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authorEric Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org>2004-08-21 21:19:29 +0000
committerEric Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org>2004-08-21 21:19:29 +0000
commit6e112da93a731085ff9b07f0804395bb3866925a (patch)
tree63320d9f5200bb3892ccfbcc55be84a5da535023 /extra/Configs/Config.in
parente50f6d1c15483fc17323ecdd427f4a84c018f3af (diff)
Kill off all support for 'gcc -pg' / 'gprof' style profiling. There is both a
size and performance penalty to profiling applications this way, as well as Heisenberg effects, where the act of measuring changes what is measured. There are better tools for doing profiling, such as OProfile, that do not require gcc to instrument the application code. -Erik
Diffstat (limited to 'extra/Configs/Config.in')
-rw-r--r--extra/Configs/Config.in37
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 37 deletions
diff --git a/extra/Configs/Config.in b/extra/Configs/Config.in
index b1624dafd..be80a3a7d 100644
--- a/extra/Configs/Config.in
+++ b/extra/Configs/Config.in
@@ -251,43 +251,6 @@ config UCLIBC_PROPOLICE
gcc version, were __guard and __stack_smash_handler are removed from libgcc.
Most people will answer N.
-config UCLIBC_PROFILING
- bool "Support gprof profiling"
- default y
- help
- If you wish to build uClibc with support for application profiling
- using the gprof tool, then you should enable this feature. Then in
- addition to building uClibc with profiling support, you will also
- need to recompile all your shared libraries with the profiling
- enabled version of uClibc. To add profiling support to your
- applications, you must compile things using the gcc options
- "-fprofile-arcs -pg". Then when you run your applications, a
- gmon.out file will be generated which can then be analyzed by
- 'gprof'.
-
- These exist a number of less invasive alternatives that do not
- require your to specially instrument your application, and recompile
- and relink everything.
-
- Many people have had good results using the combination of Valgrind
- to generate profiling information and KCachegrind for analysis:
- http://developer.kde.org/~sewardj/
- http://kcachegrind.sourceforge.net/
-
- The OProfile system-wide profiler is another alternative:
- http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/
-
- Prospect is another alternative based on OProfile:
- http://prospect.sourceforge.net/
-
- And the Linux Trace Toolkit (LTT) is also a fine tool:
- http://www.opersys.com/LTT/
-
- If none of these tools do what you need, you can of course enable
- this option, rebuild everything, and use 'gprof'. There is both a
- size and performance penalty to profiling your applications this way,
- so most people should answer N.
-
config HAS_NO_THREADS
bool
default n