table of contents
OPANNOTATE(1) | General Commands Manual | OPANNOTATE(1) |
NAME¶
opannotate - produce source or assembly annotated with profile data
SYNOPSIS¶
opannotate [ options ] [profile specification]
DESCRIPTION¶
opannotate outputs annotated source and/or assembly from profile data of an OProfile session. See oprofile(1) for how to write profile specifications.
OPTIONS¶
- --assembly / -a
- Output annotated assembly. The binary file to be annotated does not need
full debugging information to use this option, but symbol information
is required. Without symbol information, opannotate will
silently refuse to annotate the binary. If this option is combined with
--source, then mixed source / assembly annotations are output.
- --demangle / -D none|smart|normal
- none: no demangling. normal: use default demangler (default) smart: use
pattern-matching to make C++ symbol demangling more readable.
- --exclude-dependent / -x
- Do not include application-specific images for libraries, kernel modules
and the kernel. This option only makes sense if the profile session used
--separate.
- --exclude-file [files]
- Exclude all files in the given comma-separated list of glob patterns.
- --exclude-symbols / -e [symbols]
- Exclude all the symbols in the given comma-separated list.
- --help / -? / --usage
- Show help message.
- --image-path / -p [paths]
- Comma-separated list of additional paths to search for binaries. This is
needed to find modules in kernels 2.6 and upwards.
- --root / -R [path]
- A path to a filesystem to search for additional binaries.
- --include-file [files]
- Only include files in the given comma-separated list of glob patterns.
- --merge / -m [lib,cpu,tid,tgid,unitmask,all]
- Merge any profiles separated in a --separate session.
- --include-symbols / -i [symbols]
- Only include symbols in the given comma-separated list.
- --objdump-params [params]
- Pass the given parameters as extra values when calling objdump. If more
than one option is to be passed to objdump, the parameters must be
enclosed in a quoted string.
An example of where this option is useful is when your toolchain does not automatically recognize instructions that are specific to your processor. For example, on IBM POWER7/RHEL 6, objdump must be told that a binary file may have POWER7-specific instructions. The opannotate option to show the POWER7-specific instructions is:
--objdump-params=-Mpower7The opannotate option to show the POWER7-specific instructions, the source code (--source) and the line numbers (-l) would be:
--objdump-params="-Mpower7 -l --source" - --output-dir / -o [dir]
- Output directory. This makes opannotate output one annotated file for each
source file. This option can't be used in conjunction with --assembly.
- --search-dirs / -d [paths]
- Comma-separated list of paths to search for source files. You may need to
use this option when the debug information for an image contains relative
paths.
- --base-dirs / -b [paths]
- Comma-separated list of paths to strip from debug source files, prior to
looking for them in --search-dirs.
- --session-dir=dir_path
- Use sample database from the specified directory dir_path instead
of the default locations. If --session-dir is not specified, then
opannotate will search for samples in
<current_dir>/oprofile_data first. If that directory does not
exist, the standard session-dir of /var/lib/oprofile is used.
- --source / -s
- Output annotated source. This requires debugging information to be
available for the binaries.
- --threshold / -t [percentage]
- Only output data for symbols that have more than the given percentage of
total samples.
- --verbose / -V [options]
- Give verbose debugging output.
- --version / -v
- Show version.
ENVIRONMENT¶
No special environment variables are recognised by opannotate.
FILES¶
<current_dir>/oprofile_data/samples
VERSION¶
SEE ALSO¶
/usr/share/doc/oprofile/, oprofile(1)
Wed 31 October 2018 | 4th Berkeley Distribution |