1 <html> 2 <head> 3 <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> 4 <title>3.Callgrind Format Specification</title> 5 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="vg_basic.css"> 6 <meta name="generator" content="DocBook XSL Stylesheets V1.79.1"> 7 <link rel="home" href="index.html" title="Valgrind Documentation"> 8 <link rel="up" href="tech-docs.html" title="Valgrind Technical Documentation"> 9 <link rel="prev" href="manual-writing-tools.html" title="2.Writing a New Valgrind Tool"> 10 <link rel="next" href="dist.html" title="Valgrind Distribution Documents"> 11 </head> 12 <body bgcolor="white" text="black" link="#0000FF" vlink="#840084" alink="#0000FF"> 13 <div><table class="nav" width="100%" cellspacing="3" cellpadding="3" border="0" summary="Navigation header"><tr> 14 <td width="22px" align="center" valign="middle"><a accesskey="p" href="manual-writing-tools.html"><img src="images/prev.png" width="18" height="21" border="0" alt="Prev"></a></td> 15 <td width="25px" align="center" valign="middle"><a accesskey="u" href="tech-docs.html"><img src="images/up.png" width="21" height="18" border="0" alt="Up"></a></td> 16 <td width="31px" align="center" valign="middle"><a accesskey="h" href="index.html"><img src="images/home.png" width="27" height="20" border="0" alt="Up"></a></td> 17 <th align="center" valign="middle">Valgrind Technical Documentation</th> 18 <td width="22px" align="center" valign="middle"><a accesskey="n" href="dist.html"><img src="images/next.png" width="18" height="21" border="0" alt="Next"></a></td> 19 </tr></table></div> 20 <div class="chapter"> 21 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h1 class="title"> 22 <a name="cl-format"></a>3.Callgrind Format Specification</h1></div></div></div> 23 <div class="toc"> 24 <p><b>Table of Contents</b></p> 25 <dl class="toc"> 26 <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview">3.1. Overview</a></span></dt> 27 <dd><dl> 28 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview.basics">3.1.1. Basic Structure</a></span></dt> 29 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview.example1">3.1.2. Simple Example</a></span></dt> 30 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview.associations">3.1.3. Associations</a></span></dt> 31 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview.example2">3.1.4. Extended Example</a></span></dt> 32 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview.compression1">3.1.5. Name Compression</a></span></dt> 33 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview.compression2">3.1.6. Subposition Compression</a></span></dt> 34 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.overview.misc">3.1.7. Miscellaneous</a></span></dt> 35 </dl></dd> 36 <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.reference">3.2. Reference</a></span></dt> 37 <dd><dl> 38 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.reference.grammar">3.2.1. Grammar</a></span></dt> 39 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.reference.header">3.2.2. Description of Header Lines</a></span></dt> 40 <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="cl-format.html#cl-format.reference.body">3.2.3. Description of Body Lines</a></span></dt> 41 </dl></dd> 42 </dl> 43 </div> 44 <p>This chapter describes the Callgrind Format, Version 1.</p> 45 <p>The format description is meant for the user to be able to understand the 46 file contents; but more important, it is given for authors of measurement or 47 visualization tools to be able to write and read this format.</p> 48 <div class="sect1"> 49 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"> 50 <a name="cl-format.overview"></a>3.1.Overview</h2></div></div></div> 51 <p>The profile data format is ASCII based. 52 It is written by Callgrind, and it is upwards compatible 53 to the format used by Cachegrind (ie. Cachegrind uses a subset). It can 54 be read by callgrind_annotate and KCachegrind.</p> 55 <p>This chapter gives on overview of format features and examples. 56 For detailed syntax, look at the format reference.