About This Guide

The SpeedShop User's Guide describes and illustrates methods for measuring program performance using SpeedShop commands such as ssrun and prof. It also contains tutorials that generate performance statistics for C and Fortran programs.

The SpeedShop performance tools described in this manual can help you to identify specific performance problems. The techniques described in this manual are only a part of performance tuning. Other areas that you can tune, but that are outside the scope of this document, include graphics, I/O, the kernel, system parameters, memory, and real-time system calls.

This book is intended for experienced programmers and others who are interested in optimizing program performance.

The following chapters are included in this book:

Related Publications

The following documents contain additional information that may be helpful:

  • Guide to SGI Compilers and Compiling Tools

  • C Language Reference Manual

  • MIPSpro C++ Programmer's Guide

  • ProDev WorkShop: Debugger User's Guide

  • ProDev WorkShop: Performance Analyzer User's Guide

  • ProDev WorkShop: Overview

  • ProDev WorkShop: Static Analyzer User's Guide

  • ProDev WorkShop: ProMP User's Guide

  • MIPSpro Fortran 77 Programmer's Guide

  • MIPSpro Fortran 77 Language Reference Manual

  • MIPSpro Fortran Language Reference Manual, Volume 1

  • MIPSpro Fortran Language Reference Manual, Volume 2

  • MIPSpro Fortran Language Reference Manual, Volume 3

  • MIPSpro Fortran 90 Commands and Directives Reference Manual

  • MIPSpro N32/64 Compiling and Performance Tuning Guide

  • Origin 2000 and Onyx2 Performance Tuning and Optimization Guide

  • MPI Programmer's Manual

Obtaining Publications

To obtain SGI documentation, go to the SGI Technical Publications Library at http://techpubs.sgi.com.

Conventions

The following conventions are used throughout this document:

Convention 

Meaning

command 

This fixed-space font denotes literal items such as commands, files, routines, path names, signals, messages, and programming language structures.

variable 

Italic typeface denotes variable entries and words or concepts being defined.

user input 

This bold, fixed-space font denotes literal items that the user enters in interactive sessions. (Output is shown in nonbold, fixed-space font.)

[ ] 

Brackets enclose optional portions of a command or directive line.

... 

Ellipses indicate that a preceding element can be repeated.

GUI 

This font denotes the names of graphical user interface (GUI) elements such as windows, screens, dialog boxes, menus, toolbars, icons, buttons, boxes, fields, and lists.

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