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perf stat for part of program

Is it possible with perf to collect hardware counter statistics for only part of a program's execution? If so, how?

likwid offers the feature of being able to define named regions, but it would be great if this was possible on systems with just perf installed.

Some previous questions have returned relevant answers, but there are still some shortcomings:

  • Using probe I get the same error and I'm using a slightly newer kernel (3.13). Are these fixes available in a newer version?
  • Using perf_event_open I would like to maintain the flexibility to define events on the command line. I also took a peek at the code for perf stat itself , but it seems it doesn't set things up by calling perf_event_open.

Spawn a child process to run perf stat.
Attach perf stat to the parent.
Kill the child process from parent as and when required.

#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <signal.h>

int main()
{

    int pid= getpid();
    int cpid = fork();


    if( cpid == 0)
    {
        // child process .  Run your perf stat
        char buf[50];
        sprintf(buf, "perf stat -p %d   > stat.log 2>&1",pid);
        execl("/bin/sh", "sh", "-c", buf, NULL);

    }
    else
    {
        // set the child the leader of its process group
        setpgid(cpid, 0);

        //////////////////////////////////////////////
        // part of program you wanted to perf stat
        sleep(3);
        ////////////////////////////////////////////////


        ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
        // stop perf stat by killing child process and all its descendants(sh, perf stat etc )
        kill(-cpid, SIGINT);
        ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////


        // rest of the program
        sleep(2);
     }
}

You could use libpfc or jevents both of which are Linux-compatible libraries that allow programming and reading of performance counters via rdpmc at arbitrary points in the userland program.

This won't help directly with your request to specify events on the command line, but you could back something together perhaps based on the ocperf.py code, or libpfm4.

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