</p> 57 <div class="sect2"> 58 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 59 <a name="cl-format.overview.basics"></a>3.1.1.Basic Structure</h3></div></div></div> 60 <p>To uniquely specify that a file is a callgrind profile, it 61 should add "# callgrind format" as first line. This is optional but 62 recommended for easy format detection.</p> 63 <p>Each file has a header part of an arbitrary number of lines of the 64 format "key: value". After the header, lines specifying profile costs 65 follow. Everywhere, comments on own lines starting with '#' are allowed. 66 The header lines with keys "positions" and "events" define 67 the meaning of cost lines in the second part of the file: the value of 68 "positions" is a list of subpositions, and the value of "events" is a list 69 of event type names. Cost lines consist of subpositions followed by 64-bit 70 counters for the events, in the order specified by the "positions" and "events" 71 header line.</p> 72 <p>The "events" header line is always required in contrast to the optional 73 line for "positions", which defaults to "line", i.e. a line number of some 74 source file. In addition, the second part of the file contains position 75 specifications of the form "spec=name". "spec" can be e.g. "fn" for a 76 function name or "fl" for a file name. Cost lines are always related to 77 the function/file specifications given directly before.</p> 78 </div> 79 <div class="sect2"> 80 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 81 <a name="cl-format.overview.example1"></a>3.1.2.Simple Example</h3></div></div></div> 82 <p>The event names in the following example are quite arbitrary, and are not 83 related to event names used by Callgrind. Especially, cycle counts matching 84 real processors probably will never be generated by any Valgrind tools, as these 85 are bound to simulations of simple machine models for acceptable slowdown. 86 However, any profiling tool could use the format described in this chapter.</p> 87 <p> 88 </p> 89 <pre class="screen"># callgrind format 90 events: Cycles Instructions Flops 91 fl=file.f 92 fn=main 93 15 90 14 2 94 16 20 12</pre> 95 <p>The above example gives profile information for event types "Cycles", 96 "Instructions", and "Flops". Thus, cost lines give the number of CPU cycles 97 passed by, number of executed instructions, and number of floating point 98 operations executed while running code corresponding to some source 99 position. As there is no line specifying the value of "positions", it defaults 100 to "line", which means that the first number of a cost line is always a line 101 number.</p> 102 <p>Thus, the first cost line specifies that in line 15 of source file 103 <code class="filename">file.f</code> there is code belonging to function 104 <code class="function">main</code>. While running, 90 CPU cycles passed by, and 2 of 105 the 14 instructions executed were floating point operations. Similarly, the 106 next line specifies that there were 12 instructions executed in the context 107 of function <code class="function">main</code> which can be related to line 16 in 108 file <code class="filename">file.f</code>, taking 20 CPU cycles. If a cost line 109 specifies less event counts than given in the "events" line, the rest is 110 assumed to be zero. I.e. there was no floating point instruction executed 111 relating to line 16.</p> 112 <p>Note that regular cost lines always give self (also called exclusive) 113 cost of code at a given position. If you specify multiple cost lines for the 114 same position, these will be summed up. On the other hand, in the example above 115 there is no specification of how many times function 116 <code class="function">main</code> actually was 117 called: profile data only contains sums.