Difference between revisions of "How to profile a Haskell program"

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runhaskell Setup.hs build
 
runhaskell Setup.hs build
 
sudo runhaskell Setup.hs install
 
sudo runhaskell Setup.hs install
  +
  +
You'll need to do this for every library that you use.
   
 
=== Enable profiling on your stuff ===
 
=== Enable profiling on your stuff ===

Revision as of 12:21, 20 March 2007


Just jotting down my notes whilst profiling one of my helper scripts. It would be great if the community could transform this into a tutorial

The case study

I have a script that converts from an XML format to some pickled data structures via Data.Binary. The XML part is generated by HaXml's DtdToHaskell. On a 54M XML file, the thing swaps like crazy and takes several hours. I would like to improve the situation.

Preliminaries

Enable profiling on libraries

For example, my script uses HaXmL, which uses a library called polyparse:

cd polyparse
runhaskell Setup.hs configure --enable-library-profiling
runhaskell Setup.hs build
sudo runhaskell Setup.hs install
cd ..
cd HaXml
runhaskell Setup.hs configure --enable-library-profiling
runhaskell Setup.hs build
sudo runhaskell Setup.hs install

You'll need to do this for every library that you use.

Enable profiling on your stuff

Note that I assume you are using Cabal. If not, see How to write a Haskell program. It's super easy, and you'll be happy you did it.

cd yourProgram
runhaskell Setup.hs configure --enable-binary-profiling
runhaskell Setup.hs build

No need to install it. We'll be making changes aplenty.

Get toy data

My script takes hours to convert 50M of XML. Running it on such data every time I tweak something would clearly not be a good idea. You want something which is small enough for your program to come back relatively quickly, but large enough to study.

I use something like sed -f makeToy.sed reallyBigFile.xml > toy.xml where makeToy.sed is a bit of text-hacking to chop off the rest of my data after the arbitrarily chosen item #6621:

/6621/{
c\
</grammar>
q
}

Test harness

Make things easy on yourself! I find that it's very helpful to automate my way out of my clumsiness. Ideally, each tweak you make to your software should be accompanied by a simple run and not some long sequence of actions, half of which you might forget.

Create stable and unstable repositories

It's possible that you'll be making a lot of small modifications to your program, so what would be nice is to be able to save some of your modifications along the way. Darcs is very handy for this.

darcs get yourRepository perfUnstable
darcs get yourRepository perfStable

You should work in perfUnstable. From time to time, you'll want to record your changes and push them into the stable branch. More on this later.

Create a run script

Create a save script

Profiling

Generate the data, advice on how to scrutinise it (help especially wanted)