package catapult

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Tracing system based on the Catapult/TEF format

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

v0.2.tar.gz
md5=c732cce9430be74e8136cf87d6d8f9e5
sha512=2c221b86950a5ef81a41358b929633acc9d2b600aef8192a2b978b3b16dfc6237c79457db39f3beb95750d732674c977bc0547dde75bdfdf2fb378d192d37c48

README.md.html

Catapult

This is a tracing library for OCaml, based on the Catapult/TEF trace format.

The traces are .json files (or compressed .json.gz). They can be viewed in:

  • https://ui.perfetto.dev/

  • chrome://tracing in chrome/chromium

  • https://github.com/wolfpld/tracy after conversion (the tracy-import-chrome binary)

Usage

The core library is catapult. It's a small set of probes that can be inserted in your code, by hand (with meaningful messages if needed).

Systemd

An example systemd service file can be found in src/data/catapult-daemon.service.

[Unit]
Description=Catapult daemon (receives and stores profiling traces)

[Socket]
ListenStream=6981
Accept=no

[Service]
ExecStart=catapult-daemon --addr=tcp://127.0.0.1:6981
Restart=always
RestartSec=10

[Install]
WantedBy=default.target

Example: "basic"

A very stupid example (in examples/basic/basic.ml), is:

module Tr = Catapult.Tracing
let spf = Printf.sprintf

let rec fake_trace depth =
  if depth>=3 then ()
  else (
    (* the probe is here *)
    Tr.with_ "step" @@ fun () ->
    Thread.delay 0.1;
    Printf.printf "fake (depth=%d)\n%!" depth;
    fake_trace (depth+1);
    Thread.delay 0.2;
    Tr.instant "iteration.done" ~args:["depth", `Int depth];
  )

let () =
  (* this just logs into a file. It's not thread safe nor multiprocess-safe. *)
  Catapult_file.with_setup @@ fun () ->
  let n = try int_of_string (Sys.getenv "N") with _ -> 10 in
  Printf.printf "run %d iterations\n%!" n;

  for _i = 1 to n do
    fake_trace 0;
  done

If run with the TRACE=1 environment variable set, this will just produce a basic trace in the file "trace.json" (otherwise probes will do nothing and keep a minimal overhead).

Once opened in chrome://tracing, the trace looks like this:

Example: "heavy"

A more heavy example (used to benchmark a bit the tracing), is in examples/heavy.

In a terminal, run the daemon (if it's not already running):

$ ./daemon.sh

Then in another terminal:

$ ./heavy.sh -n=1 --mode=net -j 2
use net client tcp://127.0.0.1:6981
run 1 iterations
iteration 1
use net client tcp://127.0.0.1:6981
run 1 iterations
iteration 1

# list traces
$ catapult-conv
…
catapult-2022-2-16-16-36-18-pid-3229175.dbo

# convert last trace into a json.gz file
$ catapult-conv catapult-2022-2-16-16-36-18-pid-3229175.db

$ ls -lh trace.json.gz 
-rw-r--r-- 1 simon simon 374K Feb 16 11:38 trace.json.gz

Opened in chrome, the trace looks like that (focusing on a "step" event):

Coverage

  • [x] duration events

  • [x] async events

  • [x] flow events

  • [x] instants

  • [x] metadata

  • [x] counters

  • [x] object events

  • [ ] contexts

  • [ ] memory dumps

  • [ ] mark events

  • [ ] clock synchro

License

MIT

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