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Delphi High Performance

You're reading from   Delphi High Performance Build fast Delphi applications using concurrency, parallel programming and memory management

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788625456
Length 336 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Primož Gabrijelčič Primož Gabrijelčič
Author Profile Icon Primož Gabrijelčič
Primož Gabrijelčič
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. About Performance 2. Fixing the Algorithm FREE CHAPTER 3. Fine-Tuning the Code 4. Memory Management 5. Getting Started with the Parallel World 6. Working with Parallel Tools 7. Exploring Parallel Practices 8. Using External Libraries 9. Best Practices 10. Other Books You May Enjoy

Don't guess, measure!

There is only one way to get a good picture about the fast and slow parts of a program—by measuring it. We can do it manually, by inserting time-measuring calls in the code, or we can use specialized tools. We have a name for measuring—profiling—and we call specialized tools for measuring profilers.

In the rest of this chapter, we'll look at different techniques of measuring the execution speed. First we will measure the now familiar program, SlowCode, with a simple software stopwatch and then we'll look at a few open source and commercial profilers.

Before we start, I'd like to point out a few basic rules that apply to all profiling techniques:

  • Always profile without the debugger. The debugger will slow the execution in unexpected places and that will skew the results. If you are starting your program from the Delphi IDE, just press Ctrl+Shift+F9 instead of F9.
  • Try not to do anything else on the computer while profiling. Other programs will take the CPU away from the measured program which will make it run slower.
  • Take care that the program doesn't wait for user action (data entry, button click) while profiling. This will completely skew the report.
  • Repeat the tests a few times. Execution times will differ because Windows (and any other OS that Delphi supports) will always execute other tasks besides running your program.
  • All the above especially holds for multithreaded programs, which is an area explored in Chapters 5 to 7.

Profiling with TStopwatch

Delphi includes a helpful unit called System.Diagnostics, which implements a TStopwatch record. It allows us to measure time events with a better precision than 1 millisecond and has a pretty exhaustive public interface, as shown in the code fragment below:

type
TStopwatch = record
public
class function Create: TStopwatch; static;
class function GetTimeStamp: Int64; static;
procedure Reset;
procedure Start;
class function StartNew: TStopwatch; static;
procedure Stop;
property Elapsed: TTimeSpan read GetElapsed;
property ElapsedMilliseconds: Int64 read GetElapsedMilliseconds;
property ElapsedTicks: Int64 read GetElapsedTicks;
class property Frequency: Int64 read FFrequency;
class property IsHighResolution: Boolean read FIsHighResolution;
property IsRunning: Boolean read FRunning;
end;

To use a stopwatch, you first have to create it. You can call TStopwatch.Create to create a new stopped stopwatch or TStopwatch.StartNew to create a new started stopwatch. As TStopwatch is implemented as a record, there's no need to destroy a stopwatch object.

When a stopwatch is started, it is measuring time. To start a stopwatch, call the Start method and to stop it, call the Stop method. The IsRunning property will tell you if the stopwatch is currently started. Call the Reset method to reset the stopwatch to zero.

The TStopwatch contains a few functions that return the currently measured time. The most precise of them is ElapsedTicks, but as there is no built-in (public) function to convert this into standard time units, this function is hard to use. My recommendation is to just use the ElapsedMilliseconds property which will give you elapsed (measured) time in milliseconds.

For a simple demo, this code will return 1,000 or a bit more:

function Measure1sec: int64;
var
sw: TStopwatch;
begin
sw := TStopwatch.StartNew;
Sleep(1000);
Result := sw.ElapsedMilliseconds;
end;

Let's now use this function to measure the SlowMethod method.

First, you have to add the System.Diagnostics unit to the uses list:

uses
System.SysUtils,
System.Generics.Collections,
System.Classes,
System.Diagnostics;

Next, you have to create this stopwatch inside SlowMethod, stop it at the end, and write out the elapsed time:

function SlowMethod(highBound: Integer): TArray<Integer>;
var
// existing variables
sw: TStopwatch;
begin
sw := TStopwatch.StartNew;

// existing code

sw.Stop;
Writeln('SlowMethod: ', sw.ElapsedMilliseconds, ' ms');
end;

We can use this code to verify the theory that SlowCode has time complexity O(n2). To do this, we have to measure the execution times for different counts of processed numbers (different values entered at the How many numbers prompt).

