in paragraph 16.DBI::ProfileDumper is a subclass of DBI::Profile which
dumps profile data to disk instead of printing a summary to your
screen. You can then use dbiprof to analyze the data in
a number of interesting ways, or you can roll your own analysis using
DBI::ProfileData.
NOTE: For Apache/mod_perl applications, use
DBI::ProfileDumper::Apache.
One way to use this module is just to enable it in your $dbh:
$dbh->{Profile} = "1/DBI::ProfileDumper";
This will write out profile data by statement into a file called
dbi.prof. If you want to modify either of these properties, you
can construct the DBI::ProfileDumper object yourself:
use DBI::Profile;
$dbh->{Profile} = DBI::ProfileDumper->new(
Path => [ '!Statement' ]
File => 'dbi.prof' );
The Path option takes the same values as in
the DBI::Profile manpage. The File option gives the name of the
file where results will be collected. If it already exists it will be
overwritten.
You can also activate this module by setting the DBI_PROFILE
environment variable:
$ENV{DBI_PROFILE} = "!Statement/DBI::ProfileDumper";
This will cause all DBI handles to share the same profiling object.
The following methods are available to be called using the profile
object. You can get access to the profile object from the Profile key
in any DBI handle:
my $profile = $dbh->{Profile};
- $profile->
flush_to_disk()
-
Flushes all collected profile data to disk and empties the Data hash.
This method may be called multiple times during a program run.
- $profile->
empty()
-
Clears the Data hash without writing to disk.
The data format written by DBI::ProfileDumper starts with a header
containing the version number of the module used to generate it. Then
a block of variable declarations describes the profile. After two
newlines, the profile data forms the body of the file. For example:
DBI::ProfileDumper 1.0
Path = [ '!Statement', '!MethodName' ]
Program = t/42profile_data.t
+ 1 SELECT name FROM users WHERE id = ?
+ 2 prepare
= 1 0.0312958955764771 0.000490069389343262 0.000176072120666504 0.00140702724456787 1023115819.83019 1023115819.86576
+ 2 execute
1 0.0312958955764771 0.000490069389343262 0.000176072120666504 0.00140702724456787 1023115819.83019 1023115819.86576
+ 2 fetchrow_hashref
= 1 0.0312958955764771 0.000490069389343262 0.000176072120666504 0.00140702724456787 1023115819.83019 1023115819.86576
+ 1 UPDATE users SET name = ? WHERE id = ?
+ 2 prepare
= 1 0.0312958955764771 0.000490069389343262 0.000176072120666504 0.00140702724456787 1023115819.83019 1023115819.86576
+ 2 execute
= 1 0.0312958955764771 0.000490069389343262 0.000176072120666504 0.00140702724456787 1023115819.83019 1023115819.86576
The lines beginning with + signs signify keys. The number after
the + sign shows the nesting level of the key. Lines beginning
with = are the actual profile data, in the same order as
in DBI::Profile.
Note that the same path may be present multiple times in the data file
since format() may be called more than once. When read by DBI::ProfileData the data points will be merged to produce a single
data set for each distinct path.
The key strings are transformed in three ways. First, all backslashes
are doubled. Then all newlines and carriage-returns are transformed
into \n and \r respectively. Finally, any NULL bytes (\0)
are entirely removed. When DBI::ProfileData reads the file the first
two transformations will be reversed, but NULL bytes will not be
restored.
Sam Tregar <sam@tregar.com>
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.
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