MTuner
tracy
Our great sponsors
MTuner | tracy | |
---|---|---|
5 | 57 | |
2,553 | 7,814 | |
1.4% | - | |
8.6 | 9.6 | |
4 months ago | 13 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
MTuner
- MTuner: C/C memory profiler and memory leak finder
- MTuner: C/C++ memory profiler and memory leak finder
-
What do you want out of a Rust profiler?
I would really love to have some memory profiler that is capable of dealing of huge amount of data and allocations, robust and stable with stack traces on allocations. Similar to https://github.com/milostosic/MTuner
-
Hey Rustaceans! Got an easy question? Ask here (39/2021)!
For memory profiling, MTuner is a good tool (worked much better for me than Visual Studio's memory profiler), and it's even open source.
-
We Trace a KV Database with Less Than 5% Performance Impact
Remotery - https://github.com/Celtoys/Remotery
Visual Studio's built-in profiler is an ok sampling profiler. It doesn't give you a nice multi-thread view which is a huge advantage to a span based profiler.
MTuner is quite nice for debugging memory usage. Which is another gaping hole in the Rust ecosystem. https://github.com/milostosic/mtuner
Lots of tools generate data in a format viewable by the Chrome trace viewer. I think Chrome's tracer viewer is not great. Maybe someday someone will create a viewer for the format that's good. I get cranky when large traces don't render at 60fps. Web-based viewers are almost all very very slow and it makes me sad.
tracy
- Tracy: Real-time nanosecond resolution frame profiler
-
Google/orbit – C/C++ Performance Profiler
i don't really think there is _anything_ that comes even close to tracy https://github.com/wolfpld/tracy.
on top of this, given google's penchant for dumping projects aka abandonware, this would be an easy pass.
-
Immediate Mode GUI Programming
The RemedyBG debugger (https://remedybg.handmade.network/) and the Tracy profiler (https://github.com/wolfpld/tracy) both use Dear ImGui and so far I've only read high praise from people who used those tools compared to the 'established' alternatives.
For tools like this, programmers are also just "normal users", and from the developer side, I'm sure they evaluated various alternatives with all their pros and cons before settling for Dear ImGui.
- Tracy Profiler
-
Tuning Linux for Performance
Not the person you asked, but generally you might want to look at "frame-based" profilers. These are typically used in video games, but the concept is general, and can apply to other applications. The "frame" could also be something like a request or transaction being processed. I like Tracy[1], myself.
Another latency metric that you'll see, often w/respect to web apps and microservices is "P99" and similar. This is the amount of time in which 99% of requests get their response. For a higher percentile, you get a better idea of worst-case performance.
[1] https://github.com/wolfpld/tracy
-
What is your favourite profiling tool for C++?
I've not actually used Superluminal, but I use Tracy for similar reasons. It's free though (and, importantly, open source).
-
My first game engine
For profiling, you can check tracy.
-
I got my procedural city engine / game (built from scratch in c++) running on the steam deck - does it look too garish?
You could try Tracy
-
Sharing Saturday #462
There is no such thing as overengineering in fun projects, so I've also adopted Tracy as profiling solution. Works quite nice and gonna save me plenty of times in the future debugging performance spikes on badly optimized math heavy operations.
-
Debugging and profiling embedded applications.
I know about tools such as tracing, jaeger or tracy. While having a complete tracing could be a potential solution, these tools don't work with no_std.
What are some alternatives?
palanteer - Visual Python and C++ nanosecond profiler, logger, tests enabler
optick - C++ Profiler For Games
PresentMon - Capture and analyze the high-level performance characteristics of graphics applications on Windows.
orbit - C/C++ Performance Profiler
tract - Tiny, no-nonsense, self-contained, Tensorflow and ONNX inference
Remotery - Single C file, Realtime CPU/GPU Profiler with Remote Web Viewer
pprof - pprof is a tool for visualization and analysis of profiling data
meta - 🦀 GitHub Actions for Rust - recipes, discussions, questions and ideas
parallel-hashmap - A family of header-only, very fast and memory-friendly hashmap and btree containers.
coz - Coz: Causal Profiling
STL - MSVC's implementation of the C++ Standard Library.