Latest recipes tagged "hotshot"http://code.activestate.com/recipes/tags/hotshot/new/2009-02-20T22:35:07-08:00ActiveState Code Recipesquick Python profiling with hotshot (Python)
2009-02-20T22:35:07-08:00Trent Mickhttp://code.activestate.com/recipes/users/4173505/http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576656-quick-python-profiling-with-hotshot/
<p style="color: grey">
Python
recipe 576656
by <a href="/recipes/users/4173505/">Trent Mick</a>
(<a href="/recipes/tags/hotshot/">hotshot</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/performance/">performance</a>, <a href="/recipes/tags/profile/">profile</a>).
Revision 2.
</p>
<p>This is a quick snippet that I use occasionally to profile some pure-Python code, using <a href="http://docs.python.org/library/hotshot.html#module-hotshot"><code>hotshot</code></a>. Basically it is this:</p>
<ol>
<li>Put this <code>@hotshotit</code> decorator on the function you want to profile.</li>
<li>Run your code through some representative paces. The result will be a <code><functionname>.prof</code> in the current directory.</li>
<li>Process the <code>.prof</code> file and print the top 20 hotspots with the given "show_stats.py" script.</li>
</ol>
<p>Props to <a href="http://blogs.activestate.com/toddw/">Todd</a> for slapping this code together.</p>
<p>Hotshot <a href="http://docs.python.org/library/profile.html">is a little out of favour</a> now, so I should -- or Todd :) -- should really come up with an equivalent that uses <code>cProfile</code>.</p>