1ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<?xml version="1.0"?> <!-- -*- sgml -*- -->
2ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
3ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"
4ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown[ <!ENTITY % vg-entities SYSTEM "/docs/xml/vg-entities.xml"> %vg-entities; ]>
5ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
6436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<!-- Referenced from both the manual and manpage -->
7436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<chapter id="&vg-cg-manual-id;" xreflabel="&vg-cg-manual-label;">
8ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Cachegrind: a cache and branch-prediction profiler</title>
9ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
10ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>To use this tool, you must specify
11ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--tool=cachegrind</option> on the
12ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownValgrind command line.</para>
13ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
14ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.overview" xreflabel="Overview">
15ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Overview</title>
16ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
17ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Cachegrind simulates how your program interacts with a machine's cache
18ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhierarchy and (optionally) branch predictor.  It simulates a machine with
19ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownindependent first-level instruction and data caches (I1 and D1), backed by a
20ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownunified second-level cache (L2).  This exactly matches the configuration of
21ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownmany modern machines.</para>
22ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
23436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<para>However, some modern machines have three or four levels of cache.  For these
24ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownmachines (in the cases where Cachegrind can auto-detect the cache
25436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanovconfiguration) Cachegrind simulates the first-level and last-level caches.
26436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy IvanovThe reason for this choice is that the last-level cache has the most influence on
27ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownruntime, as it masks accesses to main memory.  Furthermore, the L1 caches
28ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownoften have low associativity, so simulating them can detect cases where the
29ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncode interacts badly with this cache (eg. traversing a matrix column-wise
30ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwith the row length being a power of 2).</para>
31ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
32ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Therefore, Cachegrind always refers to the I1, D1 and LL (last-level)
33ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncaches.</para>
34ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
35ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
36ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCachegrind gathers the following statistics (abbreviations used for each statistic
37ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownis given in parentheses):</para>
38ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
39ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
40ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>I cache reads (<computeroutput>Ir</computeroutput>,
41ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    which equals the number of instructions executed),
42ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    I1 cache read misses (<computeroutput>I1mr</computeroutput>) and
43ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    LL cache instruction read misses (<computeroutput>ILmr</computeroutput>).
44ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </para>
45ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
46ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
47ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>D cache reads (<computeroutput>Dr</computeroutput>, which
48ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    equals the number of memory reads),
49ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    D1 cache read misses (<computeroutput>D1mr</computeroutput>), and
50ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    LL cache data read misses (<computeroutput>DLmr</computeroutput>).
51ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </para>
52ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
53ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
54ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>D cache writes (<computeroutput>Dw</computeroutput>, which equals
55ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    the number of memory writes),
56ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    D1 cache write misses (<computeroutput>D1mw</computeroutput>), and
57ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    LL cache data write misses (<computeroutput>DLmw</computeroutput>).
58ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </para>
59ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
60ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
61ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Conditional branches executed (<computeroutput>Bc</computeroutput>) and
62ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    conditional branches mispredicted (<computeroutput>Bcm</computeroutput>).
63ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </para>
64ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
65ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
66ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Indirect branches executed (<computeroutput>Bi</computeroutput>) and
67ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    indirect branches mispredicted (<computeroutput>Bim</computeroutput>).
68ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </para>
69ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
70ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
71ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
72ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Note that D1 total accesses is given by
73ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>D1mr</computeroutput> +
74ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>D1mw</computeroutput>, and that LL total
75ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownaccesses is given by <computeroutput>ILmr</computeroutput> +
76ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>DLmr</computeroutput> +
77ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>DLmw</computeroutput>.
78ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
79ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
80ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>These statistics are presented for the entire program and for each
81ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfunction in the program.  You can also annotate each line of source code in
82ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe program with the counts that were caused directly by it.</para>
83ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
84ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>On a modern machine, an L1 miss will typically cost
85ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownaround 10 cycles, an LL miss can cost as much as 200
86ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncycles, and a mispredicted branch costs in the region of 10
87ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownto 30 cycles.  Detailed cache and branch profiling can be very useful
88ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfor understanding how your program interacts with the machine and thus how
89ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownto make it faster.</para>
90ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
91ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Also, since one instruction cache read is performed per
92ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninstruction executed, you can find out how many instructions are
93ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownexecuted per line, which can be useful for traditional profiling.</para>
94ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
95ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
96ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
97ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
98ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
99ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.profile"
100ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="Using Cachegrind, cg_annotate and cg_merge">
101ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Using Cachegrind, cg_annotate and cg_merge</title>
102ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
103ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>First off, as for normal Valgrind use, you probably want to
104ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncompile with debugging info (the
105ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>-g</option> option).  But by contrast with
106ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownnormal Valgrind use, you probably do want to turn
107ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownoptimisation on, since you should profile your program as it will
108ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbe normally run.</para>
109ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
110ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Then, you need to run Cachegrind itself to gather the profiling
111ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninformation, and then run cg_annotate to get a detailed presentation of that
112ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninformation.  As an optional intermediate step, you can use cg_merge to sum
113ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browntogether the outputs of multiple Cachegrind runs into a single file which
114ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownyou then use as the input for cg_annotate.  Alternatively, you can use
115436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanovcg_diff to difference the outputs of two Cachegrind runs into a single file
116ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwhich you then use as the input for cg_annotate.</para>
117ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
118ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
119ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.running-cachegrind" xreflabel="Running Cachegrind">
120ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Running Cachegrind</title>
121ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
122ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>To run Cachegrind on a program <filename>prog</filename>, run:</para>
123ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<screen><![CDATA[
124ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownvalgrind --tool=cachegrind prog
125ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown]]></screen>
126ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
127ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The program will execute (slowly).  Upon completion,
128ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsummary statistics that look like this will be printed:</para>
129ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
130ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
131ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== I   refs:      27,742,716
132ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== I1  misses:           276
133ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== LLi misses:           275
134ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== I1  miss rate:        0.0%
135ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== LLi miss rate:        0.0%
136ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== 
137ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== D   refs:      15,430,290  (10,955,517 rd + 4,474,773 wr)
138ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== D1  misses:        41,185  (    21,905 rd +    19,280 wr)
139ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== LLd misses:        23,085  (     3,987 rd +    19,098 wr)
140ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== D1  miss rate:        0.2% (       0.1%   +       0.4%)
141ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== LLd miss rate:        0.1% (       0.0%   +       0.4%)
142ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== 
143ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== LL misses:         23,360  (     4,262 rd +    19,098 wr)
144ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown==31751== LL miss rate:         0.0% (       0.0%   +       0.4%)]]></programlisting>
145ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
146ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Cache accesses for instruction fetches are summarised
147ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfirst, giving the number of fetches made (this is the number of
148ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninstructions executed, which can be useful to know in its own
149ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownright), the number of I1 misses, and the number of LL instruction
150ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown(<computeroutput>LLi</computeroutput>) misses.</para>
151ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
152ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Cache accesses for data follow. The information is similar
153ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownto that of the instruction fetches, except that the values are
154ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownalso shown split between reads and writes (note each row's
155ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>rd</computeroutput> and
156ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>wr</computeroutput> values add up to the row's
157ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browntotal).</para>
158ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
159ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Combined instruction and data figures for the LL cache
160ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfollow that.  Note that the LL miss rate is computed relative to the total
161ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownnumber of memory accesses, not the number of L1 misses.  I.e.  it is
162ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>(ILmr + DLmr + DLmw) / (Ir + Dr + Dw)</computeroutput>
163ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownnot
164ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>(ILmr + DLmr + DLmw) / (I1mr + D1mr + D1mw)</computeroutput>
165ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
166ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
167ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Branch prediction statistics are not collected by default.
168ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownTo do so, add the option <option>--branch-sim=yes</option>.</para>
169ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
170ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
171ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
172ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
173ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.outputfile" xreflabel="Output File">
174ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Output File</title>
175ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
176ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>As well as printing summary information, Cachegrind also writes
177ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownmore detailed profiling information to a file.  By default this file is named
178ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<filename>cachegrind.out.&lt;pid&gt;</filename> (where
179ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<filename>&lt;pid&gt;</filename> is the program's process ID), but its name
180ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncan be changed with the <option>--cachegrind-out-file</option> option.  This
181ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfile is human-readable, but is intended to be interpreted by the
182ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownaccompanying program cg_annotate, described in the next section.</para>
183ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
184ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The default <computeroutput>.&lt;pid&gt;</computeroutput> suffix
185ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownon the output file name serves two purposes.  Firstly, it means you 
186ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndon't have to rename old log files that you don't want to overwrite.  
187ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownSecondly, and more importantly, it allows correct profiling with the
188ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--trace-children=yes</option> option of
189ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprograms that spawn child processes.</para>
190ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
191ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The output file can be big, many megabytes for large applications
192ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbuilt with full debugging information.</para>
193ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
194ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
195ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
196ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
197ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  
198ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.running-cg_annotate" xreflabel="Running cg_annotate">
199ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Running cg_annotate</title>
200ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
201ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Before using cg_annotate,
202ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownit is worth widening your window to be at least 120-characters
203ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwide if possible, as the output lines can be quite long.</para>
204ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
205ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>To get a function-by-function summary, run:</para>
206ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
207ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<screen>cg_annotate &lt;filename&gt;</screen>
208ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
209ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>on a Cachegrind output file.</para>
210ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
211ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
212ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
213ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
214ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.the-output-preamble" xreflabel="The Output Preamble">
215ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>The Output Preamble</title>
216ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
217ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The first part of the output looks like this:</para>
218ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
219ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
220ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
221ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownI1 cache:              65536 B, 64 B, 2-way associative
222ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownD1 cache:              65536 B, 64 B, 2-way associative
223ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownLL cache:              262144 B, 64 B, 8-way associative
224ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCommand:               concord vg_to_ucode.c
225ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownEvents recorded:       Ir I1mr ILmr Dr D1mr DLmr Dw D1mw DLmw
226ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownEvents shown:          Ir I1mr ILmr Dr D1mr DLmr Dw D1mw DLmw
227ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownEvent sort order:      Ir I1mr ILmr Dr D1mr DLmr Dw D1mw DLmw
228ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThreshold:             99%
229ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownChosen for annotation:
230ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownAuto-annotation:       off
231ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown]]></programlisting>
232ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
233ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
234ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>This is a summary of the annotation options:</para>
235ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown                    
236ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
237ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
238ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
239ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>I1 cache, D1 cache, LL cache: cache configuration.  So
240ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    you know the configuration with which these results were
241ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    obtained.</para>
242ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
243ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
244ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
245ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Command: the command line invocation of the program
246ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      under examination.</para>
247ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
248ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
249ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
250ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown   <para>Events recorded: which events were recorded.</para>
251ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
252ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown </listitem>
253ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
254ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown <listitem>
255ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown   <para>Events shown: the events shown, which is a subset of the events
256ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown   gathered.  This can be adjusted with the
257ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown   <option>--show</option> option.</para>
258ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
259ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
260ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
261ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Event sort order: the sort order in which functions are
262ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    shown.  For example, in this case the functions are sorted
263ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    from highest <computeroutput>Ir</computeroutput> counts to
264ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    lowest.  If two functions have identical
265ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>Ir</computeroutput> counts, they will then be
266ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    sorted by <computeroutput>I1mr</computeroutput> counts, and
267ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    so on.  This order can be adjusted with the
268ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <option>--sort</option> option.</para>
269ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
270ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Note that this dictates the order the functions appear.
271ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    It is <emphasis>not</emphasis> the order in which the columns
272ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    appear; that is dictated by the "events shown" line (and can
273ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    be changed with the <option>--show</option>
274ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    option).</para>
275ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
276ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
277ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
278ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Threshold: cg_annotate
279ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    by default omits functions that cause very low counts
280ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    to avoid drowning you in information.  In this case,
281ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    cg_annotate shows summaries the functions that account for
282ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    99% of the <computeroutput>Ir</computeroutput> counts;
283ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>Ir</computeroutput> is chosen as the
284ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    threshold event since it is the primary sort event.  The
285ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    threshold can be adjusted with the
286ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <option>--threshold</option>
287ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    option.</para>
288ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
289ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
290ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
291ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Chosen for annotation: names of files specified
292ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    manually for annotation; in this case none.</para>
293ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
294ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
295ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
296ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Auto-annotation: whether auto-annotation was requested
297ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    via the <option>--auto=yes</option>
298ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    option. In this case no.</para>
299ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
300ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
301ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
302ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
303ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
304ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
305ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
306ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.the-global"
307ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="The Global and Function-level Counts">
308ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>The Global and Function-level Counts</title>
309ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
310ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Then follows summary statistics for the whole
311ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprogram:</para>
312ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  
313ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
314ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
315ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIr         I1mr ILmr Dr         D1mr   DLmr  Dw        D1mw   DLmw
316ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
317ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown27,742,716  276  275 10,955,517 21,905 3,987 4,474,773 19,280 19,098  PROGRAM TOTALS]]></programlisting>
318ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
319ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
320ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThese are similar to the summary provided when Cachegrind finishes running.
321ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
322ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
323ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Then comes function-by-function statistics:</para>
324ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
325ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
326ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
327ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIr        I1mr ILmr Dr        D1mr  DLmr  Dw        D1mw   DLmw    file:function
328ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
329ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown8,821,482    5    5 2,242,702 1,621    73 1,794,230      0      0  getc.c:_IO_getc
330ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown5,222,023    4    4 2,276,334    16    12   875,959      1      1  concord.c:get_word
331ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown2,649,248    2    2 1,344,810 7,326 1,385         .      .      .  vg_main.c:strcmp
332ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown2,521,927    2    2   591,215     0     0   179,398      0      0  concord.c:hash
333ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown2,242,740    2    2 1,046,612   568    22   448,548      0      0  ctype.c:tolower
334ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown1,496,937    4    4   630,874 9,000 1,400   279,388      0      0  concord.c:insert
335ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  897,991   51   51   897,831    95    30        62      1      1  ???:???
336ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  598,068    1    1   299,034     0     0   149,517      0      0  /sysdeps/generic/lockfile.c:__flockfile
337ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  598,068    0    0   299,034     0     0   149,517      0      0  /sysdeps/generic/lockfile.c:__funlockfile
338ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  598,024    4    4   213,580    35    16   149,506      0      0  vg_clientmalloc.c:malloc
339ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  446,587    1    1   215,973 2,167   430   129,948 14,057 13,957  concord.c:add_existing
340ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  341,760    2    2   128,160     0     0   128,160      0      0  vg_clientmalloc.c:vg_trap_here_WRAPPER
341ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  320,782    4    4   150,711   276     0    56,027     53     53  concord.c:init_hash_table
342ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  298,998    1    1   106,785     0     0    64,071      1      1  concord.c:create
343ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  149,518    0    0   149,516     0     0         1      0      0  ???:tolower@@GLIBC_2.0
344ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  149,518    0    0   149,516     0     0         1      0      0  ???:fgetc@@GLIBC_2.0
345ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown   95,983    4    4    38,031     0     0    34,409  3,152  3,150  concord.c:new_word_node
346ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown   85,440    0    0    42,720     0     0    21,360      0      0  vg_clientmalloc.c:vg_bogus_epilogue]]></programlisting>
347ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
348ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Each function
349ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownis identified by a
350ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>file_name:function_name</computeroutput> pair. If
351ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browna column contains only a dot it means the function never performs
352ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthat event (e.g. the third row shows that
353ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>strcmp()</computeroutput> contains no
354ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninstructions that write to memory). The name
355436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<computeroutput>???</computeroutput> is used if the file name
356ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownand/or function name could not be determined from debugging
357ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninformation. If most of the entries have the form
358ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>???:???</computeroutput> the program probably
359ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwasn't compiled with <option>-g</option>.</para>
360ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
361ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>It is worth noting that functions will come both from
362ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe profiled program (e.g. <filename>concord.c</filename>)
363ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownand from libraries (e.g. <filename>getc.c</filename>)</para>
364ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
365ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
366ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
367ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
368ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.line-by-line" xreflabel="Line-by-line Counts">
369ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Line-by-line Counts</title>
370ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
371ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>There are two ways to annotate source files -- by specifying them
372ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownmanually as arguments to cg_annotate, or with the
373ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--auto=yes</option> option.  For example, the output from running
374ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<filename>cg_annotate &lt;filename&gt; concord.c</filename> for our example
375ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownproduces the same output as above followed by an annotated version of
376ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<filename>concord.c</filename>, a section of which looks like:</para>
377ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
378ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
379ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
380ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown-- User-annotated source: concord.c
381ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
382ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIr        I1mr ILmr Dr      D1mr  DLmr  Dw      D1mw   DLmw
383ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
384ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .  void init_hash_table(char *file_name, Word_Node *table[])
385ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        3    1    1       .     .     .       1      0      0  {
386ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .      FILE *file_ptr;
387ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .      Word_Info *data;
388ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        1    0    0       .     .     .       1      1      1      int line = 1, i;
389ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .
390ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        5    0    0       .     .     .       3      0      0      data = (Word_Info *) create(sizeof(Word_Info));
391ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .
392ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    4,991    0    0   1,995     0     0     998      0      0      for (i = 0; i < TABLE_SIZE; i++)
393ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    3,988    1    1   1,994     0     0     997     53     52          table[i] = NULL;
394ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .
395ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .      /* Open file, check it. */
396ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        6    0    0       1     0     0       4      0      0      file_ptr = fopen(file_name, "r");
397ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        2    0    0       1     0     0       .      .      .      if (!(file_ptr)) {
398ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .          fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't open '%s'.\n", file_name);
399ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        1    1    1       .     .     .       .      .      .          exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
400ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .      }
401ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .
402ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  165,062    1    1  73,360     0     0  91,700      0      0      while ((line = get_word(data, line, file_ptr)) != EOF)
403ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  146,712    0    0  73,356     0     0  73,356      0      0          insert(data->;word, data->line, table);
404ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        .    .    .       .     .     .       .      .      .
405ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        4    0    0       1     0     0       2      0      0      free(data);
406ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        4    0    0       1     0     0       2      0      0      fclose(file_ptr);
407ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        3    0    0       2     0     0       .      .      .  }]]></programlisting>
408ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
409ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>(Although column widths are automatically minimised, a wide
410ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownterminal is clearly useful.)</para>
411ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  
412ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Each source file is clearly marked
413ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown(<computeroutput>User-annotated source</computeroutput>) as
414ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhaving been chosen manually for annotation.  If the file was
415ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfound in one of the directories specified with the
416ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>-I</option>/<option>--include</option> option, the directory
417ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownand file are both given.</para>
418ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
419ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Each line is annotated with its event counts.  Events not
420ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownapplicable for a line are represented by a dot.  This is useful
421ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfor distinguishing between an event which cannot happen, and one
422ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwhich can but did not.</para>
423ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
424ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Sometimes only a small section of a source file is
425ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownexecuted.  To minimise uninteresting output, Cachegrind only shows
426ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownannotated lines and lines within a small distance of annotated
427ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownlines.  Gaps are marked with the line numbers so you know which
428ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownpart of a file the shown code comes from, eg:</para>
429ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
430ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
431ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown(figures and code for line 704)
432ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown-- line 704 ----------------------------------------
433ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown-- line 878 ----------------------------------------
434ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown(figures and code for line 878)]]></programlisting>
435ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
436ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The amount of context to show around annotated lines is
437ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncontrolled by the <option>--context</option>
438ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownoption.</para>
439ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
440ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>To get automatic annotation, use the <option>--auto=yes</option> option.
441ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_annotate will automatically annotate every source file it can
442ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfind that is mentioned in the function-by-function summary.
443ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownTherefore, the files chosen for auto-annotation are affected by
444ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe <option>--sort</option> and
445ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--threshold</option> options.  Each
446ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsource file is clearly marked (<computeroutput>Auto-annotated
447ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsource</computeroutput>) as being chosen automatically.  Any
448ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfiles that could not be found are mentioned at the end of the
449ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownoutput, eg:</para>
450ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
451ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
452ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown------------------------------------------------------------------
453ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThe following files chosen for auto-annotation could not be found:
454ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown------------------------------------------------------------------
455ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  getc.c
456ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  ctype.c
457ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  /sysdeps/generic/lockfile.c]]></programlisting>
458ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
459ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>This is quite common for library files, since libraries are
460ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownusually compiled with debugging information, but the source files
461ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownare often not present on a system.  If a file is chosen for
462ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownannotation both manually and automatically, it
463ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownis marked as <computeroutput>User-annotated
464ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsource</computeroutput>. Use the
465ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>-I</option>/<option>--include</option> option to tell Valgrind where
466ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownto look for source files if the filenames found from the debugging
467ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninformation aren't specific enough.</para>
468ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
469ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Beware that cg_annotate can take some time to digest large
470ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<filename>cachegrind.out.&lt;pid&gt;</filename> files,
471ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browne.g. 30 seconds or more.  Also beware that auto-annotation can
472ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownproduce a lot of output if your program is large!</para>
473ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
474ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
475ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
476ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
477ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.assembler" xreflabel="Annotating Assembly Code Programs">
478ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Annotating Assembly Code Programs</title>
479ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
480ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Valgrind can annotate assembly code programs too, or annotate
481ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe assembly code generated for your C program.  Sometimes this is
482ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownuseful for understanding what is really happening when an
483ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninteresting line of C code is translated into multiple
484ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninstructions.</para>
485ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
486ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>To do this, you just need to assemble your
487ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>.s</computeroutput> files with assembly-level debug
488ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninformation.  You can use compile with the <option>-S</option> to compile C/C++
489ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprograms to assembly code, and then assemble the assembly code files with
490ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>-g</option> to achieve this.  You can then profile and annotate the
491ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownassembly code source files in the same way as C/C++ source files.</para>
492ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
493ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
494ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
495ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="ms-manual.forkingprograms" xreflabel="Forking Programs">
496ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Forking Programs</title>
497ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>If your program forks, the child will inherit all the profiling data that
498ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhas been gathered for the parent.</para>
499ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
500ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>If the output file format string (controlled by
501ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--cachegrind-out-file</option>) does not contain <option>%p</option>,
502ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthen the outputs from the parent and child will be intermingled in a single
503ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownoutput file, which will almost certainly make it unreadable by
504ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_annotate.</para>
505ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
506ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
507ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
508ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.annopts.warnings" xreflabel="cg_annotate Warnings">
509ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>cg_annotate Warnings</title>
510ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
511ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>There are a couple of situations in which
512ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_annotate issues warnings.</para>
513ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
514ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
515ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
516ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>If a source file is more recent than the
517ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>cachegrind.out.&lt;pid&gt;</filename> file.
518ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    This is because the information in
519ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>cachegrind.out.&lt;pid&gt;</filename> is only
520ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    recorded with line numbers, so if the line numbers change at
521ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    all in the source (e.g.  lines added, deleted, swapped), any
522ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    annotations will be incorrect.</para>
523ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
524ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
525ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>If information is recorded about line numbers past the
526ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    end of a file.  This can be caused by the above problem,
527ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    i.e. shortening the source file while using an old
528ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>cachegrind.out.&lt;pid&gt;</filename> file.  If
529ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    this happens, the figures for the bogus lines are printed
530ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    anyway (clearly marked as bogus) in case they are
531ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    important.</para>
532ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
533ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
534ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
535ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
536ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
537ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
538ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
539ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.annopts.things-to-watch-out-for"
540ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="Unusual Annotation Cases">
541ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Unusual Annotation Cases</title>
542ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
543ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Some odd things that can occur during annotation:</para>
544ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
545ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
546ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
547ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>If annotating at the assembler level, you might see
548ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    something like this:</para>
549ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
550ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      1    0    0  .    .    .  .    .    .          leal -12(%ebp),%eax
551ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      1    0    0  .    .    .  1    0    0          movl %eax,84(%ebx)
552ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      2    0    0  0    0    0  1    0    0          movl $1,-20(%ebp)
553ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      .    .    .  .    .    .  .    .    .          .align 4,0x90
554ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      1    0    0  .    .    .  .    .    .          movl $.LnrB,%eax
555ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      1    0    0  .    .    .  1    0    0          movl %eax,-16(%ebp)]]></programlisting>
556ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
557ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>How can the third instruction be executed twice when
558ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    the others are executed only once?  As it turns out, it
559ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    isn't.  Here's a dump of the executable, using
560ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>objdump -d</computeroutput>:</para>
561ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
562ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      8048f25:       8d 45 f4                lea    0xfffffff4(%ebp),%eax
563ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      8048f28:       89 43 54                mov    %eax,0x54(%ebx)
564ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      8048f2b:       c7 45 ec 01 00 00 00    movl   $0x1,0xffffffec(%ebp)
565ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      8048f32:       89 f6                   mov    %esi,%esi
566ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      8048f34:       b8 08 8b 07 08          mov    $0x8078b08,%eax
567ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      8048f39:       89 45 f0                mov    %eax,0xfffffff0(%ebp)]]></programlisting>
568ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
569ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Notice the extra <computeroutput>mov
570ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    %esi,%esi</computeroutput> instruction.  Where did this come
571ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    from?  The GNU assembler inserted it to serve as the two
572ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    bytes of padding needed to align the <computeroutput>movl
573ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    $.LnrB,%eax</computeroutput> instruction on a four-byte
574ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    boundary, but pretended it didn't exist when adding debug
575ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    information.  Thus when Valgrind reads the debug info it
576ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    thinks that the <computeroutput>movl
577ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    $0x1,0xffffffec(%ebp)</computeroutput> instruction covers the
578ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    address range 0x8048f2b--0x804833 by itself, and attributes
579ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    the counts for the <computeroutput>mov
580ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    %esi,%esi</computeroutput> to it.</para>
581ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
582ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
583ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <!--
584ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  I think this isn't true any more, not since cost centres were moved from
585ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  being associated with instruction addresses to being associated with
586ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  source line numbers.
587ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
588ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Inlined functions can cause strange results in the
589ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    function-by-function summary.  If a function
590ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>inline_me()</computeroutput> is defined in
591ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>foo.h</filename> and inlined in the functions
592ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>f1()</computeroutput>,
593ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>f2()</computeroutput> and
594ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>f3()</computeroutput> in
595ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>bar.c</filename>, there will not be a
596ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>foo.h:inline_me()</computeroutput> function
597ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    entry.  Instead, there will be separate function entries for
598ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    each inlining site, i.e.
599ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>foo.h:f1()</computeroutput>,
600ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>foo.h:f2()</computeroutput> and
601ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>foo.h:f3()</computeroutput>.  To find the
602ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    total counts for
603ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>foo.h:inline_me()</computeroutput>, add up
604ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    the counts from each entry.</para>
605ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
606ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>The reason for this is that although the debug info
607ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    output by GCC indicates the switch from
608ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>bar.c</filename> to <filename>foo.h</filename>, it
609ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    doesn't indicate the name of the function in
610ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>foo.h</filename>, so Valgrind keeps using the old
611ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    one.</para>
612ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
613ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  -->
614ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
615ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
616ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Sometimes, the same filename might be represented with
617ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    a relative name and with an absolute name in different parts
618ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    of the debug info, eg:
619ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>/home/user/proj/proj.h</filename> and
620ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <filename>/proj.h</filename>.  In this case, if you use
621ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    auto-annotation, the file will be annotated twice with the
622ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    counts split between the two.</para>
623ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
624ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
625ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
626ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Files with more than 65,535 lines cause difficulties
627ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    for the Stabs-format debug info reader.  This is because the line
628ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    number in the <computeroutput>struct nlist</computeroutput>
629ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    defined in <filename>a.out.h</filename> under Linux is only a
630ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    16-bit value.  Valgrind can handle some files with more than
631ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    65,535 lines correctly by making some guesses to identify
632ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    line number overflows.  But some cases are beyond it, in
633ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    which case you'll get a warning message explaining that
634ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    annotations for the file might be incorrect.</para>
635ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    
636ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>If you are using GCC 3.1 or later, this is most likely
637ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    irrelevant, since GCC switched to using the more modern DWARF2 
638ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    format by default at version 3.1.  DWARF2 does not have any such
639ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    limitations on line numbers.</para>
640ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
641ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
642ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
643ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>If you compile some files with
644ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <option>-g</option> and some without, some
645ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    events that take place in a file without debug info could be
646ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    attributed to the last line of a file with debug info
647ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    (whichever one gets placed before the non-debug-info file in
648ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    the executable).</para>
649ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
650ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
651ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
652ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
653ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>This list looks long, but these cases should be fairly
654ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownrare.</para>
655ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
656ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
657ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
658ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
659ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.cg_merge" xreflabel="cg_merge">
660ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Merging Profiles with cg_merge</title>
661ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
662ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
663ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_merge is a simple program which
664ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownreads multiple profile files, as created by Cachegrind, merges them
665ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browntogether, and writes the results into another file in the same format.
666ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownYou can then examine the merged results using
667ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>cg_annotate &lt;filename&gt;</computeroutput>, as
668ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndescribed above.  The merging functionality might be useful if you
669ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwant to aggregate costs over multiple runs of the same program, or
670ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfrom a single parallel run with multiple instances of the same
671ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprogram.</para>
672ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
673ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
674ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_merge is invoked as follows:
675ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
676ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
677ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
678ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_merge -o outputfile file1 file2 file3 ...]]></programlisting>
679ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
680ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
681ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIt reads and checks <computeroutput>file1</computeroutput>, then read
682ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownand checks <computeroutput>file2</computeroutput> and merges it into
683ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe running totals, then the same with
684ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>file3</computeroutput>, etc.  The final results are
685ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwritten to <computeroutput>outputfile</computeroutput>, or to standard
686ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownout if no output file is specified.</para>
687ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
688ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
689ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCosts are summed on a per-function, per-line and per-instruction
690ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbasis.  Because of this, the order in which the input files does not
691ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownmatter, although you should take care to only mention each file once,
692ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsince any file mentioned twice will be added in twice.</para>
693ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
694ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
695ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_merge does not attempt to check
696ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthat the input files come from runs of the same executable.  It will
697ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhappily merge together profile files from completely unrelated
698ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprograms.  It does however check that the
699ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>Events:</computeroutput> lines of all the inputs are
700ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownidentical, so as to ensure that the addition of costs makes sense.
701ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownFor example, it would be nonsensical for it to add a number indicating
702ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownD1 read references to a number from a different file indicating LL
703ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwrite misses.</para>
704ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
705ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
706ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownA number of other syntax and sanity checks are done whilst reading the
707ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninputs.  cg_merge will stop and
708ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownattempt to print a helpful error message if any of the input files
709ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfail these checks.</para>
710ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
711ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
712ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
713ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
714ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.cg_diff" xreflabel="cg_diff">
715ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Differencing Profiles with cg_diff</title>
716ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
717ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
718ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_diff is a simple program which
719ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownreads two profile files, as created by Cachegrind, finds the difference
720ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbetween them, and writes the results into another file in the same format.
721ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownYou can then examine the merged results using
722ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>cg_annotate &lt;filename&gt;</computeroutput>, as
723ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndescribed above.  This is very useful if you want to measure how a change to
724ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browna program affected its performance.
725ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
726ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
727ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
728ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_diff is invoked as follows:
729ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
730ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
731ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
732ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_diff file1 file2]]></programlisting>
733ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
734ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
735ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIt reads and checks <computeroutput>file1</computeroutput>, then read
736ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownand checks <computeroutput>file2</computeroutput>, then computes the
737ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndifference (effectively <computeroutput>file1</computeroutput> -
738ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>file2</computeroutput>).  The final results are written to
739ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownstandard output.</para>
740ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
741ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
742ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCosts are summed on a per-function basis.  Per-line costs are not summed,
743ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbecause doing so is too difficult.  For example, consider differencing two
744ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprofiles, one from a single-file program A, and one from the same program A
745ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwhere a single blank line was inserted at the top of the file.  Every single
746ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownper-line count has changed.  In comparison, the per-function counts have not
747ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownchanged.  The per-function count differences are still very useful for
748ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndetermining differences between programs.  Note that because the result is
749ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe difference of two profiles, many of the counts will be negative;  this
750ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownindicates that the counts for the relevant function are fewer in the second
751ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownversion than those in the first version.</para>
752ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
753ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
754ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncg_diff does not attempt to check
755ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthat the input files come from runs of the same executable.  It will
756ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhappily merge together profile files from completely unrelated
757ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprograms.  It does however check that the
758ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>Events:</computeroutput> lines of all the inputs are
759ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownidentical, so as to ensure that the addition of costs makes sense.
760ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownFor example, it would be nonsensical for it to add a number indicating
761ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownD1 read references to a number from a different file indicating LL
762ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwrite misses.</para>
763ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
764ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
765ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownA number of other syntax and sanity checks are done whilst reading the
766ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninputs.  cg_diff will stop and
767ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownattempt to print a helpful error message if any of the input files
768ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfail these checks.</para>
769ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
770ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
771ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownSometimes you will want to compare Cachegrind profiles of two versions of a
772ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownprogram that you have sitting side-by-side.  For example, you might have
773ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>version1/prog.c</computeroutput> and
774ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>version2/prog.c</computeroutput>, where the second is
775ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownslightly different to the first.  A straight comparison of the two will not
776ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbe useful -- because functions are qualified with filenames, a function
777ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<function>f</function> will be listed as
778ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>version1/prog.c:f</computeroutput> for the first version but
779ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>version2/prog.c:f</computeroutput> for the second
780ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownversion.</para>
781ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
782ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
783ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownWhen this happens, you can use the <option>--mod-filename</option> option.
784ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIts argument is a Perl search-and-replace expression that will be applied
785ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownto all the filenames in both Cachegrind output files.  It can be used to
786ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownremove minor differences in filenames.  For example, the option
787ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--mod-filename='s/version[0-9]/versionN/'</option> will suffice for
788ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthis case.</para>
789ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
790b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov<para>
791b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy StepanovSimilarly, sometimes compilers auto-generate certain functions and give them
792b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanovrandomized names.  For example, GCC sometimes auto-generates functions with
793b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanovnames like <function>T.1234</function>, and the suffixes vary from build to
794b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanovbuild.  You can use the <option>--mod-funcname</option> option to remove
795b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanovsmall differences like these;  it works in the same way as
796b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov<option>--mod-filename</option>.</para>
797b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov
798ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
799ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
800ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
801ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
802ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
803ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
804ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
805ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.cgopts" xreflabel="Cachegrind Command-line Options">
806ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Cachegrind Command-line Options</title>
807ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
808ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
809ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Cachegrind-specific options are:</para>
810ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
811ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<variablelist id="cg.opts.list">
812ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
813ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry id="opt.I1" xreflabel="--I1">
814ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
815ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--I1=<size>,<associativity>,<line size> ]]></option>
816ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
817ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
818ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Specify the size, associativity and line size of the level 1
819ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      instruction cache.  </para>
820ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
821ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
822ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
823ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry id="opt.D1" xreflabel="--D1">
824ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
825ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--D1=<size>,<associativity>,<line size> ]]></option>
826ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
827ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
828ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Specify the size, associativity and line size of the level 1
829ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      data cache.</para>
830ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
831ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
832ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
833ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry id="opt.LL" xreflabel="--LL">
834ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
835ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--LL=<size>,<associativity>,<line size> ]]></option>
836ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
837ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
838ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Specify the size, associativity and line size of the last-level
839ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      cache.</para>
840ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
841ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
842ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
843ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry id="opt.cache-sim" xreflabel="--cache-sim">
844ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
845ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--cache-sim=no|yes [yes] ]]></option>
846ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
847ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
848ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Enables or disables collection of cache access and miss
849ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            counts.</para>
850ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
851ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
852ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
853ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry id="opt.branch-sim" xreflabel="--branch-sim">
854ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
855ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--branch-sim=no|yes [no] ]]></option>
856ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
857ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
858ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Enables or disables collection of branch instruction and
859ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            misprediction counts.  By default this is disabled as it
860ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            slows Cachegrind down by approximately 25%.  Note that you
861ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            cannot specify <option>--cache-sim=no</option>
862ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            and <option>--branch-sim=no</option>
863ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            together, as that would leave Cachegrind with no
864ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            information to collect.</para>
865ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
866ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
867ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
868ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry id="opt.cachegrind-out-file" xreflabel="--cachegrind-out-file">
869ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
870ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--cachegrind-out-file=<file> ]]></option>
871ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
872ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
873ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Write the profile data to 
874ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            <computeroutput>file</computeroutput> rather than to the default
875ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            output file,
876ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            <filename>cachegrind.out.&lt;pid&gt;</filename>.  The
877ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            <option>%p</option> and <option>%q</option> format specifiers
878ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            can be used to embed the process ID and/or the contents of an
879ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            environment variable in the name, as is the case for the core
880ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown            option <option><xref linkend="opt.log-file"/></option>.
881ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      </para>
882ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
883ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
884ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
885ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</variablelist>
886ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
887ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
888ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
889ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
890ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
891ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
892ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.annopts" xreflabel="cg_annotate Command-line Options">
893ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>cg_annotate Command-line Options</title>
894ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
895ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
896ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<variablelist id="cg_annotate.opts.list">
897ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
898ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
899ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
900ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[-h --help ]]></option>
901ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
902ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
903ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Show the help message.</para>
904ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
905ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
906ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
907ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
908ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
909ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--version ]]></option>
910ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
911ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
912ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Show the version number.</para>
913ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
914ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
915ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
916ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
917ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
918ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--show=A,B,C [default: all, using order in
919ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      cachegrind.out.<pid>] ]]></option>
920ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
921ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
922ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Specifies which events to show (and the column
923ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      order). Default is to use all present in the
924ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <filename>cachegrind.out.&lt;pid&gt;</filename> file (and
925ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      use the order in the file).  Useful if you want to concentrate on, for
926ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      example, I cache misses (<option>--show=I1mr,ILmr</option>), or data
927ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      read misses (<option>--show=D1mr,DLmr</option>), or LL data misses
928ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      (<option>--show=DLmr,DLmw</option>).  Best used in conjunction with
929ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option>--sort</option>.</para>
930ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
931ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
932ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
933ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
934ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
935ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--sort=A,B,C [default: order in
936ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      cachegrind.out.<pid>] ]]></option>
937ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
938ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
939ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Specifies the events upon which the sorting of the
940ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      function-by-function entries will be based.</para>
941ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
942ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
943ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
944ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
945ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
946ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--threshold=X [default: 0.1%] ]]></option>
947ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
948ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
949ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Sets the threshold for the function-by-function
950ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      summary.  A function is shown if it accounts for more than X%
951ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      of the counts for the primary sort event.  If auto-annotating, also
952ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      affects which files are annotated.</para>
953ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        
954ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Note: thresholds can be set for more than one of the
955ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      events by appending any events for the
956ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option>--sort</option> option with a colon
957ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      and a number (no spaces, though).  E.g. if you want to see
958ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      each function that covers more than 1% of LL read misses or 1% of LL
959ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      write misses, use this option:</para>
960ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para><option>--sort=DLmr:1,DLmw:1</option></para>
961ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
962ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
963ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
964ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
965ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
966ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--auto=<no|yes> [default: no] ]]></option>
967ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
968ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
969ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>When enabled, automatically annotates every file that
970ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      is mentioned in the function-by-function summary that can be
971ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      found.  Also gives a list of those that couldn't be found.</para>
972ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
973ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
974ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
975ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
976ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
977ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--context=N [default: 8] ]]></option>
978ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
979ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
980ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Print N lines of context before and after each
981ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      annotated line.  Avoids printing large sections of source
982ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      files that were not executed.  Use a large number
983ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      (e.g. 100000) to show all source lines.</para>
984ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
985ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
986ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
987ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
988ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
989ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[-I<dir> --include=<dir> [default: none] ]]></option>
990ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
991ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
992ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Adds a directory to the list in which to search for
993ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      files.  Multiple <option>-I</option>/<option>--include</option>
994ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      options can be given to add multiple directories.</para>
995ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
996ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
997ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
998ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</variablelist>
999ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
1000ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  
1001ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
1002ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1003ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1004436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<sect1 id="cg-manual.mergeopts" xreflabel="cg_merge Command-line Options">
1005436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<title>cg_merge Command-line Options</title>
1006436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov
1007436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
1008436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<variablelist id="cg_merge.opts.list">
1009436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov
1010436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov  <varlistentry>
1011436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov    <term>
1012436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov      <option><![CDATA[-o outfile]]></option>
1013436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov    </term>
1014436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov    <listitem>
1015436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov      <para>Write the profile data to <computeroutput>outfile</computeroutput>
1016436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov            rather than to standard output.
1017436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov      </para>
1018436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov    </listitem>
1019436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov  </varlistentry>
1020436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov
1021436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov</variablelist>
1022436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
1023436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov
1024436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov</sect1>
1025436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov
1026436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy Ivanov
1027ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.diffopts" xreflabel="cg_diff Command-line Options">
1028ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>cg_diff Command-line Options</title>
1029ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1030ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<!-- start of xi:include in the manpage -->
1031ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<variablelist id="cg_diff.opts.list">
1032ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1033ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
1034ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
1035ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[-h --help ]]></option>
1036ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
1037ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
1038ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Show the help message.</para>
1039ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
1040ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
1041ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1042ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
1043ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
1044ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--version ]]></option>
1045ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
1046ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
1047ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Show the version number.</para>
1048ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
1049ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
1050ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1051ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <varlistentry>
1052ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <term>
1053ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <option><![CDATA[--mod-filename=<expr> [default: none]]]></option>
1054ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </term>
1055ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <listitem>
1056ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <para>Specifies a Perl search-and-replace expression that is applied
1057ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      to all filenames.  Useful for removing minor differences in paths
1058ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      between two different versions of a program that are sitting in
1059ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      different directories.</para>
1060ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </listitem>
1061ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </varlistentry>
1062ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1063b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov  <varlistentry>
1064b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov    <term>
1065b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov      <option><![CDATA[--mod-funcname=<expr> [default: none]]]></option>
1066b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov    </term>
1067b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov    <listitem>
1068b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov      <para>Like <option>--mod-filename</option>, but for filenames.
1069b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov      Useful for removing minor differences in randomized names of
1070b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov      auto-generated functions generated by some compilers.</para>
1071b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov    </listitem>
1072b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov  </varlistentry>
1073b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov
1074ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</variablelist>
1075ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<!-- end of xi:include in the manpage -->
1076ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  
1077ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
1078ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1079ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1080ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1081ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1082ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.acting-on"
1083ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="Acting on Cachegrind's Information">
1084ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Acting on Cachegrind's Information</title>
1085ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1086ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCachegrind gives you lots of information, but acting on that information
1087ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownisn't always easy.  Here are some rules of thumb that we have found to be
1088ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownuseful.</para>
1089ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1090ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1091ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownFirst of all, the global hit/miss counts and miss rates are not that useful.
1092ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIf you have multiple programs or multiple runs of a program, comparing the
1093ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownnumbers might identify if any are outliers and worthy of closer
1094ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninvestigation.  Otherwise, they're not enough to act on.</para>
1095ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1096ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1097ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThe function-by-function counts are more useful to look at, as they pinpoint
1098ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwhich functions are causing large numbers of counts.  However, beware that
1099ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninlining can make these counts misleading.  If a function
1100ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<function>f</function> is always inlined, counts will be attributed to the
1101ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfunctions it is inlined into, rather than itself.  However, if you look at
1102ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe line-by-line annotations for <function>f</function> you'll see the
1103ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncounts that belong to <function>f</function>.  (This is hard to avoid, it's
1104ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhow the debug info is structured.)  So it's worth looking for large numbers
1105ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownin the line-by-line annotations.</para>
1106ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1107ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1108ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThe line-by-line source code annotations are much more useful.  In our
1109ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownexperience, the best place to start is by looking at the
1110ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>Ir</computeroutput> numbers.  They simply measure how many
1111ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninstructions were executed for each line, and don't include any cache
1112ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninformation, but they can still be very useful for identifying
1113ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbottlenecks.</para>
1114ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1115ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1116ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownAfter that, we have found that LL misses are typically a much bigger source
1117ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownof slow-downs than L1 misses.  So it's worth looking for any snippets of
1118ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncode with high <computeroutput>DLmr</computeroutput> or
1119ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>DLmw</computeroutput> counts.  (You can use
1120ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--show=DLmr
1121ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown--sort=DLmr</option> with cg_annotate to focus just on
1122ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<literal>DLmr</literal> counts, for example.) If you find any, it's still
1123ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownnot always easy to work out how to improve things.  You need to have a
1124ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownreasonable understanding of how caches work, the principles of locality, and
1125ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownyour program's data access patterns.  Improving things may require
1126ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownredesigning a data structure, for example.</para>
1127ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1128ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1129ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownLooking at the <computeroutput>Bcm</computeroutput> and
1130ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>Bim</computeroutput> misses can also be helpful.
1131ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIn particular, <computeroutput>Bim</computeroutput> misses are often caused
1132ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownby <literal>switch</literal> statements, and in some cases these
1133ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<literal>switch</literal> statements can be replaced with table-driven code.
1134ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownFor example, you might replace code like this:</para>
1135ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1136ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
1137ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownenum E { A, B, C };
1138ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownenum E e;
1139ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownint i;
1140ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown...
