🔥 single-command flamegraph profiling 🔥
Discover the bottlenecks and hot paths in your code, with flamegraphs.
0x
can profile and generate an interactive flamegraph for a Node process with a single command,
on any platform which Node runs on (macOs, Linux, Windows, Android...).
- Node v12.x and above
- Default usage supports any Operating System that Node runs on!
- Chrome
- Other browsers may open flamegraphs in a degraded, but functional form
An example interactive flamegraph can be viewed at http://davidmarkclements.github.io/0x-demo/
npm install -g 0x
Use 0x
to run a script:
0x my-app.js
Immediately open the flamegraph in the browser:
0x -o my-app.js
Automatically execute profiling command against the first port opened by profiled process:
0x -P 'autocannon localhost:$PORT' my-app.js
Use a custom node executable:
0x -- /path/to/node my-app.js
Pass custom arguments to node:
0x -- node --zero-fill-buffers my-app.js
for pwsh users, switch to CMD at first or run with
npx
npx 0x -o my-app.js
When ready to generate a flamegraph, send a SIGINT or a SIGTERM.
The simplest way to do this is pressing CTRL+C.
When 0x
catches the SIGINT or the SIGTERM, it process the stacks and
generates a profile folder (<pid>.0x
), containing flamegraph.html
.
The flamegraph.html
file contains the 0x UI, which is explained in
docs/ui.md.
A lightweight, production server friendly, approach to generating a flamegraph is described in docs/production-servers.md.
By default, a Profile Folder will be created and named after the PID, e.g.
3866.0x
(we can set this name manually using the --output-dir
flag).
The Profile Folder is explained in more detail in docs/profile-folder.md
Clone this repo, run npm i -g
and from the repo root run
0x examples/rest-api
In another tab run
npm run stress-rest-example
To put some load on the rest server, once that's done use ctrl + c to kill the server.
Print usage info.
Open the flamegraph in the browser using open
or xdg-open
(see
https://www.npmjs.com/package/open for details).
Run a given command and then generate the flamegraph.
The command as specified has access to a $PORT
variable.
The $PORT
variable is set according to the first port that
profiled process opens.
For instance, here's an example of using autocannon to load-test the process:
0x -P 'autocannon localhost:$PORT' app.js
When the load-test completes, the profiled processed will be sent a SIGINT and the flamegraph will be automatically generated.
Remember to use single quotes to avoid bash interpolation,
or else escape variable (e.g. 0x -P "autocannon localhost:$PORT" app.js
won't work wheras 0x -P "autocannon localhost:\$PORT" app.js
will).
Note: On Windows interpolation usually occurs with %PORT%
, however
in this case the dollar-prefix $PORT
is the correct syntax
(because the interpolation is not shell based).
Default: ''
The name of the HTML file, without the .html extension
Can be set to - to write HTML to STDOUT (note
due to the nature of CLI argument parsing, this must be set using =
,
e.g. --name=-
).
If either this flag or --output-html-file
is set to -
then the HTML will go to STDOUT.
Default: flamegraph
Set the title to display in the flamegraph UI.
Default: the command that 0x ran to start the process
Specify artifact output directory. This can be specified in template
form with possible variables being {pid}
, {timestamp}
, {name}
(based on the --name
flag) and {outputDir}
(variables
must be specified without whitespace, e.g. { pid }
is not supported).
Default: {pid}.0x
Specify destination of the generated flamegraph HTML file.
This can be specified in template form with possible variables
being {pid}
, {timestamp}
, {name}
(based on the --name
flag) and
{outputDir}
(variables must be specified without whitespace,
e.g. { pid }
is not supported). It can also be set to -
to
send the HTML output to STDOUT (note
due to the nature of CLI argument parsing, this must be set using =
,
e.g. --output-html=-
).
If either this flag or --name
is set to -
then the HTML will go to STDOUT.
Default: {outputDir}/{name}.html
Use an OS kernel tracing tool (perf on Linux). This will capture native stack frames (C++ modules and Libuv I/O), but may result in missing stacks from Node.js due to the optimizing compiler.
See docs/kernel-tracing.md for more information.
Default: false
Limit output, the only output will be fatal errors or
the path to the flamegraph.html
upon successful generation.
Default: false
Suppress all output, except fatal errors.
Default: false
Don't generate the flamegraph, only create the Profile Folder, with relevant outputs.
Default: false
Delay the collection of stacks by a specified time(ms) relative to the first entry.
Default: 0
Supply a path to a profile folder to build or rebuild visualization from original stacks.
Default: undefined
Supply a path to a CPU profile (.cpuprofile
). See examples/cpu-profile
for examples.
CPU Profile output does not have as much information but it can be exported from Chrome Devtools in the browser. There's also an automated headless tool for doing so: automated-chrome-profiling. For creating Node.js Cpu Profiles in Node see v8-profiler or v8-profiler-next. They can also be generated from Node.js 12 and above using the command-line flag --cpu-prof
.
Default: undefined
Show output from perf(1) tools.
Default: false
Save the intermediate tree representation of captured trace output to a JSON file.
Default: false
0x can also be required as a Node module and scripted:
const zeroEks = require('0x')
const path = require('path')
async function capture () {
const opts = {
argv: [path.join(__dirname, 'my-app.js'), '--my-flag', '"value for my flag"'],
workingDir: __dirname
}
try {
const file = await zeroEks(opts)
console.log(`flamegraph in ${file}`)
} catch (e) {
console.error(e)
}
}
capture()
The Programmatic API is detailed in docs/api.md.
Very complex applications with lots of stacks may hit memory issues.
The --stack-size
flag can be used to set the memory to the maximum 8GB
in order to work around this when profiling:
node --stack-size=8024 $(which 0x) my-app.js
There may still be a problem opening the flamegraph in Chrome. The same work
around can be used by opening Chrome from the command line (platform dependent)
and nesting the --stack-size
flag within the --js-flags
flag:
--js-flags="--stack-size 8024"
.
DEBUG=0x* 0x my-app.js
- https://github.com/brendangregg/FlameGraph (perl)
- https://www.npmjs.com/package/stackvis (node)
- https://www.npmjs.com/package/d3-flame-graph (node)
Sponsored by nearForm
This tool is inspired from various info and code sources and would have taken much longer without the following people and their Open Source/Info Sharing efforts:
- Thorsten Lorenz (http://thlorenz.com/)
- Dave Pacheco (http://dtrace.org/blogs/dap/about/)
- Brendan Gregg (http://www.brendangregg.com/)
- Martin Spier (http://martinspier.io/)
MIT