</p> 118 </div> 119 <div class="sect2"> 120 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 121 <a name="cl-format.overview.associations"></a>3.1.3.Associations</h3></div></div></div> 122 <p>The most important extension to the original format of Cachegrind is the 123 ability to specify call relationship among functions. More generally, you 124 specify associations among positions. For this, the second part of the 125 file also can contain association specifications. These look similar to 126 position specifications, but consist of two lines. For calls, the format 127 looks like 128 </p> 129 <pre class="screen"> 130 calls=(Call Count) (Target position) 131 (Source position) (Inclusive cost of call) 132 </pre> 133 <p>The destination only specifies subpositions like line number. Therefore, 134 to be able to specify a call to another function in another source file, you 135 have to precede the above lines with a "cfn=" specification for the name of the 136 called function, and optionally a "cfi=" specification if the function is in 137 another source file ("cfl=" is an alternative specification for "cfi=" because 138 of historical reasons, and both should be supported by format readers). 139 The second line looks like a regular cost line with the difference 140 that inclusive cost spent inside of the function call has to be specified.</p> 141 <p>Other associations are for example (conditional) jumps. See the 142 reference below for details.</p> 143 </div> 144 <div class="sect2"> 145 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 146 <a name="cl-format.overview.example2"></a>3.1.4.Extended Example</h3></div></div></div> 147 <p>The following example shows 3 functions, <code class="function">main</code>, 148 <code class="function">func1</code>, and <code class="function">func2</code>. Function 149 <code class="function">main</code> calls <code class="function">func1</code> once and 150 <code class="function">func2</code> 3 times. <code class="function">func1</code> calls 151 <code class="function">func2</code> 2 times. 152 153 </p> 154 <pre class="screen"># callgrind format 155 events: Instructions 156 157 fl=file1.c 158 fn=main 159 16 20 160 cfn=func1 161 calls=1 50 162 16 400 163 cfi=file2.c 164 cfn=func2 165 calls=3 20 166 16 400 167 168 fn=func1 169 51 100 170 cfi=file2.c 171 cfn=func2 172 calls=2 20 173 51 300 174 175 fl=file2.c 176 fn=func2 177 20 700</pre> 178 <p>One can see that in <code class="function">main</code> only code from line 16 179 is executed where also the other functions are called. Inclusive cost of 180 <code class="function">main</code> is 820, which is the sum of self cost 20 and costs 181 spent in the calls: 400 for the single call to <code class="function">func1</code> 182 and 400 as sum for the three calls to <code class="function">func2</code>.</p> 183 <p>Function <code class="function">func1</code> is located in 184 <code class="filename">file1.c</code>, the same as <code class="function">main</code>. 185 Therefore, a "cfi=" specification for the call to <code class="function">func1</code> 186 is not needed. The function <code class="function">func1</code> only consists of code 187 at line 51 of <code class="filename">file1.c</code>, where <code class="function">func2</code> 188 is called.</p> 189 </div> 190 <div class="sect2"> 191 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 192 <a name="cl-format.overview.compression1"></a>3.1.5.Name Compression</h3></div></div></div> 193 <p>With the introduction of association specifications like calls it is 194 needed to specify the same function or same file name multiple times. As 195 absolute filenames or symbol names in C++ can be quite long, it is advantageous 196 to be able to specify integer IDs for position specifications. 197 Here, the term "position" corresponds to a file name (source or object file) 198 or function name.</p> 199 <p>To support name compression, a position specification can be not only of 200 the format "spec=name", but also "spec=(ID) name" to specify a mapping of an 201 integer ID to a name, and "spec=(ID)" to reference a previously defined ID 202 mapping. There is a separate ID mapping for each position specification, 203 i.e. you can use ID 1 for both a file name and a symbol name.