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.
northon_patrick3 at yahoo dot ca (2008-06-26 08:36:30)
There seem to be a mistake with the name of the apd_set_socket_session_trace function. In the latest build (version 1.0.1) of apd for PHP, the function is called apd_set_session_trace_socket.
The APD pecl page also have some problems. Some of the links direct you to some adt pages.
judas dot iscariote at gmail dot com (2006-05-07 22:52:50)
if you are looking for better/different alternatives to APD, check the xdebug website http://www.xdebug.org or download it from PECL http://pecl.php.net/xdebug
bugbuster at darrencampbell dot com dot au (2005-05-22 13:53:53)
Locate the root-cause of defects, fast.
If you need to locate the source of a defect in complicated web-based PHP applications with lots of conditional includes (osCommerce and Zen-Cart are reasonably complex), use APD to create a profile dump.
Then filter the dump for lines containing "!" to produce a list of included (required) files in the order they were included.
On my Win98 dev box I use: find "!" dumpfile > trace_program.txt
I use the trace_program.txt to backtrack to the root-cause of defects appearing in the browser. Great for maintaining systems you did not build yourself.
ng4rrjanbiah at rediffmail dot com (2005-04-05 10:52:24)
Some useful links on APD:
1. Profiling PHP Applications ( http://www.schlossnagle.org/~george/talks/Profiling-phpworks-2004.pdf ), [1.40 MB], George Schlossnagle, 2004-09-23
2. PHP Performance Profiling ( http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/7213 ), [13.16 KB], Jonathan Oxer, 2003-10-21
3. APD Wiki ( http://www.wiki.cc/php/Apd )
HTH,
R. Rajesh Jeba Anbiah
yoghurtmetperzik at gmail dot com (2005-01-25 07:15:50)
If pprofp reports 'No such file or directory', it's probably because it contains an incorrect path to your php client. Open pprofp in your fav editor, edit the first line, and try again.