package tracy-client

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Client bindings to the Tracy profiler (v0.12)

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

tracy-client-0.6.tbz
sha256=826b2dbacad0c91facff9b94309a3c34c25c2b77c0345f330c6b781ac9412c32
sha512=610097fe2a38c7675084910bb195d42d8041aa1addb534ee10dee8983d8b0f2e39dfd1571b4f8857ab0178ad20f024a4fd72cd1a893c28df962ae0506368d156

Description

Published: 09 Jun 2025

README

OCaml Tracy-client build"

This repo contains bindings to Tracy, a profiler and trace visualizer. It's licensed, like Tracy, under BSD-3-Clause.

The bindings are pretty basic and go through the C API, not the C++ one (RAII is not compatible with having a function call to enter, and one to exit).

It depends on a C++ compiler to build, along with the dependencies of Tracy-client.

Feature table

feature

supported

zones

messages

plots

locks

screenshots

frames

gpu

fibers

In some cases the feature might not provide all options.

Example

The file examples/prof1.ml shows basic instrumentation on a program that computes the Fibonacci function (yes, not representative) in a loop on 3 threads. If Tracy is running and is waiting for a connection (press "connect"), running dune exec ./examples/prof1.exe should start tracing and display something like this: tracy screenshot"

Usage

  • the tracy_client library contains the bindings and can be used directly in OCaml programs. The Tracy C++ client is vendored and will be bundled along with the bindings.

    For example in prof1.ml, we start with:

      module T = Tracy_client
    T.name_thread (Printf.sprintf "thread_%d" th_n);

    to name the n-th worker thread. Then later we have calls like:

      T.with_ ~file:__FILE__ ~line:__LINE__ "inner.fib" @@ fun _sp ->
    T.set_color _sp 0xaa000f;
    (* rest of code in the span _sp *)
    …

    to create a span in Tracy, with a custom color, and the name inner.fib. One can also add text and values to the span. Alternatively, Tracy_client.enter and Tracy_client.exit can be used to delimit the span manually.

    The client automatically tries to connect to Tracy on startup.

    A pretty convenient helper is:

    let (let@) = (@@)

    to then be able to write spans this way:

      let@ _sp = T.with_ ~file:__FILE__ ~line:__LINE__ "inner.fib" in
    T.set_color _sp 0xaa000f;
    (* rest of code in the span _sp *)
    …

    For example, in a nested loop:

    let run n =
    for i=0 to n do
      let@ _sp = T.with_ ~file:__FILE__ ~line:__LINE__ "outer-loop" in
      for j=0 to n do
        let@ _sp = T.with_ ~file:__FILE__ ~line:__LINE__ "inner-loop" in
        (* do actual computation here with [i] and [j] *)
      done
    done
  • The library tracy-client.trace turns tracy-client into a collector for trace, which is a generic tracing library.

    In that case, Tracy_client_trace.setup() needs to be called at the beginning of the program.

Dependencies (3)

  1. trace >= "0.6" & < "0.11"
  2. ocaml >= "4.08"
  3. dune >= "2.7"

Dev Dependencies (1)

  1. odoc with-doc

Used by

None

Conflicts

None

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