heapprof is a logging, sampling heap profiler for Python 3.7+.
- "Logging" means that as the program runs, it steadily generates a log of memory allocation and release events. This means that you can easily look at memory usage as a function of time.
- "Sampling" means that it can record only a statistically random sample of memory events. This improves performance dramatically while writing logs, and (with the right parameters) sacrifices almost no accuracy.
It comes with a suite of visualization and analysis tools (including time plots, flame graphs, and flow graphs), as well as an API for doing your own analyses of the results.
heapprof is complementary to tracemalloc, which is a snapshotting heap profiler. The difference is that tracemalloc keeps track of live memory internally, and only writes snapshots when its snapshot() function is called; this means it has slightly lower overhead, but you have to know the moments at which you'll want a snapshot before the program starts. This makes it particularly useful for finding leaks (from the snapshot at program exit), but not as good for understanding events like memory spikes.
You can install heapprof with pip install heapprof
. heapprof is released under the
MIT License.
You can read all the documentation at humu.github.io/heapprof.
If you're trying to find something in the GitHub repository, here's a brief directory (since, like most Python packages, this is a maze of twisty subdirectories, all different):
heapprof
contains the Python package itself. (The API and visualization logic)_heapprof
contains the C/C++ package. (The core profiling logic)docs_src
contains the sources for the documentation, mostly as.md
and.rst
files.docs
contains the compiled HTML version ofdocs_src
, created withtools/docs.py
and checked in.tools
contains tools useful when modifying heapprof itself.- And then there are the configuration files for all the tools:
setup.py
is the master build configuration for the PIP package..flake8
and.pylintrc
are the configuration for Python linting.CPPLINT.cfg
is the configuration for C/C++ linting.mypy.ini
is the configuration for Python type checking.Gemfile
is for setting up Jekyll for documentation hosting._config.yml
is the configuration for Jekyll serving.docs/Makefile
anddocs/conf.py
are the configuration for building the HTML docs image via Sphinx..circleci
is the configuration for continuous integration testing.pyproject.toml
and the rootrequirements.txt
makesetuptools
happy.
- Additional directories which are .gitignored but which show up during use:
build
contains C/C++ dependencies and their compiled images; it's managed bysetup.py
._site
contains the final Jekyll site which is served for documentation; it's created if you runbundle exec jekyll serve
to run the docs web server locally.