rbkit
is a Ruby gem that plugs into your ruby process, taps profiling data
in realtime and sends it across the wire to the rbkit-client
as packed messages.
Rbkit requires the following executables to be present :
- libtool
- autoconf
- automake
Install these with your operating system's package manager before proceeding to install Rbkit gem.
Add the following to the project's Gemfiles
gem 'rbkit', path: <RBKIT_PATH>
and run bundle install
You can also install rbkit
without bundler/rubygems. This can
be useful, if you are profiling a Ruby app where you want to measure
overhead of Rubygems/Bundler.
Just clone the repository or download from a release tag and run:
# Run from root of rbkit directory.
~> ruby setup.rb
This should install rbkit
in ruby's site_dir
and then you don't need rbkit
added to your
Gemfile
for requiring rbkit
.
Wherever you want to start profiling, add the following :
require 'rbkit' # Not needed in Rails
Rbkit.start_server
If using Rails, and you want to measure everything from the boot process,
a good place to put this would be at the end of config/boot.rb
.
Without any arguments, it's same as :
Rbkit.start_server(pub_port: nil, request_port: nil)
Starts the Rbkit server and waits for a client to connect and issue
commands to the request_port, until then there's zero performance overhead.
Profiling data is sent asynchronously over pub_port.
This method can be called early in a ruby application so that
whenever profiling needs to be done, the client can attach itself to the
inactive server, do the profiling and leave. Returns an instance of
Rbkit::Server
if server was started successfully, else returns false.
argument | valid values | default value | description |
---|---|---|---|
pub_port | nil, fixnum | nil | Override default message publishing port of 5555 |
request_port | nil, fixnum | nil | Override default command listener port of 5556 |
Without any arguments, it's same as :
Rbkit.start_profiling(
pub_port: nil,
request_port: nil,
enable_object_trace: true,
enable_gc_stats: true,
enable_cpu_profiling: true,
clock_type: :wall,
cpu_profiling_mode: :sampling,
cpu_sampling_interval_usec: 1000
)
Starts the server with all tracepoints enabled by default. User can
optionally disable tracepoints using the optional arguments.
This method can be used to profile the startup process of a ruby
application where sending commands from the client to enable
profiling is not feasible. Returns an instance of Rbkit::Server
if server was started successfully, else returns false.
Arguments:
argument | valid values | default value | description |
---|---|---|---|
pub_port | nil, fixnum | nil | Override default message publishing port of 5555 |
request_port | nil, fixnum | nil | Override default command listener port of 5556 |
enable_object_trace | true/false | true | Enables object creation/deletion events |
enable_gc_stats | true/false | true | Enables GC stats which is sent every 5 seconds |
enable_cpu_profiling | true/false | true | Enables CPU profiling |
clock_type | :wall/:cpu | :wall | Specifies clock type to use in CPU profiling |
cpu_profiling_mode | :sampling | :sampling | CPU profiling mode - currently only sampling |
cpu_sampling_interval_usec | Fixnums | 1000 | CPU Sampling interval un usec, if sampling mode |
If zmq and msgpack are not installed, Rbkit automatically downloads and installs the two libraries from source during gem installation. But if you are developing Rbkit, it makes sense to have these preinstalled:
On OSX - Using homebrew
following command should suffice:
~> brew install zeromq
~> brew install msgpack
On Linux - we recommend to download these libraries from their respective home pages and manually compiling and installing.
Recommended versions are:
Zeromq: 4.0.5_2 Msgpack: 0.5.9
git clone git@github.com:code-mancers/rbkit.git
We'll call this <RBKIT_PATH>
.
Set the environment variable RBKIT_DEV
to true.
If using bash, put export RBKIT_DEV=true
in your ~/.bashrc
.
This compiles the C extension with debug flag and also sets a macro named
RBKIT_DEV
inside the C extension.
Two ways to do this :
cd <RBKIT_PATH>
bundle install
bundle exec rake compile
cd <RBKIT_PATH/ext>
ruby extconf.rb
make
# Create a symlink at `lib/rbkit_server.bundle` (or .so if on linux)
# that points to `ext/rbkit_server.bundle`
# (in order to use `rbkit` gem in Gemfiles using `path` option)
bundle exec rake
TODOs are tracked as github issues.