APD is the Advanced PHP Debugger. It was written to provide profiling and
     debugging capabilities for PHP code, as well as to provide the ability to
     print out a full stack backtrace. APD supports interactive debugging, but
     by default it writes data to trace files. It also offers event based
     logging so that varying levels of information (including function calls,
     arguments passed, timings, etc.) can be turned on or off for individual
     scripts.
    
| Caution | 
| 
     APD is a Zend Extension, modifying the way the internals of PHP handle 
     function calls, and thus may or may not be compatible with other Zend 
     Extensions (for example Zend Optimizer). 
     | 
  APD is currently available as a PECL extension from 
  http://pecl.php.net/package/apd.
  Make sure you have installed the CGI version of PHP and it is available
  in your current path along with the phpize script.
 
  Run the following command to download, build, and install the latest stable
  version of APD:
 
 
  This automatically installs the APD Zend module into your PHP
  extensions directory. It is not mandatory to keep it there; you can
  store the module in any directory PHP can read as long as you set
  the zend_extension parameter accordingly.
 
  Windows users can download the extension dll php_apd.dll
  from http://snaps.php.net/win32/PECL_STABLE/.
 
  In your INI file, add the following lines:
 
  
| zend_extension = /absolute/path/to/apd.so
apd.dumpdir = /absolute/path/to/trace/directory
apd.statement_tracing = 0 | 
 
  Depending on your PHP build, the zend_extension directive can be one of the
  following:
 
  
| zend_extension              (non ZTS, non debug build)
zend_extension_ts           (    ZTS, non debug build)
zend_extension_debug        (non ZTS,     debug build)
zend_extension_debug_ts     (    ZTS,     debug build) | 
 
  To build APD under Windows you need a working PHP compilation
  environment as described on http://php.net/ -- basically, it requires
  you to have Microsoft Visual C++, win32build.zip, bison/flex, and some know how
  to get it to work. Also ensure that adp.dsp has DOS line endings; if it has unix
  line endings, Microsoft Visual C++ will complain about it.
 
The behaviour of these functions is affected by settings in php.ini.
  
Table 1. APD Configuration Options
| Name | Default | Changeable | Changelog | 
|---|
| apd.dumpdir | NULL | PHP_INI_ALL |  | 
| apd.statement_tracing | "0" | PHP_INI_ALL |  | 
  For further details and definitions of the 
PHP_INI_* constants, see the 
Appendix G.
 
Here's a short explanation of
the configuration directives.
  
- apd.dumpdir
     string
- 
      Sets the directory in which APD writes profile dump files.
      You can specify an absolute path or a relative path.
      - 
      You can specify a different directory as an argument
      to apd_set_pprof_trace().
      
- apd.statement_tracing
     boolean
- 
     Specfies whether or not to do per-line tracings. Turning this on (1) will
     impact the performance of your application.
      
This extension has no resource types defined.
This extension has no constants defined.
- 
      As the first line of your PHP script, call the apd_set_pprof_trace() function
      to start the trace:
      - 
       - 
     You can insert the line anywhere in your script, but if you do not start
     tracing at the beginning of your script you discard profile data that might
     otherwise lead you to a performance bottleneck.
      
- 
      Now run your script. The dump output will be written to
      apd.dumpdir/pprof_pid.ext.
       - Tip: 
        If you're running the CGI version of PHP, you will need to add the '-e'
        flag to enable extended information for apd to work properly. For
        example: 
        php -e -f script.php
       
 
- 
      To display formatted profile data, issue the pprofp
      command with the sort and display options of your choice. The formatted
      output will look something like:
       | bash-2.05b$ pprofp -R /tmp/pprof.22141.0
Trace for /home/dan/testapd.php
Total Elapsed Time = 0.00
Total System Time  = 0.00
Total User Time    = 0.00
Real         User        System             secs/    cumm
%Time (excl/cumm)  (excl/cumm)  (excl/cumm) Calls    call    s/call  Memory Usage Name
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
100.0 0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00     1  0.0000   0.0009            0 main
56.9 0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00     1  0.0005   0.0005            0 apd_set_pprof_trace
28.0 0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00    10  0.0000   0.0000            0 preg_replace
14.3 0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00  0.00 0.00    10  0.0000   0.0000            0 str_replace |  
 - 
     The -R option used in this example sorts the profile table by the amount
     of real time the script spent executing a given function. The "cumm call"
     column reveals how many times each function was called, and the "s/call"
     column reveals how many seconds each call to the function required, on
     average.
      
- 
     To generate a calltree file that you can import into the KCacheGrind
     profile analysis application, issue the pprof2calltree
     comand.
      
      If you have comments, bugfixes, enhancements or want to help developing 
      this beast, you can send an mail to 
      apd@mail.communityconnect.com. Any help is very 
      welcome.