</p> 204 <p>With string compression, the example from above looks like this: 205 </p> 206 <pre class="screen"># callgrind format 207 events: Instructions 208 209 fl=(1) file1.c 210 fn=(1) main 211 16 20 212 cfn=(2) func1 213 calls=1 50 214 16 400 215 cfi=(2) file2.c 216 cfn=(3) func2 217 calls=3 20 218 16 400 219 220 fn=(2) 221 51 100 222 cfi=(2) 223 cfn=(3) 224 calls=2 20 225 51 300 226 227 fl=(2) 228 fn=(3) 229 20 700</pre> 230 <p>As position specifications carry no information themselves, but only change 231 the meaning of subsequent cost lines or associations, they can appear 232 everywhere in the file without any negative consequence. Especially, you can 233 define name compression mappings directly after the header, and before any cost 234 lines. Thus, the above example can also be written as 235 </p> 236 <pre class="screen"># callgrind format 237 events: Instructions 238 239 # define file ID mapping 240 fl=(1) file1.c 241 fl=(2) file2.c 242 # define function ID mapping 243 fn=(1) main 244 fn=(2) func1 245 fn=(3) func2 246 247 fl=(1) 248 fn=(1) 249 16 20 250 ...</pre> 251 </div> 252 <div class="sect2"> 253 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 254 <a name="cl-format.overview.compression2"></a>3.1.6.Subposition Compression</h3></div></div></div> 255 <p>If a Callgrind data file should hold costs for each assembler instruction 256 of a program, you specify subposition "instr" in the "positions:" header line, 257 and each cost line has to include the address of some instruction. Addresses 258 are allowed to have a size of 64 bits to support 64-bit architectures. Thus, 259 repeating similar, long addresses for almost every line in the data file can 260 enlarge the file size quite significantly, and 261 motivates for subposition compression: instead of every cost line starting with 262 a 16 character long address, one is allowed to specify relative addresses. 263 This relative specification is not only allowed for instruction addresses, but 264 also for line numbers; both addresses and line numbers are called "subpositions".</p> 265 <p>A relative subposition always is based on the corresponding subposition 266 of the last cost line, and starts with a "+" to specify a positive difference, 267 a "-" to specify a negative difference, or consists of "*" to specify the same 268 subposition. Because absolute subpositions always are positive (ie. never 269 prefixed by "-"), any relative specification is non-ambiguous; additionally, 270 absolute and relative subposition specifications can be mixed freely. 271 Assume the following example (subpositions can always be specified 272 as hexadecimal numbers, beginning with "0x"): 273 </p> 274 <pre class="screen"># callgrind format 275 positions: instr line 276 events: ticks 277 278 fn=func 279 0x80001234 90 1 280 0x80001237 90 5 281 0x80001238 91 6</pre> 282 <p>With subposition compression, this looks like 283 </p> 284 <pre class="screen"># callgrind format 285 positions: instr line 286 events: ticks 287 288 fn=func 289 0x80001234 90 1 290 +3 * 5 291 +1 +1 6</pre> 292 <p>Remark: For assembler annotation to work, instruction addresses have to 293 be corrected to correspond to addresses found in the original binary. I.e. for 294 relocatable shared objects, often a load offset has to be subtracted.</p> 295 </div> 296 <div class="sect2"> 297 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 298 <a name="cl-format.overview.misc"></a>3.1.7.Miscellaneous</h3></div></div></div> 299 <div class="sect3"> 300 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"> 301 <a name="cl-format.overview.misc.summary"></a>3.1.7.1.Cost Summary Information</h4></div></div></div> 302 <p>For the visualization to be able to show cost percentage, a sum of the 303 cost of the full run has to be known. Usually, it is assumed that this is the 304 sum of all cost lines in a file. But sometimes, this is not correct. Thus, you 305 can specify a "summary:" line in the header giving the full cost for the 306 profile run. An import filter may use this to show a progress bar 307 while loading a large data file.