I did some testing for selected values from 10,000 to 1,000,000 and got the following numbers:

Highest number Execution time [ms]
10,000 15
25,000 79
50,000 250
75000 506
100,000 837
250,000 4,515
500.000 15564​
750,000 30,806​
1,000,000 54,219

 

If you repeat the tests, you will of course measure different values, but the growth rate should be the same.

For a quick confirmation, I have plotted a Scatter Chart of this data in Excel and the result surely looks like a square function. To be more sure, I have added a power trendline which created a function in the form of nc, where c was a constant that Excel has calculated from the data. In the case of my specific measurements, this fitting function was y = 10-6 * x1.7751, which is not that far from x2:

Curve fitting in Excel (left) and Wolfram Alpha (right)

Next, I repeated this curve fitting process on the wonderful Wolfram Alpha (www.wolframalpha.com) where you can find a Regression Calculator Widget, a tool designed specifically for this task. I entered measurements into the widget and it calculated a fitting function of 4.76372×10^-8 * x^2 + 0.0064733 * x - 143.666. If we ignore all unimportant factors and constants, the only part left is x^2.  Another confirmation for our analysis!

Now we know how the program behaves in global terms, but we still have no idea of which part of the code is the slowest. To find that out, we also have to measure execution times of the ElementInDataDivides and Filter methods.

These two methods are called multiple times during the execution of the program so we can't just create and destroy a stopwatch each time Filter (for example) is executed. We have to create a global stopwatch, which is a bit inconvenient in this program because we have to introduce a global variable.

If you check the SlowCode_Stopwatch program, you'll see that it actually creates three global stopwatches, one for each of the functions that we want to measure:

var
Timing_ElementInData: TStopwatch;
Timing_Filter: TStopwatch;
Timing_SlowMethod: TStopwatch;

All three stopwatches are created (but not started!) when the program starts:

Timing_ElementInData := TStopwatch.Create;
Timing_Filter := TStopwatch.Create;
Timing_SlowMethod := TStopwatch.Create;

When the program ends, the code logs elapsed time for all three stopwatches:

Writeln('Total time spent in SlowMethod: ', 
Timing_SlowMethod.ElapsedMilliseconds, ' ms');
Writeln('Total time spent in ElementInDataDivides: ',
Timing_ElementInData.ElapsedMilliseconds, ' ms');
Writeln('Total time spent in Filter: ',
Timing_Filter.ElapsedMilliseconds, ' ms');

In each of the three methods, we only have to Start the stopwatch at the beginning and Stop it at the end:

function Filter(list: TList<Integer>): TArray<Integer>;
// existing variables
begin
Timing_Filter.Start;

// existing code

Timing_Filter.Stop;
end;

The only tricky part is the ElementInDataDivides function which calls Exit as soon as one element divides the value parameter. The simplest way to fix that is to wrap the existing code in a try .. finally handler and to stop the stopwatch in the finally part:

function ElementInDataDivides(data: TList<Integer>; value: Integer): boolean;
var
i: Integer;
begin
Timing_ElementInData.Start;
try
Result := True;
for i in data do
if (value <> i) and ((value mod i) = 0) then
Exit;
Result := False;
finally
Timing_ElementInData.Stop;
end;
end;

If you run the program and play with it for a while and then exit, you'll get a performance report. In my case, I got the following result:

We now know that most of the time is spent in ElementInDataDivides, but we don't know how many calls to it were made directly from SlowMethod and how many from the Filter method. To find that out, we have to add two new global variables and some more code:

var
Generate_ElementInData_ms: int64;
Filter_ElementInData_ms: int64;

function SlowMethod(highBound: Integer): TArray<Integer>;
var
i: Integer;
temp: TList<Integer>;
begin
Timing_SlowMethod.Start;
temp := TList<Integer>.Create;
try

Timing_ElementInData.Reset;
for i := 2 to highBound do
if not ElementInDataDivides(temp, i) then
temp.Add(i);
Generate_ElementInData_ms := Generate_ElementInData_ms +
Timing_ElementInData.ElapsedMilliseconds;

Timing_ElementInData.Reset;
Result := Filter(temp);
Filter_ElementInData_ms := Filter_ElementInData_ms +
Timing_ElementInData.ElapsedMilliseconds;

finally
FreeAndNil(temp);
end;
Timing_SlowMethod.Stop;
end;

The code (which can be found in the SlowCode_Stopwatch2 program) now resets the Timing_ElementInData stopwatch before the data generation phase and adds the value of the stopwatch to Generate_ElementInData_ms afterwards. Then it resets the stopwatch again for the Filter phase and adds the value of the stopwatch to Filter_ElementInData_ms afterwards.

