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Current Path : /proc/324102/root/usr/bin/ |
Current File : //proc/324102/root/usr/bin/dbiprof |
#!/usr/bin/perl eval 'exec /usr/bin/perl -S $0 ${1+"$@"}' if 0; # not running under some shell use strict; my $VERSION = sprintf("1.%06d", q$Revision: 9874 $ =~ /(\d+)/o); use Data::Dumper; use DBI::ProfileData; use Getopt::Long; # default options my $number = 10; my $sort = 'total'; my $filename = 'dbi.prof'; my $reverse = 0; my $case_sensitive = 0; my (%match, %exclude); # get options from command line GetOptions( 'version' => sub { die "dbiprof $VERSION\n" }, 'help' => sub { exit usage() }, 'number=i' => \$number, 'sort=s' => \$sort, 'dumpnodes!' => \my $dumpnodes, 'reverse' => \$reverse, 'match=s' => \%match, 'exclude=s' => \%exclude, 'case-sensitive' => \$case_sensitive, 'delete!' => \my $opt_delete, ) or exit usage(); sub usage { print <<EOS; dbiprof [options] [files] Reads and merges DBI profile data from files and prints a summary. files: defaults to $filename options: -number=N show top N, defaults to $number -sort=S sort by S, defaults to $sort -reverse reverse the sort -match=K=V for filtering, see docs -exclude=K=V for filtering, see docs -case_sensitive for -match and -exclude -delete rename files before reading then delete afterwards -version print version number and exit -help print this help EOS return 1; } # list of files defaults to dbi.prof my @files = @ARGV ? @ARGV : ('dbi.prof'); # instantiate ProfileData object my $prof = eval { DBI::ProfileData->new( Files => \@files, DeleteFiles => $opt_delete, ); }; die "Unable to load profile data: $@\n" if $@; if (%match) { # handle matches while (my ($key, $val) = each %match) { if ($val =~ m!^/(.+)/$!) { $val = $case_sensitive ? qr/$1/ : qr/$1/i; } $prof->match($key, $val, case_sensitive => $case_sensitive); } } if (%exclude) { # handle excludes while (my ($key, $val) = each %exclude) { if ($val =~ m!^/(.+)/$!) { $val = $case_sensitive ? qr/$1/ : qr/$1/i; } $prof->exclude($key, $val, case_sensitive => $case_sensitive); } } # sort the data $prof->sort(field => $sort, reverse => $reverse); # all done, print it out if ($dumpnodes) { $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1; $Data::Dumper::Terse = 1; $Data::Dumper::Useqq = 1; $Data::Dumper::Deparse = 0; print Dumper($prof->nodes); } else { print $prof->report(number => $number); } exit 0; __END__ =head1 NAME dbiprof - command-line client for DBI::ProfileData =head1 SYNOPSIS See a report of the ten queries with the longest total runtime in the profile dump file F<prof1.out>: dbiprof prof1.out See the top 10 most frequently run queries in the profile file F<dbi.prof> (the default): dbiprof --sort count See the same report with 15 entries: dbiprof --sort count --number 15 =head1 DESCRIPTION This tool is a command-line client for the DBI::ProfileData. It allows you to analyze the profile data file produced by DBI::ProfileDumper and produce various useful reports. =head1 OPTIONS This program accepts the following options: =over 4 =item --number N Produce this many items in the report. Defaults to 10. If set to "all" then all results are shown. =item --sort field Sort results by the given field. Sorting by multiple fields isn't currently supported (patches welcome). The available sort fields are: =over 4 =item total Sorts by total time run time across all runs. This is the default sort. =item longest Sorts by the longest single run. =item count Sorts by total number of runs. =item first Sorts by the time taken in the first run. =item shortest Sorts by the shortest single run. =item key1 Sorts by the value of the first element in the Path, which should be numeric. You can also sort by C<key2> and C<key3>. =back =item --reverse Reverses the selected sort. For example, to see a report of the shortest overall time: dbiprof --sort total --reverse =item --match keyN=value Consider only items where the specified key matches the given value. Keys are numbered from 1. For example, let's say you used a DBI::Profile Path of: [ DBIprofile_Statement, DBIprofile_Methodname ] And called dbiprof as in: dbiprof --match key2=execute Your report would only show execute queries, leaving out prepares, fetches, etc. If the value given starts and ends with slashes (C</>) then it will be treated as a regular expression. For example, to only include SELECT queries where key1 is the statement: dbiprof --match key1=/^SELECT/ By default the match expression is matched case-insensitively, but this can be changed with the --case-sensitive option. =item --exclude keyN=value Remove items for where the specified key matches the given value. For example, to exclude all prepare entries where key2 is the method name: dbiprof --exclude key2=prepare Like C<--match>, If the value given starts and ends with slashes (C</>) then it will be treated as a regular expression. For example, to exclude UPDATE queries where key1 is the statement: dbiprof --match key1=/^UPDATE/ By default the exclude expression is matched case-insensitively, but this can be changed with the --case-sensitive option. =item --case-sensitive Using this option causes --match and --exclude to work case-sensitively. Defaults to off. =item --delete Sets the C<DeleteFiles> option to L<DBI::ProfileData> which causes the files to be deleted after reading. See L<DBI::ProfileData> for more details. =item --dumpnodes Print the list of nodes in the form of a perl data structure. Use the C<-sort> option if you want the list sorted. =item --version Print the dbiprof version number and exit. =back =head1 AUTHOR Sam Tregar <sam@tregar.com> =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright (C) 2002 Sam Tregar This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl 5 itself. =head1 SEE ALSO L<DBI::ProfileDumper|DBI::ProfileDumper>, L<DBI::Profile|DBI::Profile>, L<DBI|DBI>. =cut