</p> 308 </div> 309 <div class="sect3"> 310 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"> 311 <a name="cl-format.overview.misc.events"></a>3.1.7.2.Long Names for Event Types and inherited Types</h4></div></div></div> 312 <p>Event types for cost lines are specified in the "events:" line with an 313 abbreviated name. For visualization, it makes sense to be able to specify some 314 longer, more descriptive name. For an event type "Ir" which means "Instruction 315 Fetches", this can be specified the header line 316 </p> 317 <pre class="screen">event: Ir : Instruction Fetches 318 events: Ir Dr</pre> 319 <p>In this example, "Dr" itself has no long name associated. The order of 320 "event:" lines and the "events:" line is of no importance. Additionally, 321 inherited event types can be introduced for which no raw data is available, but 322 which are calculated from given types. Suppose the last example, you could add 323 </p> 324 <pre class="screen">event: Sum = Ir + Dr</pre> 325 <p> 326 to specify an additional event type "Sum", which is calculated by adding costs 327 for "Ir and "Dr".</p> 328 </div> 329 </div> 330 </div> 331 <div class="sect1"> 332 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"> 333 <a name="cl-format.reference"></a>3.2.Reference</h2></div></div></div> 334 <div class="sect2"> 335 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 336 <a name="cl-format.reference.grammar"></a>3.2.1.Grammar</h3></div></div></div> 337 <p> 338 </p> 339 <pre class="screen">ProfileDataFile := FormatSpec? FormatVersion? Creator? PartData*</pre> 340 <p> 341 </p> 342 <pre class="screen">FormatSpec := "# callgrind format\n"</pre> 343 <p> 344 </p> 345 <pre class="screen">FormatVersion := "version: 1\n"</pre> 346 <p> 347 </p> 348 <pre class="screen">Creator := "creator:" NoNewLineChar* "\n"</pre> 349 <p> 350 </p> 351 <pre class="screen">PartData := (HeaderLine "\n")+ (BodyLine "\n")+</pre> 352 <p> 353 </p> 354 <pre class="screen">HeaderLine := (empty line) 355 | ('#' NoNewLineChar*) 356 | PartDetail 357 | Description 358 | EventSpecification 359 | CostLineDef</pre> 360 <p> 361 </p> 362 <pre class="screen">PartDetail := TargetCommand | TargetID</pre> 363 <p> 364 </p> 365 <pre class="screen">TargetCommand := "cmd:" Space* NoNewLineChar*</pre> 366 <p> 367 </p> 368 <pre class="screen">TargetID := ("pid"|"thread"|"part") ":" Space* Number</pre> 369 <p> 370 </p> 371 <pre class="screen">Description := "desc:" Space* Name Space* ":" NoNewLineChar*</pre> 372 <p> 373 </p> 374 <pre class="screen">EventSpecification := "event:" Space* Name InheritedDef? LongNameDef?</pre> 375 <p> 376 </p> 377 <pre class="screen">InheritedDef := "=" InheritedExpr</pre> 378 <p> 379 </p> 380 <pre class="screen">InheritedExpr := Name 381 | Number Space* ("*" Space*)? Name 382 | InheritedExpr Space* "+" Space* InheritedExpr</pre> 383 <p> 384 </p> 385 <pre class="screen">LongNameDef := ":" NoNewLineChar*</pre> 386 <p> 387 </p> 388 <pre class="screen">CostLineDef := "events:" Space* Name (Space+ Name)* 389 | "positions:" "instr"? (Space+ "line")?</pre> 390 <p> 391 </p> 392 <pre class="screen">BodyLine := (empty line) 393 | ('#' NoNewLineChar*) 394 | CostLine 395 | PositionSpec 396 | CallSpec 397 | UncondJumpSpec 398 | CondJumpSpec</pre> 399 <p> 400 </p> 401 <pre class="screen">CostLine := SubPositionList Costs?</pre> 402 <p> 403 </p> 404 <pre class="screen">SubPositionList := (SubPosition+ Space+)+</pre> 405 <p> 406 </p> 407 <pre class="screen">SubPosition := Number | "+" Number | "-" Number | "*"</pre> 408 <p> 409 </p> 410 <pre class="screen">Costs := (Number Space+)+</pre> 411 <p> 412 </p> 413 <pre class="screen">PositionSpec := Position "=" Space* PositionName</pre> 414 <p> 415 </p> 416 <pre class="screen">Position := CostPosition | CalledPosition</pre> 417 <p> 418 </p> 419 <pre class="screen">CostPosition := "ob" | "fl" | "fi" | "fe" | "fn"</pre> 420 <p> 421 </p> 422 <pre class="screen">CalledPosition := " "cob" | "cfi" | "cfl" | "cfn"</pre> 423 <p> 424 </p> 425 <pre class="screen">PositionName := ( "(" Number ")" )? (Space* NoNewLineChar* )?