At the end that will give us  the cumulative execution time for ElementInDataDivides called directly from SlowMethod in Generate_ElementInData_ms and the cumulative execution time for ElementInDataDivides called from Filter in Filter_ElementInData_ms.

A test run with an upper bound of 100,000 produced the following output:

Now we can be really sure that almost all the time is spent in ElementInDataDivides. We also know that approximately 75% of the time it is called directly from SlowMethod and 25% of the time from the Filter method.

We are now ready to optimize the program. We can either improve the implementation to make it faster, or replace it with a faster algorithm, or both.

But first, let's see what profilers can tell us about our program.

Profilers

Measuring the speed of a program by inserting special code into the program by hand is perfect if you want to measure a very specific part of the code, but becomes cumbersome if you don't know exactly which part of the program you should focus on. In such cases, it is best to use specialized software - profilers.

Profilers can measure all kinds of parameters. Sure, they are mostly used for measuring execution speed, at a method or even on a line level, but they can do much more. They can display the call tree - a graph showing how methods call one another. They can show memory usage in a program so you can quickly find the one method which is constantly eating the memory. They can show you the coverage of your tests so you can see which code was tested and which not. And much more.

They do that magic in two ways, by sampling or instrumentation.

Sampling profiling looks at the state of your program at regular intervals (for example, 100 times per second) and each time checks which line of the code is currently being executed. Statistically, it will predominantly see lines of code that are executed most of the time.

Sampling profiling will give us only a rough overview of behavior inside the program but it will do that without affecting the program speed, and because of that is excellent for taking a first look at some code.

Instrumenting profiles do their magic by changing—instrumenting—the code. They are, in fact, doing almost exactly the same kind of changing the code as we did by inserting the stopwatch calls.

There are two ways to do instrumentation. The profiler can change the source code or it can change the program binary. Source instrumenting profilers are rare because they are less safe to use (there's always the possibility that a compiler will mess up the source) and because you have to recompile the code after it is instrumented (modified by the profiler).

Most of the instrumenting profilers on the market modify the binary code, which is a bit more tricky to implement but doesn't require a recompilation and cannot destroy the source code.

The advantage of instrumentation over sampling is that the former can collect everything that is going on inside the program and not just a few samples here and there. The disadvantage is that instrumentation reduces the speed of the program. Although instrumenting profilers take extra care to optimize the code that is inserted into your program, executing this code in many instrumented methods can still take a long time. 

The other problem is the amount of collected data. A short and fast method which is called 100,000 times in 1 second will generate 100,000 data samples in an instrumenting profiler and only 100 samples in a sampling profiler (provided that it samples the code 100 times a second).

Because of all that, instrumenting profilers are best used once we already know on which part(s) of the program we want to focus.

I'll end this chapter with an overview of four profilers, two open source and free (AsmProfiler and Sampling Profiler) and two commercial (AQTime and Nexus Quality Suite), to make it easier for you to choose the best fit for your situation. These four profilers are, of course, not your only options. If you need a very precise profiling of short methods, check out ProDelphi (www.prodelphi.de). And if you need a high-end tool that will not only profile your application but help it optimize to its fullest potential, take a look at Intel's VTune Amplifier (software.intel.com/en-us/intel-vtune-amplifier-xe).

AsmProfiler

AsmProfiler is a 32-bit instrumenting and sampling profiler written by André Mussche. Its source, along with Windows exe, can be found at https://github.com/andremussche/asmprofiler. Although the latest version was released in 2016, it works well with the newest Delphi at the time of writing this book, 10.2 Tokyo.

The sampling and instrumenting profilers are used in a different way, so I'll cover them separately.

To use AsmProfiler you first have to unpack the release ZIP into some folder on your disk. That will create two subfolders—Sampling and Instrumenting. To start the sampling profiler, start AsmProfiling_Sampling from the Sampling folder and then click Start profiling.

AsmProfiler has two ways of starting a profiling session. You can start the program manually, click Select process in AsmProfiler, and select your program from the list of running processes. Alternatively, you can click Select exe, browse to the compiled EXE of your program, and then click Start process now, which will start the program or click Start sampling which will start the program and also start sampling the code.

The reasoning behind the two different ways of starting the program is that mostly you want to profile a specific part of the program, so you would load it into the profiler, navigate to the specific part, click Start sampling, do the required steps in your program, click Stop sampling, and analyze the results. Sometimes, however, you would want to profile the very startup of the program so you would want sampling to start immediately after your program is launched. The following screenshot shows the initial AsmProfiler screen:

Starting profiling session in AsmProfiler

Sampling options can be configured in the Options group. You can set the sampling interval—how many milliseconds will pass between two samples. Setting this value to 4, for example, will generate 250 (1000/4) samples per second.

