Panel for the Flask Debug toolbar to capture and view line-by-line profiling stats
Project description
This is a panel for flask_debugtoolbar which enables the ability to view line profiling information from selected functions.
The line profile information comes from the line_profiler module, but you don’t need to worry about that.
Installation
First, you need to get the package. Install it with pip:
pip install flask-debugtoolbar-lineprofilerpanel
Somewhere after you’ve set app.debug = True and before app.run, you need to specify the flask_debugtoolbar panels that you want to use and include 'flask_debugtoolbar_lineprofilerpanel.panels.LineProfilerPanel' in that list.
For example, here’s a small flask app with the panel installed and with line profiling enabled for the hello_world:
from flask import Flask app = Flask(__name__) import flask_debugtoolbar from flask_debugtoolbar_lineprofilerpanel.profile import line_profile @app.route('/') @line_profile def hello_world(): return flask.render_template('hello_world.html') if __name__ == '__main__': app.debug = True # Specify the debug panels you want app.config['DEBUG_TB_PANELS'] = [ 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.versions.VersionDebugPanel', 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.timer.TimerDebugPanel', 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.headers.HeaderDebugPanel', 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.request_vars.RequestVarsDebugPanel', 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.template.TemplateDebugPanel', 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.sqlalchemy.SQLAlchemyDebugPanel', 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.logger.LoggingPanel', 'flask_debugtoolbar.panels.profiler.ProfilerDebugPanel', # Add the line profiling 'flask_debugtoolbar_lineprofilerpanel.panels.LineProfilerPanel' ] toolbar = flask_debugtoolbar.DebugToolbarExtension(app) app.run()
Usage
Unlike the regular profile panel that comes with flask_debugtoolbar, the line profiler will only profile functions you specifically tell it to. You can either use it as a decorator or directly as a function.
from flask_debugtoolbar_lineprofilerpanel.profile import line_profile # Using it as a decorator @app.route('/profile') @line_profile def profile_page(): ... return flask.render_template('profile_page') # Explicit argument line_profile(some_function)
Note that if I had done line_profile(profile_page) in the example above, it would’ve profiled the wrapper created by app.route. In general, you probably just want to use line_profile as a decorator.
Also note that the following will profile the decorator wrapper, not the inner function.
# Using it incorrectly as a decorator @line_profile @app.route('/profile') def profile_page(): ... return flask.render_template('profile_page')
Always use @line_profile as the inner-most decorator.
Using line_profiler with the Google AppEngine SDK
line_profiler is implemented as a C extension. Unfortunately, AppEngine does not support C extensions in the cloud, and dev_appserver simulates this restriction on your local machine. If you’d like to use line_profiler on your local machine, you can monkey-patch the AppEngine SDK to permit it. The Flask-DebugToolbar will make sure this plugin is disabled in production (it will catch any ImportErrors and disable the affected panel).
Simply open application/__init__.py, which should look something like this:
from __future__ import absolute_import from flask import Flask app = Flask('application') app.config.from_object('application.settings') if app.config['DEBUG']: from werkzeug.debug import DebuggedApplication app.wsgi_app = DebuggedApplication(app.wsgi_app, evalex=True) from flask.ext.debugtoolbar import DebugToolbarExtension toolbar = DebugToolbarExtension(app) import application.urls
and insert the monkey-patch, like so:
from __future__ import absolute_import from flask import Flask app = Flask('application') app.config.from_object('application.settings') if app.config['DEBUG']: from werkzeug.debug import DebuggedApplication app.wsgi_app = DebuggedApplication(app.wsgi_app, evalex=True) # We can't use LineProfiler in production because it requires a C-extension, # but we can monkey-patch it in here for use on the dev server: try: import os, sys, re if 'SERVER_SOFTWARE' in os.environ and os.environ['SERVER_SOFTWARE'].startswith('Dev'): # white-list the line_profiler C extension sys.meta_path[3]._enabled_regexes.append(re.compile(r'.*line_profiler.*')) from flask_debugtoolbar_lineprofilerpanel.profile import line_profile ## import the methods you want to profile here, and whitelist them with line_profile: #from application.views import YourViewClass # #line_profile(YourViewClass.the_method_you_want_to_profile) #line_profile(YourViewClass.another_method_you_want_to_profile) except: pass # Make sure the monkey-patch is applied before you instantiate the DebugToolbarExtension. from flask.ext.debugtoolbar import DebugToolbarExtension toolbar = DebugToolbarExtension(app) import application.urls
1.0.1 (2013-11-12)
- Make it >= 1.0.0 so the –pre flag isn’t needed to install the package
(it’s 1.0.1 instead of 1.0.0 because I’m bad at things)
Specify version 1.0b3 of line-profiler to make the install work
0.0.6 (2012-11-13)
No longer polluting the template namespace
Show all lines, not just those with profiling information
0.0.5 (2012-11-13)
Table output, ditch the default output given by LineProfiler.print_stats()
Usage instructions in the panel
0.0.1 (2012-11-12)
Got it “working”
Super Ugly
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