</pre> 426 <p> 427 </p> 428 <pre class="screen">CallSpec := CallLine "\n" CostLine</pre> 429 <p> 430 </p> 431 <pre class="screen">CallLine := "calls=" Space* Number Space+ SubPositionList</pre> 432 <p> 433 </p> 434 <pre class="screen">UncondJumpSpec := "jump=" Space* Number Space+ SubPositionList</pre> 435 <p> 436 </p> 437 <pre class="screen">CondJumpSpec := "jcnd=" Space* Number Space+ Number Space+ SubPositionList</pre> 438 <p> 439 </p> 440 <pre class="screen">Space := " " | "\t"</pre> 441 <p> 442 </p> 443 <pre class="screen">Number := HexNumber | (Digit)+</pre> 444 <p> 445 </p> 446 <pre class="screen">Digit := "0" | ... | "9"</pre> 447 <p> 448 </p> 449 <pre class="screen">HexNumber := "0x" (Digit | HexChar)+</pre> 450 <p> 451 </p> 452 <pre class="screen">HexChar := "a" | ... | "f" | "A" | ... | "F"</pre> 453 <p> 454 </p> 455 <pre class="screen">Name = Alpha (Digit | Alpha)*</pre> 456 <p> 457 </p> 458 <pre class="screen">Alpha = "a" | ... | "z" | "A" | ... | "Z"</pre> 459 <p> 460 </p> 461 <pre class="screen">NoNewLineChar := all characters without "\n"</pre> 462 <p> 463 </p> 464 <p>A profile data file ("ProfileDataFile") starts with basic information 465 such as a format marker, the version and creator information, and then has a list of parts, where 466 each part has its own header and body. Parts typically are different threads 467 and/or time spans/phases within a profiled application run.</p> 468 <p>Note that callgrind_annotate currently only supports profile data files with 469 one part. Callgrind may produce multiple parts for one profile run, but defaults 470 to one output file for each part.</p> 471 </div> 472 <div class="sect2"> 473 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 474 <a name="cl-format.reference.header"></a>3.2.2.Description of Header Lines</h3></div></div></div> 475 <p>Basic information in the first lines of a profile data file:</p> 476 <div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" style="list-style-type: disc; "> 477 <li class="listitem"> 478 <p><code class="computeroutput"># callgrind format</code> [Callgrind]</p> 479 <p>This line specifies that the file is a callgrind profile, 480 and it has to be the first line. It was added late to the 481 format (with Valgrind 3.13) and is optional, as all readers also 482 should work with older callgrind profiles not including this line. 483 However, generation of this line is recommended to allow desktop 484 environments and file managers to uniquely detect the format.</p> 485 </li> 486 <li class="listitem"> 487 <p><code class="computeroutput">version: number</code> [Callgrind]</p> 488 <p>This is used to distinguish future profile data formats. A 489 major version of 0 or 1 is supposed to be upwards compatible with 490 Cachegrind's format. It is optional; if not appearing, version 1 491 is assumed. Otherwise, it has to follow directly after the format 492 specification (i.e. be the first line if the optional format 493 specification is skipped).</p> 494 </li> 495 <li class="listitem"> 496 <p><code class="computeroutput">creator: string</code> [Callgrind]</p> 497 <p>This is an arbitrary string to denote the creator of this file. 498 Optional.</p> 499 </li> 500 </ul></div> 501 <p>The header for each part has an arbitrary number of lines of the format 502 "key: value". Possible <span class="emphasis"><em>key</em></span> values for the header are:</p> 503 <div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" style="list-style-type: disc; "> 504 <li class="listitem"> 505 <p><code class="computeroutput">pid: process id</code> [Callgrind]</p> 506 <p>Optional. This specifies the process ID of the supervised application 507 for which this profile was generated.</p> 508 </li> 509 <li class="listitem"> 510 <p><code class="computeroutput">cmd: program name + args</code> [Cachegrind]</p> 511 <p>Optional. This specifies the full command line of the supervised 512 application for which this profile was generated.</p> 513 </li> 514 <li class="listitem"> 515 <p><code class="computeroutput">part: number</code> [Callgrind]</p> 516 <p>Optional. This specifies a sequentially incremented number for each dump 517 generated, starting at 1.