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author | Luca Falavigna <dktrkranz@debian.org> | 2010-01-02 20:56:35 +0100 |
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committer | Luca Falavigna <dktrkranz@debian.org> | 2010-01-02 20:56:35 +0100 |
commit | 64c458487151933ee0ba093cf4ac69e177d9be37 (patch) | |
tree | f6e3755704f53406eea85532e4ffe5d5ef50b7f0 /bin/caller-tree.py | |
parent | 2aec9cc58398cac1376509a7d75edb83b41f984e (diff) | |
parent | 72c578fd4b0b4a5a43e18594339ac4ff26c376dc (diff) |
Merge commit 'upstream/1.2.0.d20091224'
Diffstat (limited to 'bin/caller-tree.py')
-rw-r--r-- | bin/caller-tree.py | 96 |
1 files changed, 96 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/bin/caller-tree.py b/bin/caller-tree.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..85bb599 --- /dev/null +++ b/bin/caller-tree.py @@ -0,0 +1,96 @@ +#!/usr/bin/env python +# +# Quick script to process the *summary* output from SCons.Debug.caller() +# and print indented calling trees with call counts. +# +# The way to use this is to add something like the following to a function +# for which you want information about who calls it and how many times: +# +# from SCons.Debug import caller +# caller(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) +# +# Each integer represents how many stack frames back SCons will go +# and capture the calling information, so in the above example it will +# capture the calls six levels up the stack in a central dictionary. +# +# At the end of any run where SCons.Debug.caller() is used, SCons will +# print a summary of the calls and counts that looks like the following: +# +# Callers of Node/__init__.py:629(calc_signature): +# 1 Node/__init__.py:683(calc_signature) +# Callers of Node/__init__.py:676(gen_binfo): +# 6 Node/FS.py:2035(current) +# 1 Node/__init__.py:722(get_bsig) +# +# If you cut-and-paste that summary output and feed it to this script +# on standard input, it will figure out how these entries hook up and +# print a calling tree for each one looking something like: +# +# Node/__init__.py:676(gen_binfo) +# Node/FS.py:2035(current) 6 +# Taskmaster.py:253(make_ready_current) 18 +# Script/Main.py:201(make_ready) 18 +# +# Note that you should *not* look at the call-count numbers in the right +# hand column as the actual number of times each line *was called by* +# the function on the next line. Rather, it's the *total* number +# of times each function was found in the call chain for any of the +# calls to SCons.Debug.caller(). If you're looking at more than one +# function at the same time, for example, their counts will intermix. +# So use this to get a *general* idea of who's calling what, not for +# fine-grained performance tuning. + +import sys + +class Entry: + def __init__(self, file_line_func): + self.file_line_func = file_line_func + self.called_by = [] + self.calls = [] + +AllCalls = {} + +def get_call(flf): + try: + e = AllCalls[flf] + except KeyError: + e = AllCalls[flf] = Entry(flf) + return e + +prefix = 'Callers of ' + +c = None +for line in sys.stdin.readlines(): + if line[0] == '#': + pass + elif line[:len(prefix)] == prefix: + c = get_call(line[len(prefix):-2]) + else: + num_calls, flf = line.strip().split() + e = get_call(flf) + c.called_by.append((e, num_calls)) + e.calls.append(c) + +stack = [] + +def print_entry(e, level, calls): + print '%-72s%6s' % ((' '*2*level) + e.file_line_func, calls) + if e in stack: + print (' '*2*(level+1))+'RECURSION' + print + elif e.called_by: + stack.append(e) + for c in e.called_by: + print_entry(c[0], level+1, c[1]) + stack.pop() + else: + print + +for e in [ e for e in AllCalls.values() if not e.calls ]: + print_entry(e, 0, '') + +# Local Variables: +# tab-width:4 +# indent-tabs-mode:nil +# End: +# vim: set expandtab tabstop=4 shiftwidth=4: |