26.7. trace — Trace or track Python statement execution
Source code: Lib/trace.py
The trace module allows you to trace program execution, generate
annotated statement coverage listings, print caller/callee relationships and
list functions executed during a program run. It can be used in another program
or from the command line.
26.7.1. Command-Line Usage
The trace module can be invoked from the command line. It can be as
simple as
python -m trace --count -C . somefile.py ...
The above will execute somefile.py and generate annotated listings of
all Python modules imported during the execution into the current directory.
-
--help
Display usage and exit.
-
--version
Display the version of the module and exit.
26.7.1.1. Main options
At least one of the following options must be specified when invoking
trace. The --listfuncs option is mutually exclusive with
the --trace and --count options. When
--listfuncs is provided, neither --count nor
--trace are accepted, and vice versa.
-
-c, --count
Produce a set of annotated listing files upon program completion that shows
how many times each statement was executed. See also
--coverdir, --file and
--no-report below.
-
-t, --trace
Display lines as they are executed.
-
-l, --listfuncs
Display the functions executed by running the program.
-
-r, --report
Produce an annotated list from an earlier program run that used the
--count and --file option. This does not
execute any code.
-
-T, --trackcalls
Display the calling relationships exposed by running the program.
26.7.1.2. Modifiers
-
-f, --file=<file>
Name of a file to accumulate counts over several tracing runs. Should be
used with the --count option.
-
-C, --coverdir=<dir>
Directory where the report files go. The coverage report for
package.module is written to file dir/package/module.cover.
-
-m, --missing
When generating annotated listings, mark lines which were not executed with
>>>>>>.
-
-s, --summary
When using --count or --report, write a brief
summary to stdout for each file processed.
-
-R, --no-report
Do not generate annotated listings. This is useful if you intend to make
several runs with --count, and then produce a single set of
annotated listings at the end.
-
-g, --timing
Prefix each line with the time since the program started. Only used while
tracing.
26.7.1.3. Filters
These options may be repeated multiple times.
-
--ignore-module=<mod>
Ignore each of the given module names and its submodules (if it is a
package). The argument can be a list of names separated by a comma.
-
--ignore-dir=<dir>
Ignore all modules and packages in the named directory and subdirectories.
The argument can be a list of directories separated by os.pathsep.
26.7.2. Programmatic Interface
-
class trace.Trace([count=1[, trace=1[, countfuncs=0[, countcallers=0[, ignoremods=()[, ignoredirs=()[, infile=None[, outfile=None[, timing=False]]]]]]]]])
Create an object to trace execution of a single statement or expression. All
parameters are optional. count enables counting of line numbers. trace
enables line execution tracing. countfuncs enables listing of the
functions called during the run. countcallers enables call relationship
tracking. ignoremods is a list of modules or packages to ignore.
ignoredirs is a list of directories whose modules or packages should be
ignored. infile is the name of the file from which to read stored count
information. outfile is the name of the file in which to write updated
count information. timing enables a timestamp relative to when tracing was
started to be displayed.
-
run(cmd)
Execute the command and gather statistics from the execution with
the current tracing parameters. cmd must be a string or code object,
suitable for passing into exec().
-
runctx(cmd, globals=None, locals=None)
Execute the command and gather statistics from the execution with the
current tracing parameters, in the defined global and local
environments. If not defined, globals and locals default to empty
dictionaries.
-
runfunc(func, *args, **kwds)
Call func with the given arguments under control of the Trace
object with the current tracing parameters.
-
results()
Return a CoverageResults object that contains the cumulative
results of all previous calls to run, runctx and runfunc
for the given Trace instance. Does not reset the accumulated
trace results.
-
class trace.CoverageResults
A container for coverage results, created by Trace.results(). Should
not be created directly by the user.
-
update(other)
Merge in data from another CoverageResults object.
-
write_results([show_missing=True[, summary=False[, coverdir=None]]])
Write coverage results. Set show_missing to show lines that had no
hits. Set summary to include in the output the coverage summary per
module. coverdir specifies the directory into which the coverage
result files will be output. If None, the results for each source
file are placed in its directory.
A simple example demonstrating the use of the programmatic interface:
import sys
import trace
# create a Trace object, telling it what to ignore, and whether to
# do tracing or line-counting or both.
tracer = trace.Trace(
ignoredirs=[sys.prefix, sys.exec_prefix],
trace=0,
count=1)
# run the new command using the given tracer
tracer.run('main()')
# make a report, placing output in the current directory
r = tracer.results()
r.write_results(show_missing=True, coverdir=".")