1141ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownswitch (e)
1142ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown{
1143b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov    case A: i += 1; break;
1144b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov    case B: i += 2; break;
1145b32f58018498ea2225959b0ba11c18f0c433deefEvgeniy Stepanov    case C: i += 3; break;
1146ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown}
1147ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown]]></programlisting>
1148ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1149ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>with code like this:</para>
1150ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1151ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
1152ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownenum E { A, B, C };
1153ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownenum E e;
1154ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownenum E table[] = { 1, 2, 3 };
1155ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownint i;
1156ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown...
1157ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browni += table[e];
1158ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown]]></programlisting>
1159ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1160ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1161ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThis is obviously a contrived example, but the basic principle applies in a
1162ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwide variety of situations.</para>
1163ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1164ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1165ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIn short, Cachegrind can tell you where some of the bottlenecks in your code
1166ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownare, but it can't tell you how to fix them.  You have to work that out for
1167ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownyourself.  But at least you have the information!
1168ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
1169ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1170ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
1171ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1172ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1173ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.sim-details"
1174ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="Simulation Details">
1175ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Simulation Details</title>
1176ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1177ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThis section talks about details you don't need to know about in order to
1178ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownuse Cachegrind, but may be of interest to some people.
1179ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
1180ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1181ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cache-sim" xreflabel="Cache Simulation Specifics">
1182ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Cache Simulation Specifics</title>
1183ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1184ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Specific characteristics of the cache simulation are as
1185ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfollows:</para>
1186ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1187ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
1188ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1189ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1190ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Write-allocate: when a write miss occurs, the block
1191ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    written to is brought into the D1 cache.  Most modern caches
1192ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    have this property.</para>
1193ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1194ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1195ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1196ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Bit-selection hash function: the set of line(s) in the cache
1197ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    to which a memory block maps is chosen by the middle bits
1198ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    M--(M+N-1) of the byte address, where:</para>
1199ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <itemizedlist>
1200ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <listitem>
1201ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        <para>line size = 2^M bytes</para>
1202ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      </listitem>
1203ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <listitem>
1204ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        <para>(cache size / line size / associativity) = 2^N bytes</para>
1205ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      </listitem>
1206ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </itemizedlist> 
1207ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1208ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1209ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1210ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Inclusive LL cache: the LL cache typically replicates all
1211ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    the entries of the L1 caches, because fetching into L1 involves
1212ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    fetching into LL first (this does not guarantee strict inclusiveness,
1213ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    as lines evicted from LL still could reside in L1).  This is
1214ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    standard on Pentium chips, but AMD Opterons, Athlons and Durons
1215ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    use an exclusive LL cache that only holds
1216ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    blocks evicted from L1.  Ditto most modern VIA CPUs.</para>
1217ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1218ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1219ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
1220ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1221ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The cache configuration simulated (cache size,
1222ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownassociativity and line size) is determined automatically using
1223ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe x86 CPUID instruction.  If you have a machine that (a)
1224ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndoesn't support the CPUID instruction, or (b) supports it in an
1225ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownearly incarnation that doesn't give any cache information, then
1226ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCachegrind will fall back to using a default configuration (that
1227ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownof a model 3/4 Athlon).  Cachegrind will tell you if this
1228ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhappens.  You can manually specify one, two or all three levels
1229ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown(I1/D1/LL) of the cache from the command line using the
1230ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--I1</option>,
1231ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--D1</option> and
1232ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--LL</option> options.
1233ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownFor cache parameters to be valid for simulation, the number
1234ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownof sets (with associativity being the number of cache lines in
1235ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browneach set) has to be a power of two.</para>
1236ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1237ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>On PowerPC platforms
1238ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCachegrind cannot automatically 
1239ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndetermine the cache configuration, so you will 
1240ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownneed to specify it with the
1241ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--I1</option>,
1242ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--D1</option> and
1243ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<option>--LL</option> options.</para>
1244ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1245ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1246ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Other noteworthy behaviour:</para>
1247ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1248ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
1249ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1250ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>References that straddle two cache lines are treated as
1251ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    follows:</para>
1252ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <itemizedlist>
1253ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <listitem>
1254ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        <para>If both blocks hit --&gt; counted as one hit</para>
1255ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      </listitem>
1256ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <listitem>
1257ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        <para>If one block hits, the other misses --&gt; counted
1258ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        as one miss.</para>
1259ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      </listitem>
1260ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      <listitem>
1261ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        <para>If both blocks miss --&gt; counted as one miss (not
1262ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown        two)</para>
1263ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown      </listitem>
1264ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    </itemizedlist>
1265ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1266ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1267ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1268ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Instructions that modify a memory location
1269ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    (e.g. <computeroutput>inc</computeroutput> and
1270ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>dec</computeroutput>) are counted as doing
1271ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    just a read, i.e. a single data reference.  This may seem
1272ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    strange, but since the write can never cause a miss (the read
1273ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    guarantees the block is in the cache) it's not very
1274ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    interesting.</para>
1275ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1276ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Thus it measures not the number of times the data cache
1277ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    is accessed, but the number of times a data cache miss could
1278ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    occur.</para>
1279ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1280ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1281ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
1282ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1283ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>If you are interested in simulating a cache with different
1284ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownproperties, it is not particularly hard to write your own cache
1285ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsimulator, or to modify the existing ones in
1286ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>cg_sim.c</computeroutput>. We'd be
1287ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browninterested to hear from anyone who does.</para>
1288ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1289ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
1290ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1291ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1292ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="branch-sim" xreflabel="Branch Simulation Specifics">
1293ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Branch Simulation Specifics</title>
1294ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1295ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Cachegrind simulates branch predictors intended to be
1296ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browntypical of mainstream desktop/server processors of around 2004.</para>
1297ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1298ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Conditional branches are predicted using an array of 16384 2-bit
1299ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsaturating counters.  The array index used for a branch instruction is
1300ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncomputed partly from the low-order bits of the branch instruction's
1301ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownaddress and partly using the taken/not-taken behaviour of the last few
1302ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownconditional branches.  As a result the predictions for any specific
1303ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbranch depend both on its own history and the behaviour of previous
1304ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbranches.  This is a standard technique for improving prediction
1305ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownaccuracy.</para>
1306ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1307ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>For indirect branches (that is, jumps to unknown destinations)
1308ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCachegrind uses a simple branch target address predictor.  Targets are
1309ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownpredicted using an array of 512 entries indexed by the low order 9
1310ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbits of the branch instruction's address.  Each branch is predicted to
1311ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownjump to the same address it did last time.  Any other behaviour causes
1312ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browna mispredict.</para>
1313ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1314ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>More recent processors have better branch predictors, in
1315ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownparticular better indirect branch predictors.  Cachegrind's predictor
1316ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndesign is deliberately conservative so as to be representative of the
1317ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownlarge installed base of processors which pre-date widespread
1318ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndeployment of more sophisticated indirect branch predictors.  In
1319ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownparticular, late model Pentium 4s (Prescott), Pentium M, Core and Core
1320ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown2 have more sophisticated indirect branch predictors than modelled by
1321ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownCachegrind.  </para>
1322ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1323ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Cachegrind does not simulate a return stack predictor.  It
1324ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownassumes that processors perfectly predict function return addresses,
1325ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownan assumption which is probably close to being true.</para>
1326ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1327ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>See Hennessy and Patterson's classic text "Computer
1328ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownArchitecture: A Quantitative Approach", 4th edition (2007), Section
1329ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown2.3 (pages 80-89) for background on modern branch predictors.</para>
1330ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1331ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
1332ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1333ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.annopts.accuracy" xreflabel="Accuracy">
1334ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Accuracy</title>
1335ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1336ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Valgrind's cache profiling has a number of
1337ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownshortcomings:</para>
1338ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1339ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
1340ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1341ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>It doesn't account for kernel activity -- the effect of system
1342ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    calls on the cache and branch predictor contents is ignored.</para>
1343ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1344ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1345ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1346ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>It doesn't account for other process activity.
