The most widely available profiler on Unix platforms is gprof, the GNU profiler. A respectable and long-available tool, gprof may not be enough for you if your are trying to do very fine tuning of a complex program with lots of small routines. This is because the time measurements given by gprof are statistical, which means that it only gives you a sampling of the time spent in the various parts of your programs, not a real and accurate view, especially if your program runs for a very short period of time.
A new profiler recently appeared on Linux. It is called Function Check
(currently only version 1.4 is supported) and is available
here. This profiler
brings numerous improvement over its ancestor. Instead of producing statistical results, it generates
real measurements of the time spent in routines. For that matter, it uses a technic known as
function instrumentation. Briefly, you compile your code with a special switch (specific to GCC,
so you'll have to use gcc 2.95 or later) which adds calls to the profiler on entry and exit of
every function. Then at link time, you link with the Function Check library. After executing your
application, a file named fnccheck.out
is produced and contains the profiling results.
Finally, KProf supports profiling for Palm OS applications executed in POSE, the Palm OS Emulator. If you use Unix to develop applications for Palm OS, you can take advantage of KProf to examine profiling results generated by POSE.
Links:
GNU gprof (part of the binutils package)
Function Check - a better profiler for Unix platforms
Palm OS Emulator - an emulator for Palm OS applications which can also generate profiling information
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