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CommentMarkAtProfile

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

The CommentMarkAtProfile method inserts a timestamp value, a numeric mark, and a comment string into the .vsp file. The timestamp value can be used to synchronize external events. For the mark and comment to be inserted, profiling for the thread that contains the CommentMarkAtProfile function must be ON.

Syntax

PROFILE_COMMAND_STATUS PROFILERAPI CommentMarkAtProfile (
                                   __int64 dnTimestamp,
                                   long lMarker,
                                   LPCTSTR szComment);

Parameters

dnTimestamp

A 64-bit integer that represents a timestamp value.

lMarker

The numeric marker to insert. The marker must greater than or equal to 0 (zero).

szComment

A pointer to the text string to insert. The string must be less than 256 characters including the NULL terminator.

Property value/return value

The function indicates success or failure by using PROFILE_COMMAND_STATUS enumeration. The return value can be one of the following:

Enumerator Description
MARK_ERROR_MARKER_RESERVED The parameter is less than or equal to 0. These values are reserved. The mark and comment are not recorded.
MARK_ERROR_MODE_NEVER The profiling mode was set to NEVER when the function was called. The mark and comment are not recorded.
MARK_ERROR_MODE_OFF The profiling mode was set to OFF when the function was called. The mark and comment are not recorded.
MARK_ERROR_NO_SUPPORT No mark support in this context. The mark and comment are not recorded.
MARK_ERROR_OUTOFMEMORY Memory was not available to record the event. The mark and comment are not recorded.
MARK_TEXTTOOLONG The string exceeds the maximum of 256 characters. The comment string is truncated and the mark and comment are recorded.
MARK_OK MARK_OK is returned to indicate success.

Remarks

The profiling state for the thread that contains the mark profile function must be on when marks and comments inserted with the Mark command or with API functions (CommentMarkAtProfile, CommentMarkProfile, or MarkProfile). Profile marks are global in scope. For example, a profile mark inserted in one thread can be used to mark the start or end of a data segment in any thread in the .vsp file.

Important

CommentMarkAtProfile methods should be used with instrumentation only.

.NET Framework equivalent

Microsoft.VisualStudio.Profiler.dll

Function information

Item Value
Header Include VSPerf.h
Library Use VSPerf.lib
Unicode Implemented as CommentMarkAtProfileW (Unicode) and CommentMarkAtProfileA (ANSI).

Example

The following code illustrates the use of the CommentMarkAtProfile generic function call. The example assumes the use of Win32 string macros and the compiler settings for ANSI to determine whether the code calls the ANSI enabled function.

void ExerciseCommentMarkAtProfile(void)
{
    // Declare and initalize variables to pass to
    // CommentMarkAtProfile.  The values of these
    // parameters are assigned based on the needs
    // of the code; and for the sake of simplicity
    // in this example, the variables are assigned
    // arbitrary values.
    int64 timeStamp = 0x1111;
    long markId = 01;
    TCHAR * markText = TEXT("Exercising CommentMarkAtProfile...");

    // Variables used to print output.
    HRESULT hResult;
    TCHAR tchBuffer[256];

    // Declare MarkOperationResult Enumerator.
    // Holds return value from call to CommentMarkAtProfile.
    PROFILE_COMMAND_STATUS markResult;

    markResult = CommentMarkAtProfile(
        timeStamp,
        markId,
        markText);

    // Format and print result.
    LPCTSTR pszFormat = TEXT("%s %d.\0");
    TCHAR* pszTxt = TEXT("CommentMarkAtProfile returned");
    hResult = StringCchPrintf(tchBuffer, 256, pszFormat,
    pszTxt, markResult);

#ifdef DEBUG
    OutputDebugString(tchBuffer);
#endif
}

See also