iOS & macOS DevelopmentDocumentedScanned

instruments-profiling

Use when profiling native macOS or iOS apps.

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Installation

npx clawhub@latest install instruments-profiling

View the full skill documentation and source below.

Documentation

Instruments Profiling (macOS/iOS)

Use this skill when the user wants performance profiling or stack analysis for native apps.
Focus: Time Profiler, xctrace CLI, and picking the correct binary/app instance.

Quick Start (CLI)

  • List templates: xcrun xctrace list templates
  • Record Time Profiler (launch):
- xcrun xctrace record --template 'Time Profiler' --time-limit 60s --output /tmp/App.trace --launch -- /path/To/App.app
  • Record Time Profiler (attach):
- Launch app yourself, get PID, then: - xcrun xctrace record --template 'Time Profiler' --time-limit 60s --output /tmp/App.trace --attach
  • Open trace in Instruments:
- open -a Instruments /tmp/App.trace

Note: xcrun xctrace --help is not a valid subcommand. Use xcrun xctrace help record.

Picking the Correct Binary (Critical)

Gotcha: Instruments may profile the wrong app (e.g., one in /Applications) if LaunchServices resolves a different bundle.
Use these rules:

  • Prefer direct binary path for deterministic launch:
- xcrun xctrace record ... --launch -- /path/App.app/Contents/MacOS/App
  • If launching .app, ensure it’s the intended bundle:
- open -n /path/App.app - Verify with ps -p -o comm= -o command=
  • If both /Applications/App.app and a local build exist, explicitly target the local build path.
  • After launch, confirm the process path before trusting the trace.

Command Arguments (xctrace)

  • --template 'Time Profiler': template name from xctrace list templates.
  • --launch -- : everything after -- is the target command (binary or app bundle).
  • --attach : attach to running process.
  • --output : .trace output. If omitted, file saved in CWD.
  • --time-limit 60s|5m: set capture duration.
  • --device : required for iOS device runs.
  • --target-stdout -: stream launched process stdout to terminal (useful for CLI tools).

Exporting Stacks (CLI)

  • Inspect trace tables:
- xcrun xctrace export --input /tmp/App.trace --toc
  • Export raw time-profile samples:
- xcrun xctrace export --input /tmp/App.trace --xpath '/trace-toc/run[@number="1"]/data/table[@schema="time-profile"]' --output /tmp/time-profile.xml
  • Post-process in a script (Python/Rust) to aggregate stacks.

Instruments UI Workflow

  • Template: Time Profiler
  • Use “Record” and capture the slow path (startup vs steady-state)
  • Call Tree tips:
- Hide System Libraries - Invert Call Tree - Separate by Thread - Focus on hot frames and call counts

Gotchas & Fixes

  • Wrong app profiled: LaunchServices resolves installed app instead of local build.
- Fix: use direct binary path or --attach with known PID.
  • No samples / empty trace: App exits quickly or never hits work.
- Fix: longer capture, trigger workload during recording.
  • Privacy prompts: xctrace may need Developer Tools permission.
- Fix: System Settings → Privacy & Security → Developer Tools → allow Terminal/Xcode.
  • Large XML exports: time-profile exports are huge.
- Fix: filter with XPath and aggregate offline; don’t print to terminal.

iOS Specific Notes

  • Device: use xcrun xctrace list devices and --device .
  • Launch via Xcode if needed; attach with xctrace --attach.
  • Ensure debug symbols for meaningful stacks.

Verification Checklist

  • Confirm trace process path matches target build.
  • Confirm stacks show expected app frames.
  • Capture covers the slow operation (startup/refresh).
  • Export stacks for automated diffing if optimizing.