bytehound
pprof-rs
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bytehound | pprof-rs | |
---|---|---|
16 | 5 | |
3,856 | 1,209 | |
- | 3.3% | |
3.8 | 4.8 | |
9 months ago | 10 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
bytehound
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My Rust program (Well, game) is leaking memory, 4MB/s.
I've found bytehound helpful for tracking memory leaks: https://github.com/koute/bytehound
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Show HN: I wrote a tool in Rust for tracking all allocations in a Linux process
Interesting approach. How is performance compared to something like https://github.com/koute/bytehound
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Introducing alloc-track: Precise memory profiling by stack trace and thread.
https://github.com/koute/bytehound is another tool in this space to be aware of
- Out of the loop: WASM for non-web projects
- Which gui crate would you suggest for a simple program?
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Implementing a C++ memory allocator to track our framework memory usage
Ot sure if it will fit your needs but maybe bytehound is worth looking into.
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Memory leak in a long running process.
I had a great success recently with https://github.com/koute/bytehound/issues/86
- Hi, I’m new in rust, I have some expirience with c# and its classes ans structs. I can’t find information about that is happend with struct in rust when I pass it to function argument. Are there some copy effect ?
- Does rust have a visual analysis tool for memory and performance like pprof of golang?
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Memory freed but not immediately
Try using this: https://github.com/koute/bytehound
pprof-rs
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Help with Rust Program performance
On top of others' specific recommendations, don't forget to profile! Tools like perf on Linux and pprof within Rust will tell you which functions are taking the most time.
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CPU Profiling in WSL-ish setup
https://github.com/tikv/pprof-rs: Seems to work nicely per se, but I cant seem to find any useful information in the flamegraph for my setting. I see mostly functions in std::thread but cant find the time it costs to render stuff or to do the actual computations which should be the most time consuming things. Not sure whether this is necessarily something wrong with pprof-rs, maybe I'm just bad at finding stuff in the flamegraph svg or bevys ECS is making this hard.
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Does rust have a visual analysis tool for memory and performance like pprof of golang?
Have you looked into using pprof?
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Pyroscope Profiler 0.5 released
The library doesn't actually do any profiling (The profiler for Rust is pprof-rs: https://github.com/tikv/pprof-rs) but it's goal is to manage data returned by profilers (abstracted behind a Backend) and send this data to a Pyroscope Server (or exported to flamegraph, though this is being implemented in the commandline application).
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Rust support for continuous profiling added in Pyroscope v0.10.2
The libunwind part is actually not related to overhead, this is just a nuance of the way that pprof-rs unwinds stack traces.
What are some alternatives?
memory-profiler - A memory profiler for Linux. [Moved to: https://github.com/koute/bytehound]
pyroscope - Continuous Profiling Platform. Debug performance issues down to a single line of code
heaptrack - A heap memory profiler for Linux
pyroscope - Continuous Profiling Platform. Debug performance issues down to a single line of code [Moved to: https://github.com/grafana/pyroscope]
goawk - A POSIX-compliant AWK interpreter written in Go, with CSV support
pprof - pprof is a tool for visualization and analysis of profiling data
pyroscope-rs - Pyroscope Profiler for Rust. Profile your Rust applications.
heappy - heap profiler for rust
leakdice-rust - Rust re-implementation of leakdice
samply - Command-line sampling profiler for macOS and Linux