1347ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    This is probably desirable when considering a single
1348ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    program.</para>
1349ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1350ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1351ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1352ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>It doesn't account for virtual-to-physical address
1353ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    mappings.  Hence the simulation is not a true
1354ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    representation of what's happening in the
1355ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    cache.  Most caches and branch predictors are physically indexed, but
1356ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    Cachegrind simulates caches using virtual addresses.</para>
1357ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1358ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1359ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1360ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>It doesn't account for cache misses not visible at the
1361ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    instruction level, e.g. those arising from TLB misses, or
1362ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    speculative execution.</para>
1363ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1364ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1365ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1366ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>Valgrind will schedule
1367ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    threads differently from how they would be when running natively.
1368ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    This could warp the results for threaded programs.</para>
1369ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1370ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1371ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1372ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>The x86/amd64 instructions <computeroutput>bts</computeroutput>,
1373ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>btr</computeroutput> and
1374ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>btc</computeroutput> will incorrectly be
1375ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    counted as doing a data read if both the arguments are
1376ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    registers, eg:</para>
1377ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
1378ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    btsl %eax, %edx]]></programlisting>
1379ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1380ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>This should only happen rarely.</para>
1381ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1382ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1383ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1384ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para>x86/amd64 FPU instructions with data sizes of 28 and 108 bytes
1385ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    (e.g.  <computeroutput>fsave</computeroutput>) are treated as
1386ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    though they only access 16 bytes.  These instructions seem to
1387ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    be rare so hopefully this won't affect accuracy much.</para>
1388ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1389ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1390ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
1391ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1392ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Another thing worth noting is that results are very sensitive.
1393436e89c602e787e7a27dd6624b09beed41a0da8aDmitriy IvanovChanging the size of the executable being profiled, or the sizes
1394ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownof any of the shared libraries it uses, or even the length of their
1395ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfile names, can perturb the results.  Variations will be small, but
1396ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndon't expect perfectly repeatable results if your program changes at
1397ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownall.</para>
1398ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1399ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>More recent GNU/Linux distributions do address space
1400ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownrandomisation, in which identical runs of the same program have their
1401ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownshared libraries loaded at different locations, as a security measure.
1402ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThis also perturbs the results.</para>
1403ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1404ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>While these factors mean you shouldn't trust the results to
1405ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownbe super-accurate, they should be close enough to be useful.</para>
1406ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1407ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
1408ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1409ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
1410ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1411ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1412ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1413ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect1 id="cg-manual.impl-details"
1414ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="Implementation Details">
1415ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Implementation Details</title>
1416ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>
1417ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownThis section talks about details you don't need to know about in order to
1418ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownuse Cachegrind, but may be of interest to some people.
1419ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
1420ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1421ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.impl-details.how-cg-works"
1422ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="How Cachegrind Works">
1423ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>How Cachegrind Works</title>
1424ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The best reference for understanding how Cachegrind works is chapter 3 of
1425ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown"Dynamic Binary Analysis and Instrumentation", by Nicholas Nethercote.  It
1426ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownis available on the <ulink url="&vg-pubs-url;">Valgrind publications
1427ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownpage</ulink>.</para>
1428ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
1429ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1430ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<sect2 id="cg-manual.impl-details.file-format"
1431ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown       xreflabel="Cachegrind Output File Format">
1432ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<title>Cachegrind Output File Format</title>
1433ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The file format is fairly straightforward, basically giving the
1434ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncost centre for every line, grouped by files and
1435ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfunctions.  It's also totally generic and self-describing, in the sense that
1436ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownit can be used for any events that can be counted on a line-by-line basis,
1437ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownnot just cache and branch predictor events.  For example, earlier versions
1438ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownof Cachegrind didn't have a branch predictor simulation.  When this was
1439ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownadded, the file format didn't need to change at all.  So the format (and
1440ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownconsequently, cg_annotate) could be used by other tools.</para>
1441ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1442ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The file format:</para>
1443ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<programlisting><![CDATA[
1444ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfile         ::= desc_line* cmd_line events_line data_line+ summary_line
1445ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndesc_line    ::= "desc:" ws? non_nl_string
1446ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncmd_line     ::= "cmd:" ws? cmd
1447ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownevents_line  ::= "events:" ws? (event ws)+
1448ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndata_line    ::= file_line | fn_line | count_line
1449ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfile_line    ::= "fl=" filename
1450ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfn_line      ::= "fn=" fn_name
1451ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncount_line   ::= line_num ws? (count ws)+
1452ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownsummary_line ::= "summary:" ws? (count ws)+
1453ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncount        ::= num | "."]]></programlisting>
1454ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1455ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Where:</para>
1456ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<itemizedlist>
1457ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1458ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para><computeroutput>non_nl_string</computeroutput> is any
1459ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    string not containing a newline.</para>
1460ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1461ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1462ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para><computeroutput>cmd</computeroutput> is a string holding the
1463ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    command line of the profiled program.</para>
1464ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1465ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1466ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para><computeroutput>event</computeroutput> is a string containing
1467ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    no whitespace.</para>
1468ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1469ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1470ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para><computeroutput>filename</computeroutput> and
1471ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>fn_name</computeroutput> are strings.</para>
1472ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1473ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1474ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para><computeroutput>num</computeroutput> and
1475ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <computeroutput>line_num</computeroutput> are decimal
1476ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    numbers.</para>
1477ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1478ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  <listitem>
1479ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown    <para><computeroutput>ws</computeroutput> is whitespace.</para>
1480ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown  </listitem>
1481ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</itemizedlist>
1482ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1483ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The contents of the "desc:" lines are printed out at the top
1484ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownof the summary.  This is a generic way of providing simulation
1485ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownspecific information, e.g. for giving the cache configuration for
1486ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncache simulation.</para>
1487ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1488ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>More than one line of info can be presented for each file/fn/line number.
1489ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff BrownIn such cases, the counts for the named events will be accumulated.</para>
1490ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1491ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Counts can be "." to represent zero.  This makes the files easier for
1492ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownhumans to read.</para>
1493ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1494ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The number of counts in each
1495ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>line</computeroutput> and the
1496ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>summary_line</computeroutput> should not exceed
1497ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe number of events in the
1498ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>event_line</computeroutput>.  If the number in
1499ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browneach <computeroutput>line</computeroutput> is less, cg_annotate
1500ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browntreats those missing as though they were a "." entry.  This saves space.
1501ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</para>
1502ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1503ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>A <computeroutput>file_line</computeroutput> changes the
1504ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browncurrent file name.  A <computeroutput>fn_line</computeroutput>
1505ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownchanges the current function name.  A
1506ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>count_line</computeroutput> contains counts that
1507ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownpertain to the current filename/fn_name.  A "fn="
1508ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>file_line</computeroutput> and a
1509ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>fn_line</computeroutput> must appear before any
1510ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<computeroutput>count_line</computeroutput>s to give the context
1511ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownof the first <computeroutput>count_line</computeroutput>s.</para>
1512ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1513ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>Each <computeroutput>file_line</computeroutput> will normally be
1514ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownimmediately followed by a <computeroutput>fn_line</computeroutput>.  But it
1515ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Browndoesn't have to be.</para>
1516ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1517ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown<para>The summary line is redundant, because it just holds the total counts
1518ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownfor each event.  But this serves as a useful sanity check of the data;  if
1519ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownthe totals for each event don't match the summary line, something has gone
1520ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brownwrong.</para>
1521ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1522ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect2>
1523ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown
1524ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</sect1>
1525ed07e00d438c74b7a23c01bfffde77e3968305e4Jeff Brown</chapter>
1526