- Update COPYING and VEX/LICENSE.GPL to version 3.
- Update README, NEWS, docs/manual license and contributing text.
- Update file headers to say either version 3 of the License,
or (at your option) any later version.
- Leave tests and perf file headers as is, unless the code is derived
from Valgrind/VEX.
- Leave valgrind.h, cachegrind.h, callgrind.h, drd.h, helgrind.h,
memcheck.h and dhat.h Hybrid-BSD licensed.
Sync VEX/LICENSE.GPL with top-level COPYING file. We used 3 different
addresses for writing to the FSF to receive a copy of the GPL. Replace
all different variants with an URL <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
The following files might still have some slightly different (L)GPL
copyright notice because they were derived from other programs:
- files under coregrind/m_demangle which come from libiberty:
cplus-dem.c, d-demangle.c, demangle.h, rust-demangle.c,
safe-ctype.c and safe-ctype.h
- coregrind/m_demangle/dyn-string.[hc] derived from GCC.
- coregrind/m_demangle/ansidecl.h derived from glibc.
- VEX files for FMA detived from glibc:
host_generic_maddf.h and host_generic_maddf.c
- files under coregrin/m_debuginfo derived from LZO:
lzoconf.h, lzodefs.h, minilzo-inl.c and minilzo.h
- files under coregrind/m_gdbserver detived from GDB:
gdb/signals.h, inferiors.c, regcache.c, regcache.h,
regdef.h, remote-utils.c, server.c, server.h, signals.c,
target.c, target.h and utils.c
Plus the following test files:
- none/tests/ppc32/testVMX.c derived from testVMX.
- ppc tests derived from QEMU: jm-insns.c, ppc64_helpers.h
and test_isa_3_0.c
- tests derived from bzip2 (with embedded GPL text in code):
hackedbz2.c, origin5-bz2.c, varinfo6.c
- tests detived from glibc: str_tester.c, pth_atfork1.c
- test detived from GCC libgomp: tc17_sembar.c
- performance tests derived from bzip2 or tinycc (with embedded GPL
text in code): bz2.c, test_input_for_tinycc.c and tinycc.c
This commit thoroughly overhauls DHAT, moving it out of the
"experimental" ghetto. It makes moderate changes to DHAT itself,
including dumping profiling data to a JSON format output file. It also
implements a new data viewer (as a web app, in dhat/dh_view.html).
The main benefits over the old DHAT are as follows.
- The separation of data collection and presentation means you can run a
program once under DHAT and then sort the data in various ways. Also,
full data is in the output file, and the viewer chooses what to omit.
- The data can be sorted in more ways than previously. Some of these
sorts involve useful filters such as "short-lived" and "zero reads or
zero writes".
- The tree structure view avoids the need to choose stack trace depth.
This avoids both the problem of not enough depth (when records that
should be distinct are combined, and may not contain enough
information to be actionable) and the problem of too much depth (when
records that should be combined are separated, making them seem less
important than they really are).
- Byte and block measures are shown with a percentage relative to the
global count, which helps gauge relative significance of different
parts of the profile.
- Byte and blocks measures are also shown with an allocation rate
(bytes and blocks per million instructions), which enables comparisons
across multiple profiles, even if those profiles represent different
workloads.
- Both global and per-node measurements are taken at the global heap
peak ("At t-gmax"), which gives Massif-like insight into the point of
peak memory use.
- The final/liftimes stats are a bit more useful than the old deaths
stats. (E.g. the old deaths stats didn't take into account lifetimes
of unfreed blocks.)
- The handling of realloc() has changed. The sequence `p = malloc(100);
realloc(p, 200);` now increases the total block count by 2 and the
total byte count by 300. Previously it increased them by 1 and 200.
The new handling is a more operational view that better reflects the
effect of allocations on performance. It makes a significant
difference in the results, giving paths involving reallocation (e.g.
repeated pushing to a growing vector) more prominence.
Other things of note:
- There is now testing, both regression tests that run within the
standard test suite, and viewer-specific tests that cannot run within
the standard test suite. The latter are run by loading
dh_view.html?test=1 in a web browser.
- The commit puts all tool lists in Makefiles (and similar files) in the
following consistent order: memcheck, cachegrind, callgrind, helgrind,
drd, massif, dhat, lackey, none; exp-sgcheck, exp-bbv.
- A lot of fields in dh_main.c have been given more descriptive names.
Those names now match those used in dh_view.js.