alt ruby_silhouette

Profiling

Non-discriminatory profiling for your MRI Ruby code. This gem is a small wrapper around the ruby-prof gem, which is its only dependency. It lets you do simple but powerful profiling of your friend's bad code.

Gem Version CircleCI

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'profiling', "~> 4.0"

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install profiling

Getting Started

Profile slow code from your friend or colleague like this:

Profiler.run do
  # Slow code here...
end

The next time you call the code it will be profiled and three files will be written into a directory called profiling.

Files Generated

File Description
graph.html Drill down into the call tree to see where the time is spent
stack.html See the profiled code as a nested stack
flat.txt List of all functions called, the time spent in each and the number of calls made to that function

Is it Fast?

No, no it's not. It's really slow. For especially gnarly, deeply nested code you will want to get up and get a coffee. This gem wraps ruby-prof which is partly written in C, so it's as fast as it can be.

Options

Use the configure method to set some options:

Profiler.configure({
  dir: '/tmp/my-dir',
  exclude_gems: true,
  exclude_standard_lib: true
})
Option Description Default
dir Directory the files will be created in (can be relative or absolute) "profiling"
exclude_gems Exclude ruby gems from the results false
exclude_standard_lib Exclude ruby standard library from results false

Rails Initializer

This initializer is recommended if you're planning to profile in Rails:

# config/initializer/profiling.rb
Profiler.configure({
  dir: Rails.root.join('tmp/profiling')
})

Conditional Profiling

Pass an argument if: to enable or disable profiling at run time:

Profiler.run(if: user.is_admin?) do
  # Slow code here...
end

Labels

Labels translate to sub directories that the files will be generated in. This is handy for profiling multiple things at once, preserving files between runs, or grouping profiling results logically.

Profiler.run("some-label") do
  # Slow code here...
end

Preserving files between runs

Keep old files by adding the current time in the label so new files are generated with each run:

Profiler.run("some-label-#{Time.now.to_i}") do
  # Slow code here...
end

Organizing

Use / in your labels to group profiling results together in directories:

Profiler.run("post/create") do
  # Slow code here...
end

Profiler.run("post/update") do
  # Slow code here...
end

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome. Pull requests with passing tests are even better.

To run the test suite:

bundle exec rspec

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.