Debugging Auto-Device Plugin

Using Debug Log

In case of execution problems, just like all other plugins, Auto-Device provides the user with information on exceptions and error values. If the returned data is not enough for debugging purposes, more information may be acquired by means of ov::log::Level.

There are six levels of logs, which can be called explicitly or set via the OPENVINO_LOG_LEVEL environment variable (can be overwritten by compile_model() or set_property()):

0 - ov::log::Level::NO

1 - ov::log::Level::ERR

2 - ov::log::Level::WARNING

3 - ov::log::Level::INFO

4 - ov::log::Level::DEBUG

5 - ov::log::Level::TRACE

ov::Core core;

// read a network in IR, PaddlePaddle, or ONNX format
std::shared_ptr<ov::Model> model = core.read_model("sample.xml");

// compile a model on AUTO and set log level to debug
ov::CompiledModel compiled_model = core.compile_model(model, "AUTO", ov::log::level(ov::log::Level::DEBUG));

// or set log level with set_property and compile model
core.set_property("AUTO", ov::log::level(ov::log::Level::DEBUG));
ov::CompiledModel compiled_model2 = core.compile_model(model, "AUTO");
    core = Core()
    # read a network in IR, PaddlePaddle, or ONNX format
    model = core.read_model(model_path)
    # compile a model on AUTO and set log level to debug
    compiled_model = core.compile_model(model=model, device_name="AUTO", config={"LOG_LEVEL":"LOG_DEBUG"});
    # set log level with set_property and compile model
    core.set_property(device_name="AUTO", properties={"LOG_LEVEL":"LOG_DEBUG"});
    compiled_model = core.compile_model(model=model, device_name="AUTO");
When defining it via the variable,
a number needs to be used instead of a log level name, e.g.:

Linux
export OPENVINO_LOG_LEVEL=0

Windows
set OPENVINO_LOG_LEVEL=0

The property returns information in the following format:

[time]LOG_LEVEL[file] [PLUGIN]: message

in which the LOG_LEVEL is represented by the first letter of its name (ERROR being an exception and using its full name). For example:

[17:09:36.6188]D[plugin.cpp:167] deviceName:MYRIAD, defaultDeviceID:, uniqueName:MYRIAD_
[17:09:36.6242]I[executable_network.cpp:181] [AUTOPLUGIN]:select device:MYRIAD
[17:09:36.6809]ERROR[executable_network.cpp:384] [AUTOPLUGIN] load failed, MYRIAD:[ GENERAL_ERROR ]

Instrumentation and Tracing Technology

All major performance calls of both OpenVINO™ Runtime and the AUTO plugin are instrumented with Instrumentation and Tracing Technology (ITT) APIs. To enable ITT in OpenVINO™ Runtime, compile it with the following option:

-DENABLE_PROFILING_ITT=ON

For more information, you can refer to:

Analyze Code Performance on Linux

You can analyze code performance using Intel® VTune™ Profiler. For more information and installation instructions refer to the installation guide (PDF) With Intel® VTune™ Profiler installed you can configure your analysis with the following steps:

  1. Open Intel® VTune™ Profiler GUI on the host machine with the following command:

    cd /vtune install dir/intel/oneapi/vtune/2021.6.0/env
    source vars.sh
    vtune-gui
    
  2. select Configure Analysis

  3. In the where pane, select Local Host

    _images/OV_UG_supported_plugins_AUTO_debugging-img01-localhost.png
  4. In the what pane, specify your target application/script on the local system.

    _images/OV_UG_supported_plugins_AUTO_debugging-img02-launch.png
  5. In the how pane, choose and configure the analysis type you want to perform, for example, Hotspots Analysis : identify the most time-consuming functions and drill down to see time spent on each line of source code. Focus optimization efforts on hot code for the greatest performance impact.

    _images/OV_UG_supported_plugins_AUTO_debugging-img03-hotspots.png
  6. Start the analysis by clicking the start button. When it is done, you will get a summary of the run, including top hotspots and top tasks in your application:

    _images/OV_UG_supported_plugins_AUTO_debugging-img04-vtunesummary.png
  7. To analyze ITT info related to the Auto plugin, click on the Bottom-up tab, choose the Task Domain/Task Type/Function/Call Stack from the dropdown list - Auto plugin-related ITT info is under the MULTIPlugin task domain:

    _images/OV_UG_supported_plugins_AUTO_debugging-img05-vtunebottomup.png