Setting the sampling interval to 0 enables a continuous sampling mode which still leaves some time to threads running on the same CPU. (The sampling code calls Sleep(0) between taking two samples.) Setting it to -1 causes the samples to be taken as fast as possible. In effect, AsmProfiler will use one CPU core for itself.

You can also set the priority of sample-taking threads from the default,  Normal. I will discuss threads and priorities in Chapter 5, Getting Started with the Parallel World.

After you have taken the samples and clicked Stop sampling, click the Show results button to analyze the results.

If you want to compare your results with mine, here are steps to produce the results (as shown in the following screenshot):

  1. Start AsmProfiler.
  2. Click Select exe and select the SlowCode.exe.
  3. Click Start process now.
  4. Click Start sampling.
  5. Enter 100,000 into the program.
  6. Click Stop sampling.
  7. Enter 0 into the program to exit.
  8. Click Show results.
  9. Click Results on the Sampling Results form.
Result of a test run profiled with AsmProfiler's Sampling profiler

AsmProfiler displays results organized by threads, but it automatically highlights the main thread so you don't have to care about that detail if your program doesn't use multithreading.

In the result grid, it shows the module (main EXE or DLL), name of the function, how many times the code was found to be in this function, and times (absolute and percentage) the code spent in that function (Own), in all functions called from it (Child), and both in that function and in all functions called from it (Own+Child).

If we sort results by the time spent only in the function (Own time), we'll see that function TextIn$qqrr15System.TTextRec comes to the top. This a function that reads console input (in the Readln statement) and we can safely ignore it. 

The next one on the list, ElementInDataDivides$qqrp40..., is the one that interests us. We can see that it was sampled 371 times (Calls) and that it needed 0.6 seconds to execute. If you switch to the Detailed view tab and select this function, you'll see in the Parent calls (called by...) panel that it was called 258 times from SlowMethod and 113 times from the Filter method. In reality, of course, it was called many more times, but most of them were not seen by the sampling profiler.

In this view, we can also see how many times each line of some method was hit, which will give us a good idea about where the program spends most of the time. Unfortunately, we cannot sort the data on different criteria:

Detailed view showing information for each line of the program

The names of the methods in these outputs are very weird, but that is how the Delphi compiler calls these methods internally. The part after the $ encodes the parameter types. This process is called name mangling (and the part after $ is sometimes referred to as a decoration) and it enables us to use overloaded methods with the same name and different parameters—internally they all have different names.

For example, the function SlowMethod(highBound: Integer) is internally known as SlowMethod$qqri. The qqr part specifies the fastcall calling convention (it describes how parameters are passed to the function in registers and on stack) and i identifies one integer parameter.

AsmProfiler's instrumenting profiler requires a bit more work. Firstly, you have to copy AsmProfiler.dll from the Instrumenting subfolder into a folder on the Windows environment path or into the exe folder. Secondly, you have to copy Instrumenting\API\_uAsmProfDllLoader.pas into Delphi's library path, into your project's folder or add this folder to your project's search path.

Thirdly, you have to add the _uAsmProfDllLoader unit to your project and call the following code. This will show the profiler's main form on the screen:

if _uAsmProfDllLoader.LoadProfilerDll then
_uAsmProfDllLoader.ShowProfileForm;

To start profiling, call _uAsmProfDllLoader.StartProfiler(False);. To stop collecting data, call  _uAsmProfDllLoader.StopProfiler;. These two calls are not strictly necessary. You can also start and stop profiling from the profiler's user interface. Modifying the code will, however, give you more control over the profiling process.

Before your program exits, unload the profiler DLL with _uAsmProfDllLoader.UnLoadProfilerDll;.

Make sure that your program has the following compiler options correctly set:

  • Linker, Map file = detailed
  • Compiler, Optimization = off
  • Compiler, Stack frames = on

The instrumenting profiler requires your program to process messages which makes it mostly useless when used in Mr. Smith's program, as it is spending most of the time inside a Readln call (and is not processing messages). As I still wanted to show you how this profiler works, I have converted SlowCode into a more modern VCL version, SlowCode_VCL.

