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Oracle Solaris Studio 12.3: Performance Analyzer     Oracle Solaris Studio 12.3 Information Library
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Overview of the Performance Analyzer

2.  Performance Data

3.  Collecting Performance Data

4.  The Performance Analyzer Tool

5.  The er_print Command Line Performance Analysis Tool

er_print Syntax

Metric Lists

Commands That Control the Function List

functions

metrics metric_spec

sort metric_spec

fsummary

fsingle function_name [N]

Commands That Control the Callers-Callees List

callers-callees

csingle function_name [N]

cprepend function-name [N | ADDR]

cappend function-name [N | ADDR]

crmfirst

crmlast

Commands That Control the Call Tree List

calltree

Commands That Control the Leak and Allocation Lists

leaks

allocs

Commands That Control the Source and Disassembly Listings

pcs

psummary

lines

lsummary

source|src { filename | function_name } [ N]

disasm|dis { filename | function_name } [ N]

scc com_spec

sthresh value

dcc com_spec

dthresh value

cc com_spec

Commands That Control Searching For Source Files

setpath path_list

addpath path_list

pathmap old-prefix new-prefix

Commands That Control Hardware Counter Dataspace and Memory Object Lists

data_objects

data_single name [N]

data_layout

memobj mobj_type

mobj_list

mobj_define mobj_type index_exp

Commands That Control Index Object Lists

indxobj indxobj_type

indxobj_list

indxobj_define indxobj_type index_exp

Commands for the OpenMP Index Objects

OMP_preg

OMP_task

Commands That Support the Thread Analyzer

races

rdetail race_id

deadlocks

ddetail deadlock_id

Commands That List Experiments, Samples, Threads, and LWPs

experiment_list

sample_list

lwp_list

thread_list

cpu_list

Commands That Control Filtering of Experiment Data

Specifying a Filter Expression

filters filter_exp

Listing Keywords for a Filter Expression

describe

Selecting Samples, Threads, LWPs, and CPUs for Filtering

Selection Lists

Selection Commands

sample_select sample_spec

lwp_select lwp_spec

thread_select thread_spec

cpu_select cpu_spec

Commands That Control Load Object Expansion and Collapse

object_list

object_show object1,object2,...

object_hide object1,object2,...

object_api object1,object2,...

objects_default

object_select object1,object2,...

Commands That List Metrics

metric_list

cmetric_list

data_metric_list

indx_metric_list

Commands That Control Output

outfile {filename|-|--}

appendfile filename

limit n

name { long | short } [ :{ shared_object_name | no_shared_object_name } ]

viewmode { user| expert | machine }

compare { on | off }

Commands That Print Other Information

header exp_id

ifreq

objects

overview exp_id

statistics exp_id

Commands That Set Defaults

dmetrics metric_spec

dsort metric_spec

en_desc { on | off | =regexp}

Commands That Set Defaults Only For the Performance Analyzer

tabs tab_spec

rtabs tab_spec

tlmode tl_mode

tldata tl_data

Miscellaneous Commands

procstats

script file

version

quit

help

Expression Grammar

Example Filter Expressions

er_print command Examples

6.  Understanding the Performance Analyzer and Its Data

7.  Understanding Annotated Source and Disassembly Data

8.  Manipulating Experiments

9.  Kernel Profiling

Index

Commands That Control Filtering of Experiment Data

You can specify filtering of experiment data in two ways:

Specifying a Filter Expression

You can specify a filter expression with the filters command.

filters filter_exp

filter_exp is an expression that evaluates as true for any data record that should be included, and false for records that should not be included. The grammar of the expression is described in Expression Grammar.

Listing Keywords for a Filter Expression

You can see a list of operands or keywords that you can use in a filter expression on your experiment.

describe

Print the list of keywords that can be used to build a filter expression. Some keywords and the grammar of a filter expression is described in Expression Grammar.

In the Performance Analyzer, you can see the same information by selecting View ⇒ Manage Filters and clicking the Show Keywords button in the Custom tab.

Selecting Samples, Threads, LWPs, and CPUs for Filtering

Selection Lists

The syntax of a selection is shown in the following example. This syntax is used in the command descriptions.

[experiment-list:]selection-list[+[
experiment-list:]selection-list … ]

Each selection list can be preceded by an experiment list, separated from it by a colon and no spaces. You can make multiple selections by joining selection lists with a + sign.

The experiment list and the selection list have the same syntax, which is either the keyword all or a list of numbers or ranges of numbers (n-m) separated by commas but no spaces, as shown in this example.

2,4,9-11,23-32,38,40

The experiment numbers can be determined by using the experiment_list command.

Some examples of selections are as follows.

1:1-4+2:5,6
all:1,3-6

In the first example, objects 1 through 4 are selected from experiment 1 and objects 5 and 6 are selected from experiment 2. In the second example, objects 1 and 3 through 6 are selected from all experiments. The objects may be LWPs, threads, or samples.

Selection Commands

The commands to select LWPs, samples, CPUs, and threads are not independent. If the experiment list for a command is different from that for the previous command, the experiment list from the latest command is applied to all three selection targets, LWPs, samples, and threads, in the following way.

sample_select sample_spec

Select the samples for which you want to display information. The list of samples you selected is displayed when the command finishes.

lwp_select lwp_spec

Select the LWPs about which you want to display information. The list of LWPs you selected is displayed when the command finishes.

thread_select thread_spec

Select the threads about which you want to display information. The list of threads you selected is displayed when the command finishes.

cpu_select cpu_spec

Select the CPUs about which you want to display information. The list of CPUs you selected is displayed when the command finishes.