NAME¶
Devel::NYTProf::Apache - Profile mod_perl applications with Devel::NYTProf
SYNOPSIS¶
# in your Apache config file with mod_perl installed
PerlPassEnv NYTPROF
PerlModule Devel::NYTProf::Apache
If you're using virtual hosts with "PerlOptions" that include either
"+Parent" or "+Clone" then see "VIRTUAL HOSTS"
below.
DESCRIPTION¶
This module allows mod_perl applications to be profiled using
"Devel::NYTProf".
If the NYTPROF environment variable isn't set
at the time
Devel::NYTProf::Apache is loaded then Devel::NYTProf::Apache will issue
a warning and default it to:
file=/tmp/nytprof.$$.out:addpid=1:endatexit=1
The file actually created by NTProf will also have the process id appended to it
because the "addpid" option is enabled by default.
See "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" in Devel::NYTProf for more details on the
settings effected by this environment variable.
Try using "PerlPassEnv" in your httpd.conf if you can set the NYTPROF
environment variable externally. Note that if you set the NYTPROF environment
variable externally then the file name obviously can't include the parent
process id. For example, to set stmts=0 externally, use:
NYTPROF=file=/tmp/nytprof.out:out:addpid=1:endatexit=1:stmts=0
Each profiled mod_perl process will need to have terminated cleanly before you
can successfully read the profile data file. The simplest approach is to start
the httpd, make some requests (e.g., 100 of the same request), then stop it
and process the profile data.
Alternatively you could send a TERM signal to the httpd worker process to
terminate that one process. The parent httpd process will start up another one
for you ready for more profiling.
Example httpd.conf¶
It's usually a good idea to use just one child process when profiling, which you
can do by setting the "MaxClients" to 1 in httpd.conf.
Set "MaxRequestsPerChild" to 0 to avoid worker processes exiting and
restarting during the profiling, which would split the profile data across
multiple files.
Using an "IfDefine" blocks lets you leave the profile configuration in
place and enable it whenever it's needed by adding "-D NYTPROF" to
the httpd startup command line.
<IfDefine NYTPROF>
MaxClients 1
MaxRequestsPerChild 0
PerlModule Devel::NYTProf::Apache
</IfDefine>
With that configuration you should get two profile files, one for the parent
process and one for the worker.
VIRTUAL HOSTS¶
If your httpd configuration includes virtual hosts with "PerlOptions"
that include either "+Parent" or "+Clone" then mod_perl2
will create a new perl interpreter to handle requests for that virtual host.
This causes some issues for profiling.
If "Devel::NYTProf::Apache" is loaded in the top-level configuration
then activity in any virtual hosts that use their own perl interpreter won't
be profiled. Normal virtual hosts will be profiled just fine.
You can profile a
single virtual host that uses its own perl interpreter
by loading "Devel::NYTProf::Apache"
inside the configuration for
that virtual host. In this case
do not use
"PerlModule" directive. You need to use a "Perl" directive
instead, like this:
<VirtualHost *:1234>
...
<Perl> use Devel::NYTProf::Apache; </Perl>
...
</VirtualHost>
LIMITATIONS¶
Profiling mod_perl on Windows is not supported because NYTProf currently doesn't
support threads.
TROUBLESHOOTING¶
Truncated profile: Profiles for large applications can take a while to write to
the disk. Allow sufficient time after stopping apache, or check the process
has actually exited, before trying to read the profile.
Truncated profile: The mod_perl
child_terminate() function terminates the
child without giving perl an opportunity to cleanup. Since
"Devel::NYTProf::Apache" doesn't intercept the mod_perl
child_terminate() function (yet) the profile will be corrupted if it's
called. You're most likely to encounter this when using Apache::SizeLimit, so
you may want to disable it while profiling.
SEE ALSO¶
Devel::NYTProf
AUTHOR¶
Adam Kaplan, "<akaplan at nytimes.com>"
Tim Bunce,
<
http://www.tim.bunce.name> and <
http://blog.timbunce.org>
Steve Peters, "<steve at fisharerojo.org>"
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
Copyright (C) 2008 by Adam Kaplan and The New York Times Company.
Copyright (C) 2008 by Steve Peters.
Copyright (C) 2008-2012 by Tim Bunce.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option,
any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.