Agent skill
dotnet-profiling
Use the free official .NET diagnostics CLI tools for profiling and runtime investigation in .NET repositories. Use when a repo needs CPU tracing, live counters, GC and allocation investigation, exception or contention tracing, heap snapshots, or startup diagnostics without GUI-only tooling.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/managedcode/dotnet-skills/tree/main/catalog/Tools/Profiling/skills/dotnet-profiling
SKILL.md
.NET Profiling
Trigger On
- the repo needs performance or runtime profiling for a .NET application
- the user asks about slow code, high CPU, GC pressure, allocation growth, exception storms, lock contention, or startup diagnostics
- the team wants official CLI-based diagnostics without depending on
dnx
Value
- produce a concrete project delta: code, docs, config, tests, CI, or review artifact
- reduce ambiguity through explicit planning, verification, and final validation skills
- leave reusable project context so future tasks are faster and safer
Do Not Use For
- replacing realistic performance tests or load tests with ad-hoc tracing alone
- production heap collection when the pause risk has not been accepted
- GUI-only workflows that the repo cannot automate or document
Inputs
- the nearest
AGENTS.md - target application, process, or startup path
- the symptom being investigated: CPU, memory, GC, contention, exceptions, or startup
Quick Start
- Read the nearest
AGENTS.mdand confirm scope and constraints. - Run this skill's
Workflowthrough theRalph Loopuntil outcomes are acceptable. - Return the
Required Result Formatwith concrete artifacts and verification evidence.
Workflow
- Build and run a realistic target first:
- prefer
Release - prefer realistic config, inputs, and data volume
- prefer
- Start with the lightest useful tool:
dotnet-countersfor live health signalsdotnet-tracefor CPU, exception, contention, GC, and startup tracesdotnet-gcdumpfor managed heap inspection when memory shape matters
- Prefer installed CLI tools over
dnxone-shot execution so the repo commands stay stable and reproducible. - Capture one focused profile at a time instead of mixing every signal into one run.
- For CPU and general runtime hotspots, start with
dotnet-trace collect. - For live triage, start with
dotnet-counters monitoronSystem.Runtime. - For heap analysis, use
dotnet-gcdumpcarefully and document the pause risk. - After each change, rerun the same measurement path and compare before versus after.
Bootstrap When Missing
If official .NET profiling tools are not available yet:
- Detect current state:
dotnet --infodotnet tool list --globalcommand -v dotnet-counterscommand -v dotnet-tracecommand -v dotnet-gcdump
- Choose the install path deliberately:
- preferred machine-level install:
dotnet tool install --global dotnet-countersdotnet tool install --global dotnet-tracedotnet tool install --global dotnet-gcdump
- direct-download fallback when global tools are not suitable:
- use the official Microsoft Learn download links for
dotnet-counters,dotnet-trace, anddotnet-gcdump
- use the official Microsoft Learn download links for
- preferred machine-level install:
- Verify the installed tools resolve correctly:
dotnet-counters --versiondotnet-trace --versiondotnet-gcdump --version
- Record exact profiling commands in
AGENTS.md, for example:dotnet-counters monitor --process-id PID --counters System.Runtimedotnet-trace collect --process-id PID --profile dotnet-common,dotnet-sampled-thread-time -o trace.nettracedotnet-gcdump collect --process-id PID --output heap.gcdump
- Run one bounded command and return
status: configuredorstatus: improved. - If the repo intentionally standardizes on another profiling stack and does not want these tools, return
status: not_applicable.
Deliver
- explicit official .NET profiling commands
- a clear profiling path for CPU, counters, and heap inspection
- reproducible diagnostics commands that humans and agents can rerun
Validate
- the chosen tool matches the actual symptom
- commands target a realistic process and configuration
- before/after comparisons use the same scenario
- heap collection warnings are explicit when
dotnet-gcdumpis used
Ralph Loop
Use the Ralph Loop for every task, including docs, architecture, testing, and tooling work.
- Plan first (mandatory):
- analyze current state
- define target outcome, constraints, and risks
- write a detailed execution plan
- list final validation skills to run at the end, with order and reason
- Execute one planned step and produce a concrete delta.
- Review the result and capture findings with actionable next fixes.
- Apply fixes in small batches and rerun the relevant checks or review steps.
- Update the plan after each iteration.
- Repeat until outcomes are acceptable or only explicit exceptions remain.
- If a dependency is missing, bootstrap it or return
status: not_applicablewith explicit reason and fallback path.
Required Result Format
status:complete|clean|improved|configured|not_applicable|blockedplan: concise plan and current iteration stepactions_taken: concrete changes madevalidation_skills: final skills run, or skipped with reasonsverification: commands, checks, or review evidence summaryremaining: top unresolved items ornone
For setup-only requests with no execution, return status: configured and exact next commands.
Load References
references/commands.mdreferences/patterns.mdreferences/profiling.md
Example Requests
- "Profile this .NET app for CPU hotspots."
- "Investigate GC pressure in this service."
- "Capture counters and a trace from startup."
- "Set up official .NET profiling tools for local investigations."
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