Microsecond accurate (or better) process timing in Linux

安稳与你 提交于 2019-11-28 20:45:51

If you are looking for this level of timing resolution, you are probably trying to do some micro-optimization. If that's the case, you should look at PAPI. Not only does it provide both wall-clock and virtual (process only) timing information, it also provides access to CPU event counters, which can be indispensable when you are trying to improve performance.

http://icl.cs.utk.edu/papi/

Will Mc

See this question for some more info.

Something I've used for such things is gettimeofday(). It provides a structure with seconds and microseconds. Call it before the code, and again after. Then just subtract the two structs using timersub, and you can get the time it took in seconds from the tv_usec field.

If you need very small time units to for (I assume) testing the speed of your software, I would reccomend just running the parts you want to time in a loop millions of times, take the time before and after the loop and calculate the average. A nice side-effect of doing this (apart from not needing to figure out how to use nanoseconds) is that you would get more consistent results because the random overhead caused by the os sceduler will be averaged out.

Of course, unless your program doesn't need to be able to run millions of times in a second, it's probably fast enough if you can't measure a millisecond running time.

I believe CFC (Completely Fair Scheduler) is what you're looking for.

You can use the High Precision Event Timer (HPET) if you have a fairly recent 2.6 kernel. Check out Documentation/hpet.txt on how to use it. This solution is platform dependent though and I believe it is only available on newer x86 systems. HPET has at least a 10MHz timer so it should fit your requirements easily.

I believe several PowerPC implementations from Freescale support a cycle exact instruction counter as well. I used this a number of years ago to profile highly optimized code but I can't remember what it is called. I believe Freescale has a kernel patch you have to apply in order to access it from user space.

http://allmybrain.com/2008/06/10/timing-cc-code-on-linux/

might be of help to you (directly if you are doing it in C/C++, but I hope it will give you pointers even if you're not)... It claims to provide microsecond accuracy, which just passes your criterion. :)

I think I found the kernel patch I was looking for. Posting it here so I don't forget the link:

http://user.it.uu.se/~mikpe/linux/perfctr/ http://sourceforge.net/projects/perfctr/

Edit: It works for my purposes, though not very user-friendly.

try the CPU's timestamp counter? Wikipedia seems to suggest using clock_gettime().

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