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scalene

scalene: a high-performance CPU and memory profiler for Python

by Emery Berger

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About Scalene

  % pip install -U scalene

Scalene is a high-performance CPU and memory profiler for Python that does a number of things that other Python profilers do not and cannot do. It runs orders of magnitude faster than other profilers while delivering far more detailed information.

  1. Scalene is fast. It uses sampling instead of instrumentation or relying on Python's tracing facilities. Its overhead is typically no more than 10-20% (and often less).
  2. Scalene is precise. Unlike most other Python profilers, Scalene performs CPU profiling at the line level, pointing to the specific lines of code that are responsible for the execution time in your program. This level of detail can be much more useful than the function-level profiles returned by most profilers.
  3. Scalene separates out time spent running in Python from time spent in native code (including libraries). Most Python programmers aren't going to optimize the performance of native code (which is usually either in the Python implementation or external libraries), so this helps developers focus their optimization efforts on the code they can actually improve.
  4. Scalene profiles memory usage. In addition to tracking CPU usage, Scalene also points to the specific lines of code responsible for memory growth. It accomplishes this via an included specialized memory allocator.
  5. Scalene produces per-line memory profiles, making it easier to track down leaks.
  6. Scalene profiles copying volume, making it easy to spot inadvertent copying, especially due to crossing Python/library boundaries (e.g., accidentally converting numpy arrays into Python arrays, and vice versa).
  7. NEW! Scalene now reports the percentage of memory consumed by Python code vs. native code.
  8. NEW! Scalene now highlights hotspots (code accounting for significant percentages of CPU time or memory allocation) in red, making them even easier to spot.
  9. NEW! Scalene can produce reduced profiles (via --reduced-profile) that only report lines that consume more than 1% of CPU or perform at least 100 allocations.
  10. NEW! Scalene now also supports @profile decorators to profile only specific functions.

Comparison to Other Profilers

Performance and Features

Below is a table comparing the performance and features of various profilers to Scalene.

Performance and feature comparison

Function-granularity profilers report information only for an entire function, while line-granularity profilers (like Scalene) report information for every line

  • Time is either real (wall-clock time), CPU-only, or both.
  • Efficiency: 🟢 = fast, 🟡 = slower, 🔴 = slowest
  • Mem Cons.: tracks memory consumption
  • Unmodified Code: works on unmodified code
  • Threads: works correctly with threads
  • Python/C: separately attributes Python/C time and memory consumption
  • Mem Trend: shows memory usage trends over time
  • Copy Vol.: reports copy volume, the amount of megabytes being copied per second

Output

Scalene prints annotated source code for the program being profiled (either as text or as HTML via the --html option) and any modules it uses in the same directory or subdirectories (you can optionally have it --profile-all and only include files with at least a --cpu-percent-threshold of time). Here is a snippet from pystone.py.

Example profile

  • Memory usage at the top: Visualized by "sparklines", memory consumption over the runtime of the profiled code. Scalene is a statistical profiler, meaning that it does sampling, and variance can certainly happen. A longer-running program that allocates and frees more memory will have more stable results.
  • "CPU % Python": How much time was spent in Python code.
  • "CPU % Native": How much time was spent in non-Python code (e.g., libraries written in C/C++).
  • "Mem % Python": How much of the memory allocation happened on the Python side of the code, as opposed to in non-Python code (e.g., libraries written in C/C++).
  • "Net (MB)": Positive net memory numbers indicate total memory allocation in megabytes; negative net memory numbers indicate memory reclamation.
  • "Memory usage over time / %": Visualized by "sparklines", memory consumption generated by this line over the program runtime, and the percentages of total memory activity this line represents.
  • "Copy (MB/s)": The amount of megabytes being copied per second (see "About Scalene").

Using scalene

The following command runs Scalene on a provided example program.

  % scalene test/testme.py

To see all the options, run with --help.

% scalene --help
usage: scalene [-h] [--outfile OUTFILE] [--html] [--reduced-profile]
               [--profile-interval PROFILE_INTERVAL] [--cpu-only]
               [--profile-all] [--use-virtual-time]
               [--cpu-percent-threshold CPU_PERCENT_THRESHOLD]
               [--cpu-sampling-rate CPU_SAMPLING_RATE]
               [--malloc-threshold MALLOC_THRESHOLD]

Scalene: a high-precision CPU and memory profiler.
        https://github.com/emeryberger/scalene
        % scalene yourprogram.py

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --outfile OUTFILE     file to hold profiler output (default: stdout)
  --html                output as HTML (default: text)
  --reduced-profile     generate a reduced profile, with non-zero lines only (default: False).
  --profile-interval PROFILE_INTERVAL
                        output profiles every so many seconds.
  --cpu-only            only profile CPU time (default: profile CPU, memory, and copying)
  --profile-all         profile all executed code, not just the target program (default: only the target program)
  --use-virtual-time    measure only CPU time, not time spent in I/O or blocking (default: False)
  --cpu-percent-threshold CPU_PERCENT_THRESHOLD
                        only report profiles with at least this percent of CPU time (default: 1%)
  --cpu-sampling-rate CPU_SAMPLING_RATE
                        CPU sampling rate (default: every 0.01s)
  --malloc-threshold MALLOC_THRESHOLD
                        only report profiles with at least this many allocations (default: 100)

Installation

pip (Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows WSL2)

Scalene is distributed as a pip package and works on Mac OS X and Linux platforms (including Ubuntu in Windows WSL2).

You can install it as follows:

  % pip install -U scalene

or

  % python3 -m pip install -U scalene

Homebrew (Mac OS X)

As an alternative to pip, you can use Homebrew to install the current version of Scalene from this repository:

  % brew tap emeryberger/scalene
  % brew install --head libscalene

ArchLinux

NEW: You can also install Scalene on Arch Linux via the AUR package. Use your favorite AUR helper, or manually download the PKGBUILD and run makepkg -cirs to build. Note that this will place libscalene.so in /usr/lib; modify the below usage instructions accordingly.

Technical Information

For technical details on Scalene, please see the following paper: Scalene: Scripting-Language Aware Profiling for Python (arXiv link).

Success Stories

If you use Scalene to successfully debug a performance problem, please add a comment to this issue!

Acknowledgements

Logo created by Sophia Berger.

scalene's People

Contributors

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