subfunctions to this frame (but excluding this frame!).
[3] = Name of the function that corresponds to this frame.
[4] = Actual frame that we correspond to (used to sync exception handling)
[5] = Our parent 6-tuple (corresponds to frame.f_back)
[ 0] = Time that needs to be charged to the parent frame's function.
It is used so that a function call will not have to access the
timing data for the parent frame.
[ 1] = Total time spent in this frame's function, excluding time in
subfunctions
[ 2] = Cumulative time spent in this frame's function, including time in
all subfunctions to this frame.
[-3] = Name of the function that corresponds to this frame.
[-2] = Actual frame that we correspond to (used to sync exception handling)
[-1] = Our parent 6-tuple (corresponds to frame.f_back)
Timing data for each function is stored as a 5-tuple in the dictionary
self.timings[]. The index is always the name stored in self.cur[4].
self.timings[]. The index is always the name stored in self.cur[-3].
The following are the definitions of the members:
[0] = The number of times this function was called, not counting direct
@ -248,16 +249,16 @@ class Profile:
def trace_dispatch_call(self, frame, t):
if self.cur and frame.f_back is not self.cur[4]:
if self.cur and frame.f_back is not self.cur[-2]:
rt, rtt, rct, rfn, rframe, rcur = self.cur
if not isinstance(rframe, Profile.fake_frame):
if rframe.f_back is not frame.f_back:
print rframe, rframe.f_back
print frame, frame.f_back
raise "Bad call", self.cur[3]
raise "Bad call", self.cur[-3]
self.trace_dispatch_return(rframe, 0)
if self.cur and frame.f_back is not self.cur[4]:
raise "Bad call[2]", self.cur[3]
if self.cur and frame.f_back is not self.cur[-2]:
raise "Bad call[2]", self.cur[-3]
fcode = frame.f_code
fn = (fcode.co_filename, fcode.co_firstlineno, fcode.co_name)
self.cur = (t, 0, 0, fn, frame, self.cur)
@ -270,11 +271,11 @@ class Profile:
return 1
def trace_dispatch_return(self, frame, t):
if frame is not self.cur[4]:
if frame is self.cur[4].f_back:
self.trace_dispatch_return(self.cur[4], 0)
if frame is not self.cur[-2]:
if frame is self.cur[-2].f_back:
self.trace_dispatch_return(self.cur[-2], 0)
else:
raise "Bad return", self.cur[3]
raise "Bad return", self.cur[-3]
# Prefix "r" means part of the Returning or exiting frame
# Prefix "p" means part of the Previous or older frame
@ -317,7 +318,7 @@ class Profile:
# very nice :-).
def set_cmd(self, cmd):
if self.cur[5]: return # already set
if self.cur[-1]: return # already set
self.cmd = cmd
self.simulate_call(cmd)
@ -339,7 +340,7 @@ class Profile:
def simulate_call(self, name):
code = self.fake_code('profile', 0, name)
if self.cur:
pframe = self.cur[4]
pframe = self.cur[-2]
else:
pframe = None
frame = self.fake_frame(code, pframe)
@ -352,10 +353,10 @@ class Profile:
def simulate_cmd_complete(self):
get_time = self.get_time
t = get_time() - self.t
while self.cur[5]:
while self.cur[-1]:
# We *can* cause assertion errors here if
# dispatch_trace_return checks for a frame match!
a = self.dispatch['return'](self, self.cur[4], t)
a = self.dispatch['return'](self, self.cur[-2], t)
t = 0
self.t = get_time() - t