Staging
v0.8.1
Revision 5b956ca42de37c761562e9c9aeb96a0e67606e33 authored by Pablo Galindo on 11 May 2020, 00:41:26 UTC, committed by GitHub on 11 May 2020, 00:41:26 UTC
With the new parser, the error message contains always the trailing
newlines, causing the comparison of the repr of the error messages
in codeop to fail. This commit makes the new parser mirror the old parser's
behaviour regarding trailing newlines.
1 parent 2cc9b84
Raw File
cProfile.py
#! /usr/bin/env python3

"""Python interface for the 'lsprof' profiler.
   Compatible with the 'profile' module.
"""

__all__ = ["run", "runctx", "Profile"]

import _lsprof
import profile as _pyprofile

# ____________________________________________________________
# Simple interface

def run(statement, filename=None, sort=-1):
    return _pyprofile._Utils(Profile).run(statement, filename, sort)

def runctx(statement, globals, locals, filename=None, sort=-1):
    return _pyprofile._Utils(Profile).runctx(statement, globals, locals,
                                             filename, sort)

run.__doc__ = _pyprofile.run.__doc__
runctx.__doc__ = _pyprofile.runctx.__doc__

# ____________________________________________________________

class Profile(_lsprof.Profiler):
    """Profile(timer=None, timeunit=None, subcalls=True, builtins=True)

    Builds a profiler object using the specified timer function.
    The default timer is a fast built-in one based on real time.
    For custom timer functions returning integers, timeunit can
    be a float specifying a scale (i.e. how long each integer unit
    is, in seconds).
    """

    # Most of the functionality is in the base class.
    # This subclass only adds convenient and backward-compatible methods.

    def print_stats(self, sort=-1):
        import pstats
        pstats.Stats(self).strip_dirs().sort_stats(sort).print_stats()

    def dump_stats(self, file):
        import marshal
        with open(file, 'wb') as f:
            self.create_stats()
            marshal.dump(self.stats, f)

    def create_stats(self):
        self.disable()
        self.snapshot_stats()

    def snapshot_stats(self):
        entries = self.getstats()
        self.stats = {}
        callersdicts = {}
        # call information
        for entry in entries:
            func = label(entry.code)
            nc = entry.callcount         # ncalls column of pstats (before '/')
            cc = nc - entry.reccallcount # ncalls column of pstats (after '/')
            tt = entry.inlinetime        # tottime column of pstats
            ct = entry.totaltime         # cumtime column of pstats
            callers = {}
            callersdicts[id(entry.code)] = callers
            self.stats[func] = cc, nc, tt, ct, callers
        # subcall information
        for entry in entries:
            if entry.calls:
                func = label(entry.code)
                for subentry in entry.calls:
                    try:
                        callers = callersdicts[id(subentry.code)]
                    except KeyError:
                        continue
                    nc = subentry.callcount
                    cc = nc - subentry.reccallcount
                    tt = subentry.inlinetime
                    ct = subentry.totaltime
                    if func in callers:
                        prev = callers[func]
                        nc += prev[0]
                        cc += prev[1]
                        tt += prev[2]
                        ct += prev[3]
                    callers[func] = nc, cc, tt, ct

    # The following two methods can be called by clients to use
    # a profiler to profile a statement, given as a string.

    def run(self, cmd):
        import __main__
        dict = __main__.__dict__
        return self.runctx(cmd, dict, dict)

    def runctx(self, cmd, globals, locals):
        self.enable()
        try:
            exec(cmd, globals, locals)
        finally:
            self.disable()
        return self

    # This method is more useful to profile a single function call.
    def runcall(self, func, /, *args, **kw):
        self.enable()
        try:
            return func(*args, **kw)
        finally:
            self.disable()

    def __enter__(self):
        self.enable()
        return self

    def __exit__(self, *exc_info):
        self.disable()

# ____________________________________________________________

def label(code):
    if isinstance(code, str):
        return ('~', 0, code)    # built-in functions ('~' sorts at the end)
    else:
        return (code.co_filename, code.co_firstlineno, code.co_name)

# ____________________________________________________________

def main():
    import os
    import sys
    import runpy
    import pstats
    from optparse import OptionParser
    usage = "cProfile.py [-o output_file_path] [-s sort] [-m module | scriptfile] [arg] ..."
    parser = OptionParser(usage=usage)
    parser.allow_interspersed_args = False
    parser.add_option('-o', '--outfile', dest="outfile",
        help="Save stats to <outfile>", default=None)
    parser.add_option('-s', '--sort', dest="sort",
        help="Sort order when printing to stdout, based on pstats.Stats class",
        default=-1,
        choices=sorted(pstats.Stats.sort_arg_dict_default))
    parser.add_option('-m', dest="module", action="store_true",
        help="Profile a library module", default=False)

    if not sys.argv[1:]:
        parser.print_usage()
        sys.exit(2)

    (options, args) = parser.parse_args()
    sys.argv[:] = args

    if len(args) > 0:
        if options.module:
            code = "run_module(modname, run_name='__main__')"
            globs = {
                'run_module': runpy.run_module,
                'modname': args[0]
            }
        else:
            progname = args[0]
            sys.path.insert(0, os.path.dirname(progname))
            with open(progname, 'rb') as fp:
                code = compile(fp.read(), progname, 'exec')
            globs = {
                '__file__': progname,
                '__name__': '__main__',
                '__package__': None,
                '__cached__': None,
            }
        runctx(code, globs, None, options.outfile, options.sort)
    else:
        parser.print_usage()
    return parser

# When invoked as main program, invoke the profiler on a script
if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()
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