Update manual.

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Bartosz Taudul 2019-08-01 23:24:51 +02:00
parent ba162940a3
commit 138743f880

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@ -1135,7 +1135,7 @@ Timer resolution: 6 ns
The \emph{queue delay} and \emph{timer resolution} parameters are calibration results of timers used by the client. The next line is a status bar, which presents: network connection speed, connection compression ratio, the resulting uncompressed data rate and total memory usage of the utility. The \emph{queue delay} and \emph{timer resolution} parameters are calibration results of timers used by the client. The next line is a status bar, which presents: network connection speed, connection compression ratio, the resulting uncompressed data rate and total memory usage of the utility.
You can disconnect from the client\footnote{\label{disconnect}The disconnect functionality is currently not implemented the right way and some data from the capture may be lost.} and save the captured trace by pressing \keys{\ctrl + C}. You can disconnect from the client and save the captured trace by pressing \keys{\ctrl + C}.
\subsection{Interactive profiling} \subsection{Interactive profiling}
\label{interactiveprofiling} \label{interactiveprofiling}
@ -1173,7 +1173,7 @@ Both connecting to a client and opening a saved trace will present you with the
If this is a real-time capture, you will also see the connection window (figure~\ref{connectioninfo}), with the capture status similar to the one displayed by the command line utility. This dialog also displays the connection speed graphed over time and the profiled application's current frames per second and frame time measurements. The \emph{Query backlog} represents the number of queries that were held back due to the bandwidth volume overwhelming the available network send buffer. While this number drains down to zero, the performance of real time profiling may be temporarily compromised. The circle displayed next to the bandwidth graph signals the connection status. If it's red, the connection is active. If it's gray, the client has disconnected. If this is a real-time capture, you will also see the connection window (figure~\ref{connectioninfo}), with the capture status similar to the one displayed by the command line utility. This dialog also displays the connection speed graphed over time and the profiled application's current frames per second and frame time measurements. The \emph{Query backlog} represents the number of queries that were held back due to the bandwidth volume overwhelming the available network send buffer. While this number drains down to zero, the performance of real time profiling may be temporarily compromised. The circle displayed next to the bandwidth graph signals the connection status. If it's red, the connection is active. If it's gray, the client has disconnected.
You can use the \faSave{}~\emph{Save trace} button to save the current profile data to a file. Use the \faPlug{}~\emph{Stop} button to disconnect from the client (see footnote~\ref{disconnect}). The \faExclamationTriangle{}~\emph{Discard} button is used to discard current trace. You can use the \faSave{}~\emph{Save trace} button to save the current profile data to a file\footnote{This should be taken literally. If a live capture is in progress and a save is performed, some data may be missing from the capture and won't be saved.}. Use the \faPlug{}~\emph{Stop} button to disconnect from the client\footnote{While requesting disconnect stops retrieval of any new events, the profiler will wait for any data that is still pending for the current set of events.}. The \faExclamationTriangle{}~\emph{Discard} button is used to discard current trace.
\begin{figure}[h] \begin{figure}[h]
\centering\begin{tikzpicture} \centering\begin{tikzpicture}