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research article

Optimally Profiling and Tracing Programs

Ball, Thomas
•
Larus, James R.
1994
ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems

This paper describes algorithms for inserting monitoring code to profile and trace programs. These algorithms greatly reduce the cost of measuring programs with respect to the commonly used technique of placing code in each basic block. Program profiling counts the number of times each basic block in a program executes. Instruction tracing records the sequence of basic blocks traversed in a program execution. The algorithms optimize the placement of counting/tracing code with respect to the expected or measured frequency of each block or edge in a program's control-flow graph. We have implemented the algorithms in a profiling/tracing tool, and they substantially reduce the overhead of profiling and tracing.We also define and study the hierarchy of profiling problems. These problems have two dimensions: what is profiled (i.e., vertices (basic blocks) or edges in a control-flow graph) and where the instrumentation code is placed (in blocks or along edges). We compare the optimal solutions to the profiling problems and describe a new profiling problem: basic-block profiling with edge counters. This problem is important because an optimal solution to any other profiling problem (for a given control-flow graph) is never better than an optimal solution to this problem. Unfortunately, finding an optimal placement of edge counters for vertex profiling appears to be a hard problem in general. However, our work shows that edge profiling with edge counters works well in practice because it is simple and efficient and finds optimal counter placements in most cases. Furthermore, it yields more information than a vertex profile. Tracing also benefits from placing instrumentation code along edges rather than on vertices.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1145/183432.183527
Author(s)
Ball, Thomas
•
Larus, James R.
Date Issued

1994

Publisher

ACM

Published in
ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems
Volume

16

Issue

4

Start page

1319

End page

1360

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
VLSC  
Available on Infoscience
December 23, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/98754
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