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Importing from pprof (go)
pprof
is a tool for capturing profiling data for the Go programming language. The two most common ways of profiling go programs are by writing a .prof
file to disk, and by downloading profiling information from a running server instrumented with net/http/pprof
.
You can write CPU profiles to disk in a program via the pprof.StartCPUProfile
and pprof.StopCPUProfile
commands.
Let's say you have a program like this in simple.go
.
// simple.go
package main
import "flag"
import "runtime/pprof"
import "os"
var cpuprofile = flag.String("cpuprofile", "", "write cpu profile to file")
func main() {
flag.Parse()
if *cpuprofile != "" {
f, _ := os.Create(*cpuprofile)
pprof.StartCPUProfile(f)
defer pprof.StopCPUProfile()
}
// Do the expensive stuff here
}
Then you can compile this program with go build simple.go
, then run it with ./simple -cpuprofile=simple.prof
. This will output a pprof
profile to simple.prof
. The resulting file can be dragged into https://www.speedscope.app/, or opened directly with the CLI tool by running speedscope simple.prof.
The net/http/pprof
package offers an easy-to-use profiling integration for long-lived servers.
If you have a server set up like this, you can download various different profiles by visiting the profile index page found at http://localhost:$PORT/debug/pprof
. All of the available profile types should be importable into speedscope with the exception of debug/pprof/trace
, which uses a different file format that speedscope doesn't yet support.
Rather than downloading the file and dropping it into https://www.speedscope.app/, if you have speedscope
installed locally via npm install -g speedscope
, you can also do e.g.:
curl http://localhost:$PORT/debug/pprof/profile?seconds=2 | speedscope -