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Does anyone know of a profiler that works with .NET 4 (beta 2)? I normally use the EQATEC profiler but it doesn't seem to be working with .NET 4 executables.

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EQATEC Profiler v3.0 has just been released today and it now supports .NET 4.0.

You can get it here: http://www.eqatec.com/tools/profiler

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For what it's worth, I've found plenty of performance problems in our .NET app, using the non-profiler.

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That's a good idea, I'll look into it but I'm not sure if it can help my specific problem - I've got a hobbyist compiler of my own and I'd like to measure the performance characteristics of the compiled .NET executables generated by the compiler. – DrJokepu Nov 6 at 0:23
@DrJokepu: That sounds like a really fun project. I've done a few compilers, but never one I would call "serious". For basic testing, I would compare the generated code to another compiler. I suppose you want to get into the whole realm of optimization. My personal view is the whole subject of compiler optimization is way over-emphasized, but people can certainly differ on that point. Good luck. – Mike Dunlavey Nov 6 at 1:15
Thanks for your advices. Unfortunately, it's not very easy to get the generated MSIL due to the compiler being a JIT compiler - the compiled code is never written to the disk. While I agree that compiler optimization is over-emphasized (especially in .NET), for a program compiled with my compiler it takes almost a second on a modern computer to calculate the factorial of 20 so there's clearly something wrong and I was hoping that a profiler could help me find the source of the problem. – DrJokepu Nov 8 at 18:47
@DrJokepu: Hmmm... I assume you're doing 20! in double precision, because it's about 2.4e18 and requires about 15 digits of precision. In any case, here's what I would do since it's such a simple program. Just set a breakpoint at the start of it, and step through it at the disassembly level, stepping into functions, not over them. What it should do is a series of floating point multiplies, plus whatever control structure you're using for looping or recursion, which shouldn't be much. If it's doing anything else you'll see it. But you probably thought of that. – Mike Dunlavey Nov 8 at 23:08
... If that's too much work, I would wrap a loop around it to do it lots of times. Then while it was running I would pause it. If it's 100 times slower than it should be, you will see the problem with 99% probability on each pause. It has to be possible to do that. – Mike Dunlavey Nov 8 at 23:11
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VS2010 Ultimate edition comes with a profiler. It is placed in the Analyze menu. I haven't used it for anything serious yet, but it appears to be an updated version of the one that comes with the TF editions of VS2008/2005.

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