nitro

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Published: Oct 3, 2013 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 5 Imported by: 116

README

Nitro

Quick and easy performance analyzer library for golang.

Overview

Nitro is a quick and easy performance analyzer library for golang. It is useful for comparing A/B against different drafts of functions or different functions.

Implementing Nitro

Using Nitro is simple. First use go get to install the latest version of the library.

$ go get github.com/spf13/nitro

Next include nitro in your application.

import "github.com/spf13/nitro"

Somewhere near the beginning of your application (or where you want to begin profiling) call

timer := nitro.Initialize()

Then throughout your application wherever a major division of work is call

timer.Step("name of step")
Flags

Nitro automatically adds a flag to your application. If you aren't already using flags in your application the following code is an example of how you may use flags. Make sure to import "flag".

func main() {
    flag.Parse()
}

Bring your own flags implementation

If you are using your own flag system or a commander like cobra you may want to enable Nitro on your own. To enable Nitro without using the default flags, simply set the package variable '&nitro.AnalysisOn' to true. The following example uses a flagset:

Flags().BoolVar(&nitro.AnalysisOn, "stepAnalysis", false, "display memory and timing of different steps of the program")

var Timer *nitro.B

func init() {
    Timer = nitro.Initalize()
}

func TrackMe() {
    // a bunch of code here
    Timer.Step("important function to track")
}

func TrackAnother() {
    // more code here
    Timer.Step("another function to track")
}

Usage

Once the library is implemented throughout your application simply run your application and pass the "--stepAnalysis" flag to it. It does not need to be built to run, but can be called from go run or the binary form.

$ go run ./my_application --stepAnalysis
Example output

The following output comes from the hugo static site generator library. Nitro was built as a component of hugo and was extracted into it's own library.

$ ./main -p spf13 -b http://localhost -d --stepAnalysis

initialize & template prep:
    4.664481ms (5.887625ms)	        0.43 MB 	4583 Allocs
import pages:
    65.196788ms (71.107809ms)	   17.13 MB 	70151 Allocs
build indexes:
    1.823434ms (72.960713ms)	    0.12 MB 	3720 Allocs
render and write indexes:
    212.06721ms (285.057592ms)	   65.72 MB 	362557 Allocs
render and write lists:
    17.796945ms (302.87847ms)	    7.76 MB 	33122 Allocs
render pages:
    50.092756ms (352.998539ms)	   11.27 MB 	139898 Allocs
render shortcodes:
    11.34692ms (364.386939ms)	    6.24 MB 	21260 Allocs
render and write homepage:
    4.075194ms (368.497883ms)	    0.84 MB 	3906 Allocs
write pages:
    8.73933ms (377.263888ms)	    0.11 MB 	1672 Allocs

Release Notes

  • 0.5.0 Oct 1, 2013
    • Now supporting non flag based enabling
  • 0.4.0 June 19, 2013
    • Implement first draft

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Contributors

Names in no particular order:

License

nitro is released under the Apache 2.0 license. See LICENSE.txt

Documentation

Overview

Quick and Easy Performance Analyzer Useful for comparing A/B against different drafts of functions or different functions Loosely inspired by the go benchmark package

Example:

import "github.com/spf13/nitro"
timer := nitro.Initialize()
prepTemplates()
timer.Step("initialize & template prep")
CreatePages()
timer.Step("import pages")

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

View Source
var AnalysisOn = false

Functions

This section is empty.

Types

type B

type B struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

func Initalize

func Initalize() *B

Simple wrapper for Initialize Maintain for legacy purposes

func Initialize

func Initialize() *B

Call this first to get the performance object Should be called at the top of your function.

func (*B) Step

func (b *B) Step(str string)

Call perf.Step("step name") at each step in your application you want to benchmark Measures time spent since last Step call.

type R

type R struct {
	C         time.Duration // Cumulative time taken
	T         time.Duration // The total time taken.
	MemAllocs uint64        // The total number of memory allocations.
	MemBytes  uint64        // The total number of bytes allocated.
}

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