Reference: vcperf commands
The C++ Build Insights tools are available starting in Visual Studio 2019 and later. To see the documentation for that version, set the Visual Studio Version selector control for this article to Visual Studio 2019 or later. It's found at the top of the table of contents on this page.
This article lists and describes the commands available in vcperf.exe
, and how to use them.
Commands to start and stop traces
Important
Unless you specify /noadmin
, the following commands require administrative privileges.
Option | Arguments and description |
---|---|
/start |
[/noadmin ] [/nocpusampling ] [/level1 | /level2 | /level3 ] <sessionName> |
Starts a trace under the given session name. The /noadmin option runs vcperf.exe without admin privileges, and it ignores the /nocpusampling option. When you run vcperf without admin privileges, there can be more than one active session on a given machine. The /nocpusampling option specifies vcperf.exe doesn't collect CPU samples. It prevents the use of the CPU Usage (Sampled) view in Windows Performance Analyzer, but makes the collected traces smaller. The /level1 , /level2 , or /level3 options specify which MSVC events to collect, in increasing level of information. Level 3 includes all events. Level 2 includes all events except template instantiation events. Level 1 includes all events except template instantiation, function, and file events. If unspecified, /level2 is selected by default. Once vcperf.exe starts the trace, it returns immediately. The trace collects events system-wide for all processes running on the machine. That means that you don't need to build your project in the same command prompt window as the one you use to run vcperf.exe. For example, you can build your project in Visual Studio. |
|
/stop |
(1) [/templates ] <sessionName> <outputFile.etl> (2) [ /templates ] <sessionName> /timetrace <outputFile.json> |
Stops the trace identified by the given session name. Runs a post-processing step on the trace to generate a file specified by the <outputFile> parameter. The /templates option includes template instantiation events in the file. (1) Generates a file viewable in Windows Performance Analyzer (WPA). The output file requires a .etl extension.(2) Generates a file viewable in the Microsoft Edge trace viewer ( edge://tracing ). The output file requires a .json extension. |
|
/stopnoanalyze |
<sessionName> <rawOutputFile.etl> |
Stops the trace identified by the given session name and writes the raw, unprocessed data in the specified output file. The resulting file isn't meant for viewing in WPA. The post-processing step involved in the /stop command can sometimes be lengthy. You can use the /stopnoanalyze command to delay this post-processing step. Use the /analyze command when you're ready to produce a file viewable in Windows Performance Analyzer or the Microsoft Edge trace viewer. |
Miscellaneous commands
Option | Arguments and description |
---|---|
/analyze |
(1) [/templates ] <rawInputFile.etl> <outputFile.etl> (2) [ /templates ] <rawInputFile.etl> /timetrace <outputFile.json> |
Accepts a raw trace file produced by the /stopnoanalyze command. Runs a post-processing step on this trace to generate the file specified by the <outputFile> parameter. The /templates option includes template instantiation events in the file. (1) Generates a file viewable in Windows Performance Analyzer (WPA). The output file requires a .etl extension. (2) Generates a file viewable in the Microsoft Edge trace viewer ( edge://tracing ). The output file requires a .json extension. |
See also
Get started with C++ Build Insights
Tutorial: Windows Performance Analyzer basics
Reference: Windows Performance Analyzer views
Windows Performance Analyzer