--- COMPILING | |
This project has begun being ported to Windows. A working solution | |
file exists in this directory: | |
gperftools.sln | |
You can load this solution file into VC++ 7.1 (Visual Studio 2003) or | |
later -- in the latter case, it will automatically convert the files | |
to the latest format for you. | |
When you build the solution, it will create a number of unittests, | |
which you can run by hand (or, more easily, under the Visual Studio | |
debugger) to make sure everything is working properly on your system. | |
The binaries will end up in a directory called "debug" or "release" in | |
the top-level directory (next to the .sln file). It will also create | |
two binaries, nm-pdb and addr2line-pdb, which you should install in | |
the same directory you install the 'pprof' perl script. | |
I don't know very much about how to install DLLs on Windows, so you'll | |
have to figure out that part for yourself. If you choose to just | |
re-use the existing .sln, make sure you set the IncludeDir's | |
appropriately! Look at the properties for libtcmalloc_minimal.dll. | |
Note that these systems are set to build in Debug mode by default. | |
You may want to change them to Release mode. | |
To use tcmalloc_minimal in your own projects, you should only need to | |
build the dll and install it someplace, so you can link it into | |
further binaries. To use the dll, you need to add the following to | |
the linker line of your executable: | |
"libtcmalloc_minimal.lib" /INCLUDE:"__tcmalloc" | |
Here is how to accomplish this in Visual Studio 2005 (VC8): | |
1) Have your executable depend on the tcmalloc library by selecting | |
"Project Dependencies..." from the "Project" menu. Your executable | |
should depend on "libtcmalloc_minimal". | |
2) Have your executable depend on a tcmalloc symbol -- this is | |
necessary so the linker doesn't "optimize out" the libtcmalloc | |
dependency -- by right-clicking on your executable's project (in | |
the solution explorer), selecting Properties from the pull-down | |
menu, then selecting "Configuration Properties" -> "Linker" -> | |
"Input". Then, in the "Force Symbol References" field, enter the | |
text "__tcmalloc" (without the quotes). Be sure to do this for both | |
debug and release modes! | |
You can also link tcmalloc code in statically -- see the example | |
project tcmalloc_minimal_unittest-static, which does this. For this | |
to work, you'll need to add "/D PERFTOOLS_DLL_DECL=" to the compile | |
line of every perftools .cc file. You do not need to depend on the | |
tcmalloc symbol in this case (that is, you don't need to do either | |
step 1 or step 2 from above). | |
An alternative to all the above is to statically link your application | |
with libc, and then replace its malloc with tcmalloc. This allows you | |
to just build and link your program normally; the tcmalloc support | |
comes in a post-processing step. This is more reliable than the above | |
technique (which depends on run-time patching, which is inherently | |
fragile), though more work to set up. For details, see | |
https://groups.google.com/group/google-perftools/browse_thread/thread/41cd3710af85e57b | |
--- THE HEAP-PROFILER | |
The heap-profiler has had a preliminary port to Windows. It has not | |
been well tested, and probably does not work at all when Frame Pointer | |
Optimization (FPO) is enabled -- that is, in release mode. The other | |
features of perftools, such as the cpu-profiler and leak-checker, have | |
not yet been ported to Windows at all. | |
--- WIN64 | |
The function-patcher has to disassemble code, and is very | |
x86-specific. However, the rest of perftools should work fine for | |
both x86 and x64. In particular, if you use the 'statically link with | |
libc, and replace its malloc with tcmalloc' approach, mentioned above, | |
it should be possible to use tcmalloc with 64-bit windows. | |
As of perftools 1.10, there is some support for disassembling x86_64 | |
instructions, for work with win64. This work is preliminary, but the | |
test file preamble_patcher_test.cc is provided to play around with | |
that a bit. preamble_patcher_test will not compile on win32. | |
--- ISSUES | |
NOTE FOR WIN2K USERS: According to reports | |
(http://code.google.com/p/gperftools/issues/detail?id=127) | |
the stack-tracing necessary for the heap-profiler does not work on | |
Win2K. The best workaround is, if you are building on a Win2k system | |
is to add "/D NO_TCMALLOC_SAMPLES=" to your build, to turn off the | |
stack-tracing. You will not be able to use the heap-profiler if you | |
do this. | |
NOTE ON _MSIZE and _RECALLOC: The tcmalloc version of _msize returns | |
the size of the region tcmalloc allocated for you -- which is at least | |
as many bytes you asked for, but may be more. (btw, these *are* bytes | |
you own, even if you didn't ask for all of them, so it's correct code | |
to access all of them if you want.) Unfortunately, the Windows CRT | |
_recalloc() routine assumes that _msize returns exactly as many bytes | |
as were requested. As a result, _recalloc() may not zero out new | |
bytes correctly. IT'S SAFEST NOT TO USE _RECALLOC WITH TCMALLOC. | |
_recalloc() is a tricky routine to use in any case (it's not safe to | |
use with realloc, for instance). | |
I have little experience with Windows programming, so there may be | |
better ways to set this up than I've done! If you run across any | |
problems, please post to the google-perftools Google Group, or report | |
them on the gperftools Google Code site: | |
http://groups.google.com/group/google-perftools | |
http://code.google.com/p/gperftools/issues/list | |
-- craig | |
Last modified: 2 February 2012 |