I've done a lot of profiling of Rust code using tools that are based around
stack traces. I can't emphasize how useful it is to have inlined stack
frames.
Here is a highly typical example from a profile I had lying around:
#1: 0x655A213: alloc (alloc.rs:75)
#2: 0x655A213: alloc (alloc.rs:151)
#3:
Thank you for doing this work! Any additional information for inlined
frames in crash stacks will be hugely helpful.
On Fri, Apr 5, 2019 at 12:34 PM Nathan Froyd wrote:
>
> TL;DR: We're making some changes to how inlined functions are handled
> in our crash reports on non-Windows platforms in bug
Awesome and super useful work.
I really hope it'll help us to detect the guilty patches.
Calixte
Le ven. 5 avr. 2019 à 18:34, Nathan Froyd a écrit :
> TL;DR: We're making some changes to how inlined functions are handled
> in our crash reports on non-Windows platforms in bug 524410. This
> cha
This is awesome - thank you Nathan!
On Fri, Apr 5, 2019 at 9:34 AM Nathan Froyd wrote:
> TL;DR: We're making some changes to how inlined functions are handled
> in our crash reports on non-Windows platforms in bug 524410. This
> change should mostly result in more understandable crash stacks fo
TL;DR: We're making some changes to how inlined functions are handled
in our crash reports on non-Windows platforms in bug 524410. This
change should mostly result in more understandable crash stacks for
code that uses lots of inlining, and shouldn't make things any worse.
Some crash signatures ma
5 matches
Mail list logo