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author | Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com> | 2006-07-24 13:49:50 +0000 |
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committer | Nick Clifton <nickc@redhat.com> | 2006-07-24 13:49:50 +0000 |
commit | b45619c047b9bcea43bebfd63d2489301262b481 (patch) | |
tree | af4caf7d19df1a76a8881e54d78cf38ee8dc6f0d /gprof/gprof.texi | |
parent | 2f9c733339d0a8476a7a8ff77fbfbdbedfa190d1 (diff) | |
download | gdb-b45619c047b9bcea43bebfd63d2489301262b481.zip gdb-b45619c047b9bcea43bebfd63d2489301262b481.tar.gz gdb-b45619c047b9bcea43bebfd63d2489301262b481.tar.bz2 |
Fix spelling typos
Diffstat (limited to 'gprof/gprof.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | gprof/gprof.texi | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/gprof/gprof.texi b/gprof/gprof.texi index a81b109..3c141d9 100644 --- a/gprof/gprof.texi +++ b/gprof/gprof.texi @@ -442,7 +442,7 @@ The order of these options does not matter. @menu * Output Options:: Controlling @code{gprof}'s output style -* Analysis Options:: Controlling how @code{gprof} analyses its data +* Analysis Options:: Controlling how @code{gprof} analyzes its data * Miscellaneous Options:: * Deprecated Options:: Options you no longer need to use, but which have been retained for compatibility @@ -559,7 +559,7 @@ Normally, @code{gprof} prints annotated source files to standard-output. If this option is specified, annotated source for a file named @file{path/@var{filename}} is generated in the file @file{@var{filename}-ann}. If the underlying -filesystem would truncate @file{@var{filename}-ann} so that it +file system would truncate @file{@var{filename}-ann} so that it overwrites the original @file{@var{filename}}, @code{gprof} generates annotated source in the file @file{@var{filename}.ann} instead (if the original file name has an extension, that extension is @emph{replaced} @@ -654,7 +654,7 @@ The @samp{-a} option causes @code{gprof} to suppress the printing of statically declared (private) functions. (These are functions whose names are not listed as global, and which are not visible outside the file/function/block where they were defined.) Time spent in these -functions, calls to/from them, etc, will all be attributed to the +functions, calls to/from them, etc., will all be attributed to the function that was loaded directly before it in the executable file. @c This is compatible with Unix @code{gprof}, but a bad idea. This option affects both the flat profile and the call graph. @@ -1685,7 +1685,7 @@ Because @code{gprof} can only report call times and counts by function, the best way to get finer-grained information on where the program is spending its time is to re-factor large functions into sequences of calls to smaller ones. Beware however that this can introduce -artifical hot spots since compiling with @samp{-pg} adds a significant +artificial hot spots since compiling with @samp{-pg} adds a significant overhead to function calls. An alternative solution is to use a non-intrusive profiler, e.g.@: oprofile. @@ -1722,7 +1722,7 @@ gprof fastprog gmon.sum @end example If your program is completely deterministic, all the call counts -will be simple multiples of 100 (i.e. a function called once in +will be simple multiples of 100 (i.e., a function called once in each run will appear with a call count of 100). @end table |