prof(M)
prof --
profile within a function
Syntax
#define MARK
#include <prof.h>
void MARK (name)
Description
MARK will introduce a mark called name
that will be treated the same as a function entry point.
Execution of the mark will add to a counter for that mark,
and program-counter time spent will be accounted to the
immediately preceding mark or to the function if
there are no preceding marks within the active function.
name may be any valid C identifier.
Each name in a single compilation must be unique,
but may be the same as any ordinary program symbol.
For marks to be effective, the symbol MARK
must be defined before the header file <prof.h>
is included.
This may be defined by a preprocessor directive as in the synopsis
or by a command line argument, that is:
cc -p -DMARK foo.c
If MARK is not defined, the MARK(name)
statements may be left in the source files
containing them and will be ignored.
Examples
In this example, marks
can be used to determine how much time is spent in each loop.
Unless this example is compiled with MARK
defined on the command line, the marks are ignored.
#include <prof.h>
foo( )
{
int i, j;
.
.
.
MARK(loop1);
for (i = 0; i < 2000; i++) {
. . .
}
MARK(loop2);
for (j = 0; j < 2000; j++) {
. . .
}
}
See also
profil(S),
monitor(S)
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003