Re: Shark woes
Re: Shark woes
- Subject: Re: Shark woes
- From: Keith Wiley <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2007 13:34:19 -0700
Where in Console would I see the std out from a Shark run? I don't
see anything in the console log or the system log. The output has to
be going SOMEwhere. Where the heck did it go? I really need to
figure out why a Shark run behaves differently (runs much much
faster) than an Xcode debugger run. The output files that should be
generated don't appear anywhere on the computer (a good indication of
why the Shark run is so fast, it probably crashed), the std out is
missing...I need to see the output to find the problem. What am I
supposed to do here?
...frustrated...
On Jul 17, 2007, at 9:44 AM, Rick Altherr wrote:
Stdin and stderr aren't explicitly set up so they are likely to
route to Console.app. I'm not sure why it thinks the initial
working directory is invalid. Do you have an example of what the
working directory is being set to?
--
Rick Altherr
Architecture and Performance Group
email@hidden
On Jul 17, 2007, at 9:11 AM, Keith Wiley wrote:
Okay, but why does it always claim the initial setting for the
working directory is invalid?
Where does standard out and standard err go during a Shark run.
Again, I can't find these terms in the Shark help. As described
below, a Shark run of my program goes very quickly, so it is not
performing a lot of the computation involved. I'm guessing it's
bailing, perhaps because it can't find a file, but I can't see any
error messages.
Thanks.
On Jul 16, 2007, at 5:21 PM, Rick Altherr wrote:
The working directory is the directory that your application
executes in. Thus, when you start executing with your working
directory as /tmp and you try to open a file name "foo", you
really open /tmp/foo. The working directory is simply the
directory used when a relative path is provided to file system
calls. By default, the working directory is the directory where
the executable exists. For an OS X app, this will be the
location of the actual executable in the .app bundle structure
(i.e. /Applications/MyApp.app/Contents/MacOS/).
I'm betting that your app is referencing a relative path to a
data file and is failing to find it since the working directory
isn't being set to the proper path.
We definitely need to document what the working directory is better.
--
Rick Altherr
Architecture and Performance Group
email@hidden
On Jul 16, 2007, at 4:54 PM, Keith Wiley wrote:
When I launch Shark using the "Launch Using Performance Tool"
submenu, two windows appear, one titled "Shark" and one titled
"Launch Process". The Launch Process always has a message in
the lower left corner that says "Invalid path to working
directory". There is a place in that window where I can assign
a different working directory, but I have no idea what I'm
supposed to put here. The shark documentation has no
explanation of this parameter (the word "working" only occurs
twice in the docs and neither instance relates to this issue).
So I assign some arbitrary directory and the message always
invariably goes away, even if I assign the directory that was
already assigned when I launched Shark, but this undims the OK
button, so I've tried it that way, I've tried other directories,
all kinds of stuff. So I hit he OK button. Shark does its
thing. What I don't understand is, if I run the program from
the command line it takes fair amount of time to run, about 153
seconds. Likewise, if I run the program from Xcode, but without
Shark, it runs for the same amount of time and produces the same
standard I/O. However, when I run it using Shark, it zips
through in a couple of seconds, so it is not performing the same
computation.
I am unsure where to observe the standard output during a Shark
run and I don't have any theories as to why a Shark run clearly
performs a subset of my computation, as if some path or
something is lost and the program effectively bails. I can't
really tell what's going on because I don't where the output
went. Where does the standard output go during a Shark run?
Any help on any of these issues?
Thank you.
___________________________________________________________________
_____
Keith Wiley email@hidden http://
www.cs.unm.edu/~kwiley
"I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has
endowed us
with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their
use."
-- Galileo Galilei
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Keith Wiley email@hidden http://
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"I used to be with it, but then they changed what it was. Now,
what I'm
with isn't it, and what's it seems weird and scary to me."
-- Abe (Grandpa) Simpson
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Keith Wiley email@hidden http://
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"Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter."
-- Yoda
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