A second question:
I have found that a read-command consumes a lot of time. All other
statements are not conspicuous.
ncalls tottime percall cumtime percall filename:lineno(function)
1 2.939 2.939 2.939 2.939 {built-in method read}
1 5.080 5.080 5.080 5.080 {built-in method read}
1 5.669 5.669 5.669 5.669 {built-in method read}
1 2.083 2.083 2.083 2.083 {built-in method read}
4 2.752 0.688 2.752 0.688 {built-in method read}
4 2.473 0.618 2.473 0.618 {built-in method read}
But the profiler does not tell me which read statement makes trouble.
Any hints how to find the malefactor?
2015-06-12 6:57 GMT+02:00 Martin Weissenboeck <[email protected]>:
> Thank you very much for your fast response.
>
> 2015-06-11 21:15 GMT+02:00 Niphlod <[email protected]>:
>
>> runsnakerun is the best tool for the job.
>> for running with profiler and another webserver, you need to tweak
>> wsgihandler.py .... pass a directory to profiler_dir
>>
>>
>> On Thursday, June 11, 2015 at 8:39:45 PM UTC+2, mweissen wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> I have tried the option -F with a simple web2py start:
>>> python web2py.py -F profilerdir...
>>> Works fine, no problem.
>>>
>>> But now I want to do the same with nginx and emperor: where is the place
>>> to add the -F parameter?
>>>
>>> And, by the way, is there a web2py app to read and display the *.prof
>>> files? I have only found cprofilev (
>>> https://github.com/ymichael/cprofilev).
>>>
>>> Regards, Martin
>>>
>>>
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