diff --git a/doc/pprof.md b/doc/pprof.md index 1a4bd4d30..0c310ecde 100644 --- a/doc/pprof.md +++ b/doc/pprof.md @@ -238,38 +238,41 @@ compatible (for example, CPU profiles cannot be combined with heap profiles). ## Comparing profiles -pprof can subtract a profile from another, provided the profiles are of -compatible types, in order to compare them. For that, use the -**-diff_base= _profile_** option, where *profile* is the filename or URL for the -profile to be subtracted. This may result in some report entries having negative -values. Percentages in the report are relative to the total of -the diff base. - -If the merged profile is output as a protocol buffer, all samples in -the diff base profile will have a label with the key "pprof::base" and a value -of "true". If pprof is then used to look at the merged profile, it will behave -as if separate source and base profiles were passed in. - -The **-base** option can be used in the place of the **-diff_base** option, and -may be preferrable when comparing two cumulative profiles, for example two -contention profiles collected from the same program at different times. When -this flag is used and no negative values appear in the merged profile when -aggregated at the address-level, percentages reported will be relative to the -the difference between the total for the source profile and the total for the -base profile. In the general case, percentages will be relative to the total of -the absolute value of all samples when aggregated at the address level. - -The **-normalize** option can be useful for determining the relative differences -between profiles, for example, which profile has a larger percentage of CPU time -used in a particular function. With this option, the source profile is scaled so -that the total of samples in the source profile is equal to the total of samples -in the base profile prior to merging the profiles. - -This flag can be only be used when a diff base or a base profile is specified, -so for example: - - pprof -normalize -diff_base=base source - +pprof can subtract one profile from another, provided the profiles are of +compatible types. pprof has two options which can be used to specify the +filename or URL for a profile to be subtracted from the source profile: + +* **-diff_base= _profile_:** useful for comparing any two profiles of compatible +types (i.e. any two heap profiles). Percentages in the output are relative to +the total of samples in the diff base profile. + +* **-base= _profile_:** useful for subtracting a cumulative profile, like a +golang block profile, from another cumulative profile collected from the same +program at a later time. When comparing cumulative profiles collected on the +same profile, percentages in the output are relative to the the difference +between the total for the source profile and the total for the base profile. + +The following flag can be used when a base profile is specified with either the +`-diff_base` or the `-base` option: + +* **-normalize**: Scales the source profile so that that the total of samples +in the source profile is equal to the total of samples in the base profile prior +to subtracting the base profile from the source profile. Useful for determining +the relative differences between profiles, for example, which profile has a +larger percentage of CPU time used in a particular function. + +When using the **-diff_base** option, some report entries may have negative +values. If the merged profile is output as a protocol buffer, all samples in the +diff base profile will have a label with the key "pprof::base" and a value of +"true". If pprof is then used to look at the merged profile, it will behave as +if separate source and base profiles were passed in. + +When using the **-base** option to subtract one cumulative profile from another +collected on the same program at a later time, percentages will be relative to +the difference between the total for the source profile and the total for +the base profile, and all values will be positive. In the general case, some +report entries may have negative values and percentages will be relative to the +total of the absolute value of all samples when aggregated at the address level. ## Symbolization