Enabling Profiling
Updated: August 2011
A code profiler is a software tool, implemented as a DLL, which is called by the common language runtime during the execution of an image. The profiler must implement the ICorProfilerCallback interface, which the common language runtime calls to notify the profiler when specific events occur. The profiler receives notifications whenever a function is entered or exited, an assembly is loaded or unloaded, a thread has been created or destroyed, and when other events occur that are of interest to the programmer. By gathering statistics on these events, a profiler can build a comprehensive picture of which routines used the most CPU time, when garbage collections occurred, if exceptions were thrown, and so on.
The common language runtime can connect a profiler to a process during startup or attach it to a running process. For instructions on loading a profiler for an application, see Registry-Free Profiler Startup and Attach.
See Also
Reference
ICorProfilerCallback Interface
Concepts
Making an Image Easier to Debug
Other Resources
Debugging, Tracing, and Profiling
Change History
Date |
History |
Reason |
---|---|---|
August 2011 |
Clarified information. |
Information enhancement. |