Performance Validator can be controlled from the command line prompt.
This tutorial describes in detail how to performance profile a child process launched from a process.
Sometimes the process you want to performance profile is not the process you are launching, but a process launched by that process.
Related tutorials:
Performance profiling a child process.
Performance profiling a service.
Performance profiling a child process of a service.
Performance profiling an IIS ISAPI DLL.
Performance profiling ASP.Net with IIS.
Performance profiling ASP.Net with Web Development Server.
The command line is:
performanceValidator.exe -program "c:\test results\testbed.exe" -programToMonitorEXE "<<Any>>" -programToMonitorLaunchCount 1 -saveSession "c:\test results\testFirstChildProcess.pvm" -hideUI
The above command line can be broken into its constituent items:
This command line runs testbed.exe but monitors the first program that testbed.exe launches. When the monitored program closes the performance profiling results are finalised and then saved to the session c:\test results\testFirstChildProcess.pvm. Finally, Performance Validator is closed.
The command line is:
performanceValidator.exe -program "c:\test results\testbed.exe" -programToMonitorEXE "c:\test results\testbed_helper.exe" -programToMonitorLaunchCount 2 -saveSession "c:\test results\testbedHelper2.pvm" -hideUI
The above command line can be broken into its constituent items:
This command line runs testbed.exe but monitors the second launch of testbed_helper.exe. When the testbed_helper.exe closes, the performance profiling results are finalised and then saved to the session c:\test results\testbedHelper2.pvm. Finally, Performance Validator is closed.
If you find writing command lines tiresome and you’d like some help, we have created a command line builder tool to make the process of creating command lines a lot easier.