These options specify which of several output formats
gprof
should produce.
Many of these options take an optional symspec to specify functions to be included or excluded. These options can be specified multiple times, with different symspecs, to include or exclude sets of symbols. See Symspecs.
Specifying any of these options overrides the default (‘-p -q’), which prints a flat profile and call graph analysis for all functions.
-A[symspec]
--annotated-source[=symspec]
The ‘-A’ option causes gprof
to print annotated source code.
If symspec is specified, print output only for matching symbols.
See The Annotated Source Listing.
-b
--brief
If the ‘-b’ option is given, gprof
doesn’t print the
verbose blurbs that try to explain the meaning of all of the fields in
the tables. This is useful if you intend to print out the output, or
are tired of seeing the blurbs.
-B
The ‘-B’ option causes gprof
to print the call graph analysis.
-C[symspec]
--exec-counts[=symspec]
The ‘-C’ option causes gprof
to
print a tally of functions and the number of times each was called.
If symspec is specified, print tally only for matching symbols.
If the profile data file contains basic-block count records, specifying the ‘-l’ option, along with ‘-C’, will cause basic-block execution counts to be tallied and displayed.
-i
--file-info
The ‘-i’ option causes gprof
to display summary information
about the profile data file(s) and then exit. The number of histogram,
call graph, and basic-block count records is displayed.
-I dirs
--directory-path=dirs
The ‘-I’ option specifies a list of search directories in which to find source files. Environment variable GPROF_PATH can also be used to convey this information. Used mostly for annotated source output.
-J[symspec]
--no-annotated-source[=symspec]
The ‘-J’ option causes gprof
not to
print annotated source code.
If symspec is specified, gprof
prints annotated source,
but excludes matching symbols.
-L
--print-path
Normally, source filenames are printed with the path
component suppressed. The ‘-L’ option causes gprof
to print the full pathname of
source filenames, which is determined
from symbolic debugging information in the image file
and is relative to the directory in which the compiler
was invoked.
-p[symspec]
--flat-profile[=symspec]
The ‘-p’ option causes gprof
to print a flat profile.
If symspec is specified, print flat profile only for matching symbols.
See The Flat Profile.
-P[symspec]
--no-flat-profile[=symspec]
The ‘-P’ option causes gprof
to suppress printing a flat profile.
If symspec is specified, gprof
prints a flat profile,
but excludes matching symbols.
-q[symspec]
--graph[=symspec]
The ‘-q’ option causes gprof
to print the call graph analysis.
If symspec is specified, print call graph only for matching symbols
and their children.
See The Call Graph.
-Q[symspec]
--no-graph[=symspec]
The ‘-Q’ option causes gprof
to suppress printing the
call graph.
If symspec is specified, gprof
prints a call graph,
but excludes matching symbols.
-t
--table-length=num
The ‘-t’ option causes the num most active source lines in each source file to be listed when source annotation is enabled. The default is 10.
-y
--separate-files
This option affects annotated source output only.
Normally, gprof
prints annotated source files
to standard-output. If this option is specified,
annotated source for a file named path/filename
is generated in the file filename-ann. If the underlying
file system would truncate filename-ann so that it
overwrites the original filename, gprof
generates
annotated source in the file filename.ann instead (if the
original file name has an extension, that extension is replaced
with .ann).
-Z[symspec]
--no-exec-counts[=symspec]
The ‘-Z’ option causes gprof
not to
print a tally of functions and the number of times each was called.
If symspec is specified, print tally, but exclude matching symbols.
-r
--function-ordering
The ‘--function-ordering’ option causes gprof
to print a
suggested function ordering for the program based on profiling data.
This option suggests an ordering which may improve paging, tlb and
cache behavior for the program on systems which support arbitrary
ordering of functions in an executable.
The exact details of how to force the linker to place functions in a particular order is system dependent and out of the scope of this manual.
-R map_file
--file-ordering map_file
The ‘--file-ordering’ option causes gprof
to print a
suggested .o link line ordering for the program based on profiling data.
This option suggests an ordering which may improve paging, tlb and
cache behavior for the program on systems which do not support arbitrary
ordering of functions in an executable.
Use of the ‘-a’ argument is highly recommended with this option.
The map_file argument is a pathname to a file which provides
function name to object file mappings. The format of the file is similar to
the output of the program nm
.
c-parse.o:00000000 T yyparse c-parse.o:00000004 C yyerrflag c-lang.o:00000000 T maybe_objc_method_name c-lang.o:00000000 T print_lang_statistics c-lang.o:00000000 T recognize_objc_keyword c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_identifier c-decl.o:00000000 T print_lang_type …
To create a map_file with GNU nm
, type a command like
nm --extern-only --defined-only -v --print-file-name program-name.
-T
--traditional
The ‘-T’ option causes gprof
to print its output in
“traditional” BSD style.
-w width
--width=width
Sets width of output lines to width. Currently only used when printing the function index at the bottom of the call graph.
-x
--all-lines
This option affects annotated source output only.
By default, only the lines at the beginning of a basic-block
are annotated. If this option is specified, every line in
a basic-block is annotated by repeating the annotation for the
first line. This behavior is similar to tcov
’s ‘-a’.
--demangle[=style]
--no-demangle
These options control whether C++ symbol names should be demangled when
printing output. The default is to demangle symbols. The
--no-demangle
option may be used to turn off demangling. Different
compilers have different mangling styles. The optional demangling style
argument can be used to choose an appropriate demangling style for your
compiler.