At first I wanted to start/stop profiling right in SlowMethod:

function TfrmSlowCode.SlowMethod(highBound: Integer): TArray<Integer>;
var
i: Integer;
temp: TList<Integer>;
begin
_uAsmProfDllLoader.StartProfiler(False);

// existing code

_uAsmProfDllLoader.StopProfiler;
end;

That attempt, however, misfired, as AsmProfiler didn't want to show profiling results for SlowCode. It turned out to be better to move the start/stop calls out of this method and into the method which calls SlowCode:

procedure TfrmSlowCode.btnTestClick(Sender: TObject);
var
data: TArray<Integer>;
begin
outResults.Text := '';
outResults.Update;

_uAsmProfDllLoader.StartProfiler(False);
data := SlowMethod(inpHowMany.Value);
_uAsmProfDllLoader.StopProfiler;

ShowElements(data);
end;

A version of the program, ready for profiling with the AsmProfiler, is stored in the SlowCode_VCL_Instrumented project. You will still have to download AsmProfiler and store AsmProfiler.dll and _uAsmProfDllLoader.pas into appropriate places.

When you start the program, a small form will appear alongside the program's main form. From here you can start and stop profiling, select items (methods) that should be profiled (Select items), and open results of the profiling session (Show results):

AsmProfiler's instrumenting profiler

We are interested only in three methods, so click the Select items button, select the ElementInDataDivides, Filter and SlowMethod methods, and click OK:

Selecting methods to be profiled

Next, enter 100000 into the How many numbers field and click the Test button. You don't have to start and stop the profiler, as the program will do that. When the values are calculated and displayed on the screen, click the Show results button. Don't close the profiled program as that would close the profiler form, too.

The result form of the instrumenting profiler is very similar to the equivalent form of the sampling profiler. The most interesting feature is the Unit overview tab, which combines detailed timing information and a call tree:

Unit overview display

We can see that ElementInDataDivides is in fact called 99,999 times directly from the SlowMethod and only 9,592 times from the Filter method, not 258 and 113 times, as shown by the sampling profiler.

AsmProfiler gives a good combination of a global overview and detailed analysis, although it is rough around the edges and requires more effort on your part than more polished commercial profilers.

Sampling Profiler

The Sampling Profiler is, as its name suggests, a sampling profiler for Delphi, written by Eric Grange. You can find it at www.delphitools.info. Although it officially supports only Delphi 5 to XE4, it will function well with applications written in modern Delphis.

The strongest part of the Sampling Profiler is its configurability for multithreaded sampling. You can specify which CPUs will execute the profiler and which profiled application. You can also focus on a specific thread by issuing a OutputDebugString('SAMPLING THREAD threadID') command from your code (replace threadID with the real ID of the thread you want to profile). It is also very simple to turn profiling on or off by calling OutputDebugString('SAMPLING ON') and OutputDebugString('SAMPLING OFF').

An interesting feature of the Sampling Profiler, which other profilers don't provide, is the ability to enable web server in the profiler. After that, we can use a browser to connect to the profiler (if firewalls allow us, of course) and we get an instant insight into the currently most executed lines of our program:

Live status view from remote location

The weakest point of the Sampling Profiler is its complete inability to select methods that are of interest to us. As we can see in the following screenshot, we get some methods from Generics.Collections mixed between methods from SlowCode. This only distracts us from our task—trying to find the slow parts of SlowCode.

Saying all that, I must admit that the display of profiling results is really neatly implemented. The results view is simple, clean, and easy to use:

Simple and effective result view

The Sampling Profiler would be a perfect solution for occasional profiling if it would only allow us to select topics of interest.  

AQTime

AQTime is a performance and memory profiler for C/C++, Delphi, .NET, Java, and Silverlight, produced by SmartBear Software. It supports 32- and 64-bit applications and can be found at www.smartbear.com.

Previously, a special Standard version of AQTime was included with RAD Studio, C++Builder, and Delphi. This offer was only available for releases XE to XE8 and the licensing was not renewed after that. If you want to use AQTime with any other Delphi release, you have to buy AQTime Professional.

For testing purposes, you can install a trial version of AQTime Professional, which will only allow you to run five profiling sessions. Dedicate some time to testing and use your five sessions wisely!

AQTime Professional supports all Delphi version from 2006 to Tokyo and you can even use it in Visual Studio, which is a great plus for multiplatform developers. It contains a variety of profilers—from the performance profiler (binary instrumentating profiler) and the sampling profiler, to the coverage profiler (to see which parts of the program were executed) and more specific tools such as BDE SQL profiler, static analysis (a code analysis tool which is not really a profiler), and more.

