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go/src/pkg/runtime/debug.go

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// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package runtime
// Breakpoint() executes a breakpoint trap.
func Breakpoint()
// LockOSThread wires the calling goroutine to its current operating system thread.
// Until the calling goroutine exits or calls UnlockOSThread, it will always
// execute in that thread, and no other goroutine can.
func LockOSThread()
// UnlockOSThread unwires the calling goroutine from its fixed operating system thread.
// If the calling goroutine has not called LockOSThread, UnlockOSThread is a no-op.
func UnlockOSThread()
// GOMAXPROCS sets the maximum number of CPUs that can be executing
// simultaneously and returns the previous setting. If n < 1, it does not
// change the current setting.
// The number of logical CPUs on the local machine can be queried with NumCPU.
// This call will go away when the scheduler improves.
func GOMAXPROCS(n int) int
// NumCPU returns the number of logical CPUs on the local machine.
func NumCPU() int
// Cgocalls returns the number of cgo calls made by the current process.
func Cgocalls() int64
// Goroutines returns the number of goroutines that currently exist.
func Goroutines() int32
// Alloc allocates a block of the given size.
// FOR TESTING AND DEBUGGING ONLY.
func Alloc(uintptr) *byte
// Free frees the block starting at the given pointer.
// FOR TESTING AND DEBUGGING ONLY.
func Free(*byte)
// Lookup returns the base and size of the block containing the given pointer.
// FOR TESTING AND DEBUGGING ONLY.
func Lookup(*byte) (*byte, uintptr)
// MemProfileRate controls the fraction of memory allocations
// that are recorded and reported in the memory profile.
// The profiler aims to sample an average of
// one allocation per MemProfileRate bytes allocated.
//
// To include every allocated block in the profile, set MemProfileRate to 1.
// To turn off profiling entirely, set MemProfileRate to 0.
//
// The tools that process the memory profiles assume that the
// profile rate is constant across the lifetime of the program
// and equal to the current value. Programs that change the
// memory profiling rate should do so just once, as early as
// possible in the execution of the program (for example,
// at the beginning of main).
var MemProfileRate int = 512 * 1024
// A MemProfileRecord describes the live objects allocated
// by a particular call sequence (stack trace).
type MemProfileRecord struct {
AllocBytes, FreeBytes int64 // number of bytes allocated, freed
AllocObjects, FreeObjects int64 // number of objects allocated, freed
Stack0 [32]uintptr // stack trace for this record; ends at first 0 entry
}
// InUseBytes returns the number of bytes in use (AllocBytes - FreeBytes).
func (r *MemProfileRecord) InUseBytes() int64 { return r.AllocBytes - r.FreeBytes }
// InUseObjects returns the number of objects in use (AllocObjects - FreeObjects).
func (r *MemProfileRecord) InUseObjects() int64 {
return r.AllocObjects - r.FreeObjects
}
// Stack returns the stack trace associated with the record,
// a prefix of r.Stack0.
func (r *MemProfileRecord) Stack() []uintptr {
for i, v := range r.Stack0 {
if v == 0 {
return r.Stack0[0:i]
}
}
return r.Stack0[0:]
}
// MemProfile returns n, the number of records in the current memory profile.
// If len(p) >= n, MemProfile copies the profile into p and returns n, true.
// If len(p) < n, MemProfile does not change p and returns n, false.
//
// If inuseZero is true, the profile includes allocation records
// where r.AllocBytes > 0 but r.AllocBytes == r.FreeBytes.
// These are sites where memory was allocated, but it has all
// been released back to the runtime.
//
// Most clients should use the runtime/pprof package or
// the testing package's -test.memprofile flag instead
// of calling MemProfile directly.
func MemProfile(p []MemProfileRecord, inuseZero bool) (n int, ok bool)
// A ThreadProfileRecord describes the execution stack that
// caused a new thread to be created.
type ThreadProfileRecord struct {
Stack0 [32]uintptr // stack trace for this record; ends at first 0 entry
}
// Stack returns the stack trace associated with the record,
// a prefix of r.Stack0.
func (r *ThreadProfileRecord) Stack() []uintptr {
for i, v := range r.Stack0 {
if v == 0 {
return r.Stack0[0:i]
}
}
return r.Stack0[0:]
}
// ThreadProfile returns n, the number of records in the current thread profile.
// If len(p) >= n, ThreadProfile copies the profile into p and returns n, true.
// If len(p) < n, ThreadProfile does not change p and returns n, false.
//
// Most clients should use the runtime/pprof package instead
// of calling ThreadProfile directly.
func ThreadProfile(p []ThreadProfileRecord) (n int, ok bool)
// CPUProfile returns the next chunk of binary CPU profiling stack trace data,
// blocking until data is available. If profiling is turned off and all the profile
// data accumulated while it was on has been returned, CPUProfile returns nil.
// The caller must save the returned data before calling CPUProfile again.
// Most clients should use the runtime/pprof package or
// the testing package's -test.cpuprofile flag instead of calling
// CPUProfile directly.
func CPUProfile() []byte
// SetCPUProfileRate sets the CPU profiling rate to hz samples per second.
// If hz <= 0, SetCPUProfileRate turns off profiling.
// If the profiler is on, the rate cannot be changed without first turning it off.
// Most clients should use the runtime/pprof package or
// the testing package's -test.cpuprofile flag instead of calling
// SetCPUProfileRate directly.
func SetCPUProfileRate(hz int)