Share via


Collect concurrency data for stand-alone applications by using the profiler command line

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual 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

The concurrency method of Visual Studio Profiling Tools enables you to collect resource contention data and thread activity data that shows you CPU utilization, thread contention, thread migration, synchronization delays, areas of overlapped IO, and other system events.

Common tasks

Task Related content
Start a .NET Framework application and profile concurrency data - How to: Launch a .NET Framework application to collect concurrency data
Start a C/C++ application and profile concurrency data - How to: Launch a native application to collect concurrency data
Attach the profiler to a running .NET Framework application - How to: Attach the profiler to a .NET Framework application to collect concurrency data
Attach the profiler to a running C/C++ application - How to: Attach the profiler to a native application and collect concurrency data

Profile stand-alone applications

Task Related content
Profile by using the sampling method - Collect application statistics using sampling
Profile by using the instrumentation method - Collect detailed timing data using instrumentation
Profile .NET memory allocation and garbage collection - Collect .NET Framework memory data
Add tier-interaction data - Collect tier interaction data

Profile concurrency issues

Task Related content
Profile ASP.NET applications - Collect concurrency data
Profile services - Collect concurrency data

Analyze concurrency data views and reports

Reference