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Debugging Utilities
### Valgrind
Valgrind is useful to find memory problems in Peloton.
## Try to use with something like the attached.
valgrind --suppress
valgrind \
--suppressions=$PG_SOURCE/src/tools/valgrind.supp \
--trace-children=yes --track-origins=yes --read-var-info=yes \
peloton -D REST_OF_ARGS
## Callgrind
valgrind --tool=callgrind --trace-children=yes ./src/peloton -D data &> /dev/null &
The Linux kernel
comes with a performance analysis tool
called perf that can even be used on production servers to analyze the call stack
of a server, or a process. This is useful to find the bottlenecks
of a query processing or simply of a server running and improve those.
It is usually found in the package "perf"
, at least it is the case of RHEL, CentOS and ArchLinux.
/proc/sys/kernel/perf_event_paranoid can be used to restrict access to the performance counters.
2, allow only user-space measurements
1, allow both kernel and user measurements (default)
0, allow access to CPU-specific data
-1, no paranoid at all
Record information
## Profile system as long as needed, can be cancelled with Ctrl-C
perf record -a -g
## Profile system for a given period of time
perf record -a -g -s sleep $TIME_IN_SECONDS
## For the duration of a command
perf record -a -g -s -- $COMMAND
Different things can be recorded:
-a to profile the whole system
-p $PID to profile only the given PID
-u $USER to profile only the given user
Reports are saved by default in $HOME/perf.data. Old reports are renamed as $HOME/perf.data.old.
## Real-time measurement is done by perf top, like system-wide profiling
perf top
## Profiling without accumulating stats
perf top -z
Viewing the records
## View profile recorded
perf report -n
## With a graph
perf report -g
## Run peloton under strace
strace -o trace.server -f -t peloton -D /path/to/data
## Run psql under strace
strace -o trace.client -f -t psql postgres
The first flag is -f
, which tells strace to follow the forked processes. The -o
flag sends all the output to a file. We can also use the -ff
flag, that sends the output corresponding to each forked process to a separate file. Very handy, that. Finally, we add a -t
flag, which prepends each line with a timestamp.