Provided by: libpapi-dev_7.1.0-5build1_amd64 

NAME
PAPI_sprofil - Generate PC histogram data from multiple code regions where hardware counter overflow
occurs.
SYNOPSIS
Detailed Description
C Interface:
#include <papi.h>
int PAPI_sprofil( PAPI_sprofil_t * prof, int profcnt, int EventSet, int EventCode, int threshold, int
flags );
Parameters
*prof pointer to an array of PAPI_sprofil_t structures. Each copy of the structure contains the
following:
• buf -- pointer to a buffer of bufsiz bytes in which the histogram counts are stored in an array of
unsigned short, unsigned int, or unsigned long long values, or 'buckets'. The size of the buckets
is determined by values in the flags argument.
• bufsiz -- the size of the histogram buffer in bytes. It is computed from the length of the code
region to be profiled, the size of the buckets, and the scale factor as discussed below.
• offset -- the start address of the region to be profiled.
• scale -- broadly and historically speaking, a contraction factor that indicates how much smaller
the histogram buffer is than the region to be profiled. More precisely, scale is interpreted as an
unsigned 16-bit fixed-point fraction with the decimal point implied on the left. Its value is the
reciprocal of the number of addresses in a subdivision, per counter of histogram buffer.
profcnt number of structures in the prof array for hardware profiling.
EventSet The PAPI EventSet to profile. This EventSet is marked as profiling-ready, but profiling
doesn't actually start until a PAPI_start() call is issued.
EventCode Code of the Event in the EventSet to profile. This event must already be a member of the
EventSet.
threshold minimum number of events that must occur before the PC is sampled. If hardware overflow is
supported for your component, this threshold will trigger an interrupt when reached. Otherwise, the
counters will be sampled periodically and the PC will be recorded for the first sample that exceeds
the threshold. If the value of threshold is 0, profiling will be disabled for this event.
flags bit pattern to control profiling behavior. Defined values are given in a table in the
documentation for PAPI_pofil
Return values
Return values for PAPI_sprofil() are identical to those for PAPI_profil. Please refer to that page
for further details.
PAPI_sprofil() is a structure driven profiler that profiles one or more disjoint regions of code in a
single call. It accepts a pointer to a preinitialized array of sprofil structures, and initiates
profiling based on the values contained in the array. Each structure in the array defines the profiling
parameters that are normally passed to PAPI_profil(). For more information on profiling, PAPI_profil
Example:
int retval;
unsigned long length;
PAPI_exe_info_t *prginfo;
unsigned short *profbuf1, *profbuf2, profbucket;
PAPI_sprofil_t sprof[3];
prginfo = PAPI_get_executable_info();
if (prginfo == NULL) handle_error( NULL );
length = (unsigned long)(prginfo->text_end - prginfo->text_start);
// Allocate 2 buffers of equal length
profbuf1 = (unsigned short *)malloc(length);
profbuf2 = (unsigned short *)malloc(length);
if ((profbuf1 == NULL) || (profbuf2 == NULL))
handle_error( NULL );
memset(profbuf1,0x00,length);
memset(profbuf2,0x00,length);
// First buffer
sprof[0].pr_base = profbuf1;
sprof[0].pr_size = length;
sprof[0].pr_off = (vptr_t) DO_FLOPS;
sprof[0].pr_scale = 0x10000;
// Second buffer
sprof[1].pr_base = profbuf2;
sprof[1].pr_size = length;
sprof[1].pr_off = (vptr_t) DO_READS;
sprof[1].pr_scale = 0x10000;
// Overflow bucket
sprof[2].pr_base = profbucket;
sprof[2].pr_size = 1;
sprof[2].pr_off = 0;
sprof[2].pr_scale = 0x0002;
retval = PAPI_sprofil(sprof, EventSet, PAPI_FP_INS, 1000000,
PAPI_PROFIL_POSIX | PAPI_PROFIL_BUCKET_16)) != PAPI_OK)
if ( retval != PAPI_OK ) handle_error( retval );
See also
PAPI_overflow
PAPI_get_executable_info
PAPI_profil
Author
Generated automatically by Doxygen for PAPI from the source code.
Version 7.1.0.0 Thu Dec 14 2023 PAPI_sprofil(3)