Continuous Profiling

Summary

Profiling systems typically fall into one of the two categories. The first group uses binary modification, compiler support, or direct simulation of programs to gather measurements. They introduce significant overhead and usually require significant user intervention, so they are not deployed on production systems. The other group uses statistical sampling to collect fine-grained information on program or system behavior. They incur much smaller overhead but relies on existing source of interrupts (e.g. timer interrupts) to generated samples. This prevents them from sampling within those interrupt routines and can result in correlation between sampling and other system activity (bias).

The profiling system presented in this paper falls into the second category. It consists of two parts: a data collection subsystem that runs during program execution, and a suite of analysis tools that analyzes the collected data.

The data collection subsystem consists of 3 interacting components: a kernel device driver that services performance counter interrupts; a user-mode daemon process that extracts samples from the driver; and a modified system loader and other mechanisms for identifying executable images and where they are loaded by each running process.

First, each processor generates a high-priority interrupt after a specified number of events have occurred. The kernel device driver handles this interrupt by recording the PID of the running process, the program counter (PC), and the event type causing the interrupt. Since interrupts are frequently issued, the kernel device driver needs to handle them quickly. The driver keeps a per-process hash table to keep track of the number of times each (PID, PC, EVENT) tuple has occurred. This data structure avoids copying the recorded data to userspace on every timer interrupt. The hash table is implemented as an array of fixed size buckets. Whenever a new (PID, PC, EVENT) tuple is to be added to a full bucket, an old tuple in that bucket is evicted and copied to the user-mode daemon through a pair of overflow buffers. This basic design is efficient since it is cache friendly and synchronization is only needed when copying data into buffers. This paper handles this synchronization through inter-process interrupts. The user-mode daemon will map the events to the corresponding location in the executable image (through PID and PC) and store the records to disk.

After the samples are collected through the data collection subsystem, the analysis tool can be used offline to analyze the profiling results. It will identify for each instruction a frequency (number of times it is executed for a fixed time period), a cpi (average number of cycles spent in one execution), and a set of culprits (possible explanations for any wasted issue slots).

Estimating frequency and cpi is tricky since the data collection subsystem only shows the amount of time spent in this instruction relative to overall execution time, indicated by the sample count. More specifically, for each instruction $i$, its frequency $F_i$, cpi $C_i$, and sample frequency $S_i$ should satisfy $F_i\cdot C_i=S_i$. $S_i$ can be calculated directly from the sampling result. The analysis tool estimates $F_i$ through the following: it first does a static analysis on the program to identify the instructions that are guaranteed to execute for the same amount of time (i.e. basic blocks). This splits the program into a control-flow graph of basic blocks. It then runs each basic block $I$ individually to obtain an approximate $\sum_{i\in I} C_i$. Then the estimated frequency is $F_j=\sum_{i\in I} S_i/\sum_{i\in I} C_i$ for any instruction $j\in I$. Then it can calculate each $C_j$ accordingly.

To find the list of all possible culprits, this paper separately discusses static and dynamic causes. For static causes, it schedules instructions in each basic block using an accurate model of the processor issue logic and assume no dynamic stalls. With detailed record-keeping and accurate model, it is able to identify the static causes. For dynamic causes, it uses different techniques for each cause to check if it is possible that the dynamic stall is caused by this.

Anderson, Jennifer M., et al. “Continuous profiling: Where have all the cycles gone?.” ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS) 15.4 (1997): 357-390.

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