From: "Dr. Thomas Fischbacher" <t.fischbacher@soton.ac.uk>
To: Caml-list List <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Memory statistics tool
Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2008 11:54:16 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <48870DD8.4050906@soton.ac.uk> (raw)
Dear OCaml folks,
when building large applications that work on complicated and highly
networked data, one issue that easily comes up is to get some idea
about what chunks of data eat all your memory. Now, it would be
marvellous for data structure optimization purposes if there were a
function
memory_footprint: 'a -> int64 (or maybe float),
which takes as argument a root
(e.g. Obj.magic [|Obj.magic firstthingy; Obj.magic secondthingy;
Obj.magic thirdthingy|])
and tells me how many cells are occupied by those ML data structures
reachable from that root. Basically, this would correspond to using
the GC's traversal mechanism and doing some internal statistics at the
same time. My guess would be that the Marshal module "almost" has such
a function already, to determine the amount of memory required to hold
a string-serialized value. But as these values get compacted, the length
of the string does not correspond to the number of words occupied by the
in-memory data.
Is there already something like that? Has anyone already built such
a tool?
--
best regards,
Thomas Fischbacher
t.fischbacher@soton.ac.uk
next reply other threads:[~2008-07-23 10:54 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-07-23 10:54 Dr. Thomas Fischbacher [this message]
2008-07-23 11:47 ` [Caml-list] " Daniel Bünzli
2008-07-23 12:40 ` Jan Kybic
2008-07-23 12:44 ` dmitry grebeniuk
2008-07-23 13:09 ` Dr. Thomas Fischbacher
2008-07-23 13:16 ` Alain Frisch
2008-07-24 12:48 ` Dr. Thomas Fischbacher
2008-07-24 15:14 ` Alain Frisch
2008-07-24 15:44 ` Dr. Thomas Fischbacher
2008-07-24 16:12 ` Alain Frisch
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