after upstream changed the folder, the build command is broken: https://github.com/gimli-rs/addr2line/pull/291/files#diff-2e9d962a08321605940b5a657135052fbcef87b5e360662bb527c96d9a615542R70-R72 for a more stable way, I intend to pin the version
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slug | sidebar_label | title |
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/en/operations/allocation-profiling | Allocation profiling | Allocation profiling |
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Allocation profiling
ClickHouse uses jemalloc as its global allocator that comes with some tools for allocation sampling and profiling.
To make allocation profiling more convenient, SYSTEM
commands are provided along 4LW commands in Keeper.
Sampling allocations and flushing heap profiles
If we want to sample and profile allocations in jemalloc
, we need to start ClickHouse/Keeper with profiling enabled using environment variable MALLOC_CONF
.
MALLOC_CONF=background_thread:true,prof:true
jemalloc
will sample allocation and store the information internally.
We can tell jemalloc
to flush current profile by running:
SYSTEM JEMALLOC FLUSH PROFILE
echo jmfp | nc localhost 9181
By default, heap profile file will be generated in /tmp/jemalloc_clickhouse._pid_._seqnum_.heap
where _pid_
is the PID of ClickHouse and _seqnum_
is the global sequence number for the current heap profile.
For Keeper, the default file is /tmp/jemalloc_keeper._pid_._seqnum_.heap
following the same rules.
A different location can be defined by appending the MALLOC_CONF
environment variable with prof_prefix
option.
For example, if we want to generate profiles in /data
folder where the prefix for filename will be my_current_profile
we can run ClickHouse/Keeper with following environment variable:
MALLOC_CONF=background_thread:true,prof:true,prof_prefix:/data/my_current_profile
Generated file will append to prefix PID and sequence number.
Analyzing heap profiles
After we generated heap profiles, we need to analyze them.
For that, we need to use jemalloc
's tool called jeprof which can be installed in multiple ways:
- installing
jemalloc
using system's package manager - cloning jemalloc repo and running autogen.sh from the root folder that will provide you with
jeprof
script inside thebin
folder
:::note
jeprof
uses addr2line
to generate stacktraces which can be really slow.
If that’s the case, we recommend installing an alternative implementation of the tool.
git clone https://github.com/gimli-rs/addr2line.git --depth=1 --branch=0.23.0
cd addr2line
cargo build --features bin --release
cp ./target/release/addr2line path/to/current/addr2line
:::
There are many different formats to generate from the heap profile using jeprof
.
We recommend to run jeprof --help
to check usage and many different options the tool provides.
In general, jeprof
command will look like this:
jeprof path/to/binary path/to/heap/profile --output_format [ > output_file]
If we want to compare which allocations happened between 2 profiles we can set the base argument:
jeprof path/to/binary --base path/to/first/heap/profile path/to/second/heap/profile --output_format [ > output_file]
For example:
- if we want to generate a text file with each procedure written per line:
jeprof path/to/binary path/to/heap/profile --text > result.txt
- if we want to generate a PDF file with call-graph:
jeprof path/to/binary path/to/heap/profile --pdf > result.pdf
Generating flame graph
jeprof
allows us to generate collapsed stacks for building flame graphs.
We need to use --collapsed
argument:
jeprof path/to/binary path/to/heap/profile --collapsed > result.collapsed
After that, we can use many different tools to visualize collapsed stacks.
Most popular would be FlameGraph which contains a script called flamegraph.pl
:
cat result.collapsed | /path/to/FlameGraph/flamegraph.pl --color=mem --title="Allocation Flame Graph" --width 2400 > result.svg
Another interesting tool is speedscope that allows you to analyze collected stacks in a more interactive way.
Controlling allocation profiler during runtime
If ClickHouse/Keeper were started with enabled profiler, they support additional commands for disabling/enabling allocation profiling during runtime. Using those commands, it's easier to profile only specific intervals.
Disable profiler:
SYSTEM JEMALLOC DISABLE PROFILE
echo jmdp | nc localhost 9181
Enable profiler:
SYSTEM JEMALLOC ENABLE PROFILE
echo jmep | nc localhost 9181
It's also possible to control the initial state of the profiler by setting prof_active
option which is enabled by default.
For example, if we don't want to sample allocations during startup but only after we enable the profiler, we can start ClickHouse/Keeper with following environment variable:
MALLOC_CONF=background_thread:true,prof:true,prof_active:false
and enable profiler at a later point.
Additional options for profiler
jemalloc
has many different options available related to profiler which can be controlled by modifying MALLOC_CONF
environment variable.
For example, interval between allocation samples can be controlled with lg_prof_sample
.
If you want to dump heap profile every N bytes you can enable it using lg_prof_interval
.
We recommend to check jemalloc
s reference page for such options.
Other resources
ClickHouse/Keeper expose jemalloc
related metrics in many different ways.
:::warning Warning It's important to be aware that none of these metrics are synchronized with each other and values may drift. :::
System table asynchronous_metrics
SELECT *
FROM system.asynchronous_metrics
WHERE metric ILIKE '%jemalloc%'
FORMAT Vertical
System table jemalloc_bins
Contains information about memory allocations done via jemalloc allocator in different size classes (bins) aggregated from all arenas.
Prometheus
All jemalloc
related metrics from asynchronous_metrics
are also exposed using Prometheus endpoint in both ClickHouse and Keeper.
jmst
4LW command in Keeper
Keeper supports jmst
4LW command which returns basic allocator statistics.
Example:
echo jmst | nc localhost 9181