Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bde
467c7d29da Use a (signed) int32_t counter instead of an `unsigned int' counter
for the GPROF4 case.  This allows a simpler method to be used for
non-statistical profiling (it allows overhead adjustments to be
subtracted from one counter without harm if that counter goes
negative; otherwise the adjustment would have to be distributed).

32 bit counters were already too small for GPROF4 with a 200MHz
clock.  int64_t counters should be used.
1996-10-16 21:02:49 +00:00
bde
39cdb05128 Implemented non-statistical kernel profiling. This is based on
looking at a high resolution clock for each of the following events:
function call, function return, interrupt entry, interrupt exit,
and interesting branches.  The differences between the times of
these events are added at appropriate places in a ordinary histogram
(as if very fast statistical profiling sampled the pc at those
places) so that ordinary gprof can be used to analyze the times.

gmon.h:
Histogram counters need to be 4 bytes for microsecond resolutions.
They will need to be larger for the 586 clock.
The comments were vax-centric and wrong even on vaxes.  Does anyone
disagree?

gprof4.c:
The standard gprof should support counters of all integral sizes
and the size of the counter should be in the gmon header.  This
hack will do until then.  (Use gprof4 -u to examine the results
of non-statistical profiling.)

config/*:
Non-statistical profiling is configured with `config -pp'.
`config -p' still gives ordinary profiling.

kgmon/*:
Non-statistical profiling is enabled with `kgmon -B'.  `kgmon -b'
still enables ordinary profiling (and distables non-statistical
profiling) if non-statistical profiling is configured.
1995-12-29 15:46:59 +00:00
rgrimes
a14d555c87 Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 06:41:30 +00:00
rgrimes
f9ab90d9d6 BSD 4.4 Lite Usr.bin Sources 1994-05-27 12:33:43 +00:00