dbiprof

Langue: en

Version: 2009-02-26 (CentOS - 06/07/09)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

dbiprof - command-line client for DBI::ProfileData

SYNOPSIS

See a report of the ten queries with the longest total runtime in the profile dump file prof1.out:
  dbiprof prof1.out
 
 

See the top 10 most frequently run queries in the profile file dbi.prof (the default):

   dbiprof --sort count
 
 

See the same report with 15 entries:

   dbiprof --sort count --number 15
 
 

DESCRIPTION

This tool is a command-line client for the DBI::ProfileData. It allows you to analyze the profile data file produced by DBI::ProfileDumper and produce various useful reports.

OPTIONS

This program accepts the following options:
--number N
Produce this many items in the report. Defaults to 10. If set to ``all'' then all results are shown.
--sort field
Sort results by the given field. The available sort fields are:
total
Sorts by total time run time across all runs. This is the default sort.
longest
Sorts by the longest single run.
count
Sorts by total number of runs.
first
Sorts by the time taken in the first run.
shortest
Sorts by the shortest single run.
--reverse
Reverses the selected sort. For example, to see a report of the shortest overall time:
   dbiprof --sort total --reverse
 
 
--match keyN=value
Consider only items where the specified key matches the given value. Keys are numbered from 1. For example, let's say you used a DBI::Profile Path of:
   [ DBIprofile_Statement, DBIprofile_Methodname ]
 
 

And called dbiprof as in:

   dbiprof --match key2=execute
 
 

Your report would only show execute queries, leaving out prepares, fetches, etc.

If the value given starts and ends with slashes ("/") then it will be treated as a regular expression. For example, to only include SELECT queries where key1 is the statement:

   dbiprof --match key1=/^SELECT/
 
 

By default the match expression is matched case-insensitively, but this can be changed with the --case-sensitive option.

--exclude keyN=value
Remove items for where the specified key matches the given value. For example, to exclude all prepare entries where key2 is the method name:
   dbiprof --exclude key2=prepare
 
 

Like "--match", If the value given starts and ends with slashes ("/") then it will be treated as a regular expression. For example, to exclude UPDATE queries where key1 is the statement:

   dbiprof --match key1=/^UPDATE/
 
 

By default the exclude expression is matched case-insensitively, but this can be changed with the --case-sensitive option.

--case-sensitive
Using this option causes --match and --exclude to work case-sensitively. Defaults to off.
--version
Print the dbiprof version number and exit.

AUTHOR

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.

SEE ALSO

DBI::ProfileDumper, DBI::Profile, DBI.