It integrates nicely into the Delphi IDE but you can also use it as a standalone application. That gives you more flexibility during the profiling and result analysis and that's why I also used the standalone AQTime Professional for the examples.

To prepare your program for profiling, make sure that the following compiler options are set:

  • Compiler, Stack frames = on
  • Compiler, Debug information = Debug information
  • Compiler, Local symbols = true
  • Linker, Debug information = true

In order for AQTime to be able to find the source file for your project, you have to specify a search path. Go to Options | Options, then select General Search directory, and add all the folders with your source files.

Next you can choose to profile all units, but unless you are using a sampling profiler this will slow down the execution in a typical program a lot. It is better to select just a few units or, as in our example, just a few methods.

The easiest way to do that is to create a new profiling area and the easiest way to do that is to select one or more methods in the left tree (use Shift+click and Ctrl+click), then right-click and select Add selected to | New profiling area. After that you can add additional methods to that profiling area by right-clicking and selecting Add selected to Existing profiling area, or simply with drag-and-drop.

When creating a new profiling area, you also have to choose whether to profile on a method or on a line level by checking or unchecking the Collect info about lines checkbox:

Creating new profiling area

Then start the program from AQTime—or select the AQTime | Run with profiling menu from Delphi, do the necessary steps you want to profile, and exit. AQTime will show the profiling results. Similarly to all other profilers, it will show a grid with measured methods, net time spent in each, time with children, and a hit count—an indicator showing how many times the method executed.

More interesting info is hiding in the lower panel. There is a very detailed Call Graph, which displays a call tree for the selected method, and a very useful Editor panel, which shows the source together with the hit count information for each line:

Editor view showing hit count for instrumented methods

AQTime is a great tool provided that you stay away from the very limited Standard edition and go directly for the Professional.

Nexus Quality Suite

Nexus Quality Suite (NQS) is a successor to the long-defunct TurboPower's SleuthQA, published by NexusQA Pty Ltd. It supports 32- and 64-bit applications written in Delphi from 5 to 10.2 Tokyo. You can find it at www.nexusdb.com.

The trial version has fewer limitations than AQTime's. Some functions are disabled and some are limited in the quantity of collected data. Still, the program is not so limited that you wouldn't be able to test it out.

NQS integrates into Delphi's Tools menu and extends it with all the profilers it brings to Delphi. Of the most interest to us are Method Timer, an instrumenting profiler working at a method level, and Line Timer, an instrumenting profiler working at a line level. There is also a Block Timer, an instrumenting profiler working on a block level (a for loop, for example), which was not working correctly at the time of writing this book and so I wasn't able to test it. That's really bad luck, as there are no other profilers working on a block level and it would be really interesting to compare it with more standard approaches.

A few other tools are also interesting from the profiling viewpoint. Coverage Analyst will help you analyze code coverage, which is an important part of unit testing. After all, you definitely want to know whether your unit tests test all of the methods in a unit or not.

Also interesting is CodeWatch, which hunts for bugs in the code by looking for memory and resource leaks.

All these profilers, with the exception of CodeWatch, are available in 32-bit and 64-bit versions, although the 64-bit operation is not as stable as in the 32-bit counterparts. I was only able to use Line Timer in 32-bit mode, for example, while Method Timer worked flawlessly in 32-bit and 64-bit modes.

Both Method Timer and Line Timer require no special preparation. You just have to have debug information turned on in the linker options.

When you start the Method Timer, a profiler window opens. Click on the Routines button to select methods to profile. To change the profiling status of a method, double-click its name or right-click and select Profile Status | Enable Profile Status For Selected.

When you are done, press F9 to start the program, go through the steps that you want to profile, and exit the program.

The program will then display basic timing information including net time per method and gross time (what other programs call "time with children"). If you click on a method, the lower two panes will display information about methods that called the current method and methods that were called from the current method.

If you double-click on a method, another window will appear showing the source code for the selected method but without any information about the profiling results:

Method Timer result window

Line Timer has a similar user interface. First you select the methods to be profiled in the Routines view, then you run the program, and at the end examine the results in the Line Times window.

This profiler has a display that is a bit different from other profilers that support line-level profiling. It is not grouped by methods, but by line numbers. This gives us an immediate overview of the most critical part of the code, but is hard to integrate into a bigger picture.

As in the Method Timer, a double-click on a line in the results grid opens up an editor window which displays the source code, together with the time spent in each profiled line and the number of times this line was executed:


Line Timer with built-in code display

Nexus Quality Suite is a nice set of tools and we can only hope that its stability will improve with future releases.

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