</p> 518 </li> 519 <li class="listitem"> 520 <p><code class="computeroutput">desc: type: value</code> [Cachegrind]</p> 521 <p>This specifies various information for this dump. For some 522 types, the semantic is defined, but any description type is allowed. 523 Unknown types should be ignored.</p> 524 <p>There are the types "I1 cache", "D1 cache", "LL cache", which 525 specify parameters used for the cache simulator. These are the only 526 types originally used by Cachegrind. Additionally, Callgrind uses 527 the following types: "Timerange" gives a rough range of the basic 528 block counter, for which the cost of this dump was collected. 529 Type "Trigger" states the reason of why this trace was generated. 530 E.g. program termination or forced interactive dump.</p> 531 </li> 532 <li class="listitem"> 533 <p><code class="computeroutput">positions: [instr] [line]</code> [Callgrind]</p> 534 <p>For cost lines, this defines the semantic of the first numbers. 535 Any combination of "instr", "bb" and "line" is allowed, but has to be 536 in this order which corresponds to position numbers at the start of 537 the cost lines later in the file.</p> 538 <p>If "instr" is specified, the position is the address of an 539 instruction whose execution raised the events given later on the 540 line. This address is relative to the offset of the binary/shared 541 library file to not have to specify relocation info. For "line", 542 the position is the line number of a source file, which is 543 responsible for the events raised. Note that the mapping of "instr" 544 and "line" positions are given by the debugging line information 545 produced by the compiler.</p> 546 <p>This header line is optional, defaulting to "positions: 547 line" if not specified.</p> 548 </li> 549 <li class="listitem"> 550 <p><code class="computeroutput">events: event type abbreviations</code> [Cachegrind]</p> 551 <p>A list of short names of the event types logged in cost 552 lines in this part of the profile data file. Arbitrary short 553 names are allowed. The order given specifies the required order 554 in cost lines. Thus, the first event type is the second or third 555 number in a cost line, depending on the value of "positions". 556 Required to appear for each header part exactly once.</p> 557 </li> 558 <li class="listitem"> 559 <p><code class="computeroutput">summary: costs</code> [Callgrind]</p> 560 <p>Optional. This header line specifies a summary cost, which should be 561 equal or larger than a total over all self costs. It may be larger as 562 the cost lines may not represent all cost of the program run.</p> 563 </li> 564 <li class="listitem"> 565 <p><code class="computeroutput">totals: costs</code> [Cachegrind]</p> 566 <p>Optional. Should appear at the end of the file (although 567 looking like a header line). Must give the total of all cost lines, 568 to allow for a consistency check.</p> 569 </li> 570 </ul></div> 571 </div> 572 <div class="sect2"> 573 <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"> 574 <a name="cl-format.reference.body"></a>3.2.3.Description of Body Lines</h3></div></div></div> 575 <p>The regular body line is a cost line consisting of one or two 576 position numbers (depending on "positions:" header line, see above) 577 and an array of cost numbers. A position number either is a 578 line numbers into a source file or an instruction address within binary 579 code, with source/binary file names specified as position names (see 580 below). The cost numbers get mapped to event types in the same order 581 as specified in the "events:" header line. If less numbers than event 582 types are given, the costs default to zero for the remaining event 583 types.</p> 584 <p>Further, there exist lines 585 <code class="computeroutput">spec=position name</code>. A position name 586 is an arbitrary string. If it starts with "(" and a 587 digit, it's a string in compressed format. Otherwise it's the real 588 position string. This allows for file and symbol names as position 589 strings, as these never start with "(" + <span class="emphasis"><em>digit</em></span>. 