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The Visual Profiler provides a drop in solution for viewing your mixed reality Unity application's frame rate, scene complexity, and memory usage.

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Visual Profiler

The Visual Profiler provides a drop in solution for viewing your mixed reality Unity application's frame rate, scene complexity, and memory usage across a variety of platforms.

Visual Profiler Screenshot

Missed frames are displayed over time to visually find problem areas. Scene complexity is reported in the form of batches, draw calls, and rendered vertex counts (or triangle counts). Memory is reported as current, peak and max usage in a bar graph.

Note

To ensure the profiler is minimally intrusive it does not create any GameObjects, perform any per frame managed allocations, and renders in a single draw call.

The Visual Profiler has been verified to work on the following platforms:

  • Microsoft HoloLens & HoloLens 2
  • Microsoft Immersive headsets (IHMD)
  • OpenXR platforms
  • Steam VR (HTC Vive / Oculus Rift)
  • Meta Quest & Quest 2
  • Windows PCs
  • WebGL

Installation

The Visual Profiler is normally ingested as a Unity package. To import the Visual Profiler package into your Unity project follow the below steps:

Note

The Visual Profiler package requires Unity 2021.3 and above.

  1. Open your Unity project and select Window > Package Manager from the file menu bar

  2. Click the '+' icon within the Package Manager and select "Add package from git URL..."

    Package Manager Add

  3. Paste https://github.com/microsoft/VisualProfiler-Unity.git?path=/com.microsoft.mixedreality.visualprofiler#v3.4.0 into the text field and click "Add"

    Package Manager Paste

  4. The Visual Profiler will now be installed within your Unity project as an immutable package within the project's Packages folder named Microsoft Mixed Reality Visual Profiler.

  5. Finally, add the VisualProfiler component to any GameObject in the Unity scene you wish to profile. The profiler is initially active and visible (toggle-able via the IsVisible property), but can be toggled via the enabled/disable voice command keywords (on Windows/UWP platforms only).

It is advised you use a specific release of the Visual Profiler package to ensure your project is locked to a stable release. Release version 3.4.0 is suggested in step three above. You can also pull another version, specific branch, or git commit hash by altering the URL as demonstrated below:

Syntax URL example
Specific version https://github.com/microsoft/VisualProfiler-Unity.git?path=/com.microsoft.mixedreality.visualprofiler#vX.Y.Z
Specific branch https://github.com/microsoft/VisualProfiler-Unity.git?path=/com.microsoft.mixedreality.visualprofiler#my_branch
Git commit hash https://github.com/microsoft/VisualProfiler-Unity.git?path=/com.microsoft.mixedreality.visualprofiler#badc0ffee0ddf00ddead10cc8badf00d1badb002

Usage

When using the profiler look for "missed frames" which appear as orange bars. Missed frames indicate your application is not hitting its target frame rate and may need optimization work. Draw call counts and vertex counts (or triangle counts) are also displayed under the missed frame indicators. These numbers can be indicative of why your app isn't meeting its target frame rate.

Profiler Guide

One should also keep an eye on the bottom memory bar to insure memory usage isn't rapidly changing or approaching the application's memory limit.

Note

The Visual Profiler works in both development and release builds.

The profiler UI (such as anchoring, scale, follow behavior and UI color) can also be tweaked in the component inspector.

Profiler Inspector

Custom profilers can be added to the bottom of the Visual Profiler by adding to the list of "Profiler Groups." Profiler Groups use Unity's ProfilerRecorder API. For example the below image shows how the "BehaviorUpdate", "LateBehaviourUpdate", and "FixedBehaviourUpdate" markers display a millisecond average over 300 samples with the group label "Scripting."

Custom Profilers

Sample

A sample Unity project can be found in the VisualProfilerUnityProject folder. This project contains a simple sample scene that demonstrates the Visual Profiler being used in 3D and 2D (perspective and orthographic cameras) plus example profiler groups for C# behaviors, rendering, and physics.

Sample

Feedback

To file issues or suggestions, please use the Issues page for this project on GitHub.

Contributing

This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.

When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.

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The Visual Profiler provides a drop in solution for viewing your mixed reality Unity application's frame rate, scene complexity, and memory usage.

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