Collect application statistics for stand-alone applications by using the profiler command line
Applies to: Visual Studio Visual Studio for Mac
Note
This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here
This section describes the procedures and options for collecting performance statistics for a client (stand-alone) application by using the sampling method from the command line.
Note
Enhanced security features in Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 required significant changes in the way the Visual Studio profiler collects data on these platforms. UWP apps also require new collection techniques. See Performance tools on Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 applications.
Common tasks
Task | Related content |
---|---|
Start an application by using profiling | - How to: Launch a stand-alone application and collect application statistics |
Attach the profiler to a running .NET Framework application | - How to: Attach the profiler to a .NET Framework application and collect application statistics |
Attach the profiler to a running C/C++ application | - How to: Attach the profiler to a native application and collect application statistics |
Add tier-interaction data | - Collecting tier interaction data |
Related tasks
Profile stand-alone applications
Task | Related content |
---|---|
Instrument an application | - Collect detailed timing data using instrumentation |
Collect .NET memory allocation and garbage collection data | - Collect .NET Framework memory data |
Collect resource contention and thread execution data | - Collect concurrency data |
Profile by using the sampling method
Task | Related content |
---|---|
Profile ASP.NET web applications | - Collect application statistics using sampling |
Profile services | - Collect application statistics using sampling. Describes how to collect performance statistics from Windows services by using the sampling method. |