590 The compressed format is either "(" <span class="emphasis"><em>number</em></span> ")" 591 <span class="emphasis"><em>space</em></span> <span class="emphasis"><em>position</em></span> or only 592 "(" <span class="emphasis"><em>number</em></span> ")". The first relates 593 <span class="emphasis"><em>position</em></span> to <span class="emphasis"><em>number</em></span> in the 594 context of the given format specification from this line to the end of 595 the file; it makes the (<span class="emphasis"><em>number</em></span>) an alias for 596 <span class="emphasis"><em>position</em></span>. Compressed format is always 597 optional.</p> 598 <p>Position specifications allowed:</p> 599 <div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" style="list-style-type: disc; "> 600 <li class="listitem"> 601 <p><code class="computeroutput">ob=</code> [Callgrind]</p> 602 <p>The ELF object where the cost of next cost lines happens.</p> 603 </li> 604 <li class="listitem"><p><code class="computeroutput">fl=</code> [Cachegrind]</p></li> 605 <li class="listitem"><p><code class="computeroutput">fi=</code> [Cachegrind]</p></li> 606 <li class="listitem"> 607 <p><code class="computeroutput">fe=</code> [Cachegrind]</p> 608 <p>The source file including the code which is responsible for 609 the cost of next cost lines. "fi="/"fe=" is used when the source 610 file changes inside of a function, i.e. for inlined code.</p> 611 </li> 612 <li class="listitem"> 613 <p><code class="computeroutput">fn=</code> [Cachegrind]</p> 614 <p>The name of the function where the cost of next cost lines 615 happens.</p> 616 </li> 617 <li class="listitem"> 618 <p><code class="computeroutput">cob=</code> [Callgrind]</p> 619 <p>The ELF object of the target of the next call cost lines.</p> 620 </li> 621 <li class="listitem"> 622 <p><code class="computeroutput">cfi=</code> [Callgrind]</p> 623 <p>The source file including the code of the target of the 624 next call cost lines.</p> 625 </li> 626 <li class="listitem"> 627 <p><code class="computeroutput">cfl=</code> [Callgrind]</p> 628 <p>Alternative spelling for <code class="computeroutput">cfi=</code> 629 specification (because of historical reasons).</p> 630 </li> 631 <li class="listitem"> 632 <p><code class="computeroutput">cfn=</code> [Callgrind]</p> 633 <p>The name of the target function of the next call cost 634 lines.</p> 635 </li> 636 </ul></div> 637 <p>The last type of body line provides specific costs not just 638 related to one position as regular cost lines. It starts with specific 639 strings similar to position name specifications.</p> 640 <div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" style="list-style-type: disc; "> 641 <li class="listitem"> 642 <p><code class="computeroutput">calls=count target-position</code> [Callgrind]</p> 643 <p>Call executed "count" times to "target-position". 644 After a "calls=" line there MUST be a cost line. This provides the source position 645 of the call and the cost spent in the called function in total.</p> 646 </li> 647 <li class="listitem"> 648 <p><code class="computeroutput">jump=count target-position</code> [Callgrind]</p> 649 <p>Unconditional jump, executed "count" times, to "target-position".</p> 650 </li> 651 <li class="listitem"> 652 <p><code class="computeroutput">jcnd=exe-count jump-count target-position</code> [Callgrind]</p> 653 <p>Conditional jump, executed "exe-count" times with "jump-count" jumps 654 happening (rest is fall-through) to "target-position".</p> 655 </li> 656 </ul></div> 657 </div> 658 </div> 659 </div> 660 <div> 661 <br><table class="nav" width="100%" cellspacing="3" cellpadding="2" border="0" summary="Navigation footer"> 662 <tr> 663 <td rowspan="2" width="40%" align="left"> 664 <a accesskey="p" href="manual-writing-tools.html"><<2.Writing a New Valgrind Tool</a></td> 665 <td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="u" href="tech-docs.html">Up</a></td> 666 <td rowspan="2" width="40%" align="right"><a accesskey="n" href="dist.html">Valgrind Distribution Documents>></a> 667 </td> 668 </tr> 669 <tr><td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="h" href="index.html">Home</a></td></tr> 670 </table> 671 </div> 672 </body> 673 </html> 674