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go-profiler-notes/heap.md
2021-02-19 15:26:28 +01:00

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# Go's Heap Profiler
Totally a work in progress ... !!! Please come back later : ).
https://twitter.com/felixge/status/1355846360562589696
## How does it work?
Look at the go source code to understand how the data is captured, what role runtime.MemProfileRate plays, etc.
## How does it fail?
Think through sampling rate issues, alloc size classes, etc.
## Performance Overhead
Talk about performance overhead ...
## Data Format
Figure out how the data ends up in the pprof file.
## GC Control
```
# turn of gc
GOGC=off go run <code>
# print gc events to stdout
GODEBUG=gctrace=1 go run <code>
```
## Questions
- What are the [docs](https://golang.org/pkg/runtime/pprof/#Profile) talking about here? How do I actually use this?
> Pprof's -inuse_space, -inuse_objects, -alloc_space, and -alloc_objects flags select which to display, defaulting to -inuse_space (live objects, scaled by size).
A: Those flags are deprecated. Easiest way to select this stuff is via the pprof web ui's sample drop down.
- The [docs](https://golang.org/pkg/runtime/pprof/#Profile) say I should get some kind of data, even if there is no GC. I can reproduce that, but the data seems to not change?
> If there has been no garbage collection at all, the heap profile reports all known allocations. This exception helps mainly in programs running without garbage collection enabled, usually for debugging purposes.
## Disclaimers
I'm [felixge](https://github.com/felixge) and work at [Datadog](https://www.datadoghq.com/) on [Continuous Profiling](https://www.datadoghq.com/product/code-profiling/) for Go. You should check it out. We're also [hiring](https://www.datadoghq.com/jobs-engineering/#all&all_locations) : ).
The information on this page is believed to be correct, but no warranty is provided. Feedback is welcome!