Actually, I asked that question a bit prematurely, but any answers to number 2 are still welcome-I'd like to know about any and all options. For the record, for number 1, you can get the associated profiling with a vanilla ocamlbuild/oasis setup without any hairy plugin by doing: ocaml setup.ml -tag profile From there, just executing your program like normal will have it poop out a little gmon.out that you can work with with gprof. As far as how good it is, it's as good as gprof/gmon because that's what it is behind the scenes. On Wed, Oct 14, 2015 at 3:44 AM, Kenneth Adam Miller < kennethadammiller@gmail.com> wrote: > So, I'm looking to do some performance profiling of some libraries and > tools. I would like some tools that are more language facilitated than an > alternative of using something like oprofile because while oprofile is > good, you can only guess at what is consuming the most time in your actual > ocaml source because all the function names have been lost by that time. > > I found ocamlviz, and that seems pretty good, but I'm looking for > something else because we plan to move away from using camlp4 toward ppx. > Introducing this will mean an additional hurdle to overcome once the > transition is complete in terms of customizing the build chain twice. > > In any case, I guess what I'd really like to know is: > > 1) How good are the ocamlcp and ocamloptp tools and how would you get a > vanilla oasis/ocamlbuild combo to easily start using them instead? > > 2) Are there any ppx based profiling tools out there? I need both memory > and time profiling to be done. OCamlviz was great because it had a graph-I > don't necessarily need a dedicated gui, but some way to visualize the data > would be very helpful. >