A custom ProfilerA window that helps you to optimize your game. It shows how much time is spent in the various areas of your game. For example, it can report the percentage of time spent rendering, animating, or in your game logic. More info
See in Glossary module displays performance data from your system in the Profiler window.
You can create a custom profiler module in one of the following ways:
Some packages include custom profiler modules that you can use when you install that specific package. For more information, see the Profiler modules list.
A custom module displays the counters you specified in code in the Profiler window chart view (A), and the counters appear as a list in the module details panel (B).
You can use Unity’s built-in Profiler Module Editor to create a custom Profiler module. For more information, see the Profiler Module Editor documentation section Creating a custom module.
To create a custom Profiler module via code, you must create a new ProfilerModule script and define the module’s properties including the counters it displays, its name, and its icon.
To define a custom Profiler module, your script must do the following:
TankEffectsProfilerModule
:public class TankEffectsProfilerModule : ProfilerModule
[ProfilerModuleMetadata("Tank Effects")]
TankEffectsProfilerModule()
, the list of chart counter descriptors is k_Counters
, and the base constructor is base
:static readonly ProfilerCounterDescriptor[] k_Counters = new ProfilerCounterDescriptor[]
{
new ProfilerCounterDescriptor(GameStatistics.TankTrailParticleCountName, GameStatistics.TanksCategory),
new ProfilerCounterDescriptor(GameStatistics.ShellExplosionParticleCountName, GameStatistics.TanksCategory),
new ProfilerCounterDescriptor(GameStatistics.TankExplosionParticleCountName, GameStatistics.TanksCategory),
};
public TankEffectsProfilerModule() : base(k_Counters) { }
When you define a custom Profiler module, the Profiler window automatically detects it. To view data in your custom Profiler module in the Profiler window:
You can also run the Profiler when your application is in Play mode. However, if you profile an application in Play mode, the Profiler displays data that is not representative of how your application runs when you build it on a hardware device.