## perf-event: a Rust interface to Linux performance monitoring This uses the Linux [`perf_event_open`][man] API to access performance monitoring hardware and software. Use `Builder` to create a perf event counter, then use `enable` and `disable` to start and stop counting. Call `read` to get your count. For example, this counts the number of cycles used by the call to `println!`. Try adjusting the length of the vector to see the cycle count change. use perf_event::Builder; fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { let mut counter = Builder::new().build()?; let vec = (0..=51).collect::>(); counter.enable()?; println!("{:?}", vec); counter.disable()?; println!("{} instructions retired", counter.read()?); Ok(()) } Since we don't specify what sort of event we want to count, `Builder` defaults to `PERF_COUNT_HW_INSTRUCTIONS` events, whose documentation says: > Retired instructions. Be careful, these can be affected by various issues, > most notably hardware interrupt counts. The `examples` directory includes programs that count other sorts of events. [man]: http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/perf_event_open.2.html ## See also The [`perfcnt`] crate provides more extensive coverage of the Linux `perf_event_open` API than this crate. Markus Stange's [`linux-perf-event-reader`][lper] supports events. This crate only handles counters for now. The [`not-perf`] project is a rewrite of `perf` in Rust, and has a bunch of code for dealing with the Linux perf API. [`perfcnt`]: https://crates.io/crates/perfcnt [lper]: https://crates.io/crates/linux-perf-event-reader [`not-perf`]: https://github.com/koute/not-perf