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Top Forums Programming Efficient logging of time measurements Post 302767131 by venam on Wednesday 6th of February 2013 09:11:48 AM
Old 02-06-2013
First of all I'd like to state that I'm a not an expert in C.
I use in C++ the boost::timer library which is an excellent one to do those calculations.

If you don't want to add dependencies to your project you can do the following:
when the function that you want to calculate time starts start a thread that will count time : see man 3 usleep or man 3 sleep or man 3 nanosleep.
This thread sleeps a number of time which increase every n time unit.
This thread stops counting when the other function finish the procedure and change a boolean value to true.
I think the above solution will not be really efficient but it can work.

Experts in C should have a better answer to this question.
 

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SLEEP(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						  SLEEP(3)

NAME
sleep -- suspend thread execution for an interval measured in seconds LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> unsigned int sleep(unsigned int seconds); DESCRIPTION
The sleep() function suspends execution of the calling thread until either seconds seconds have elapsed or a signal is delivered to the thread and its action is to invoke a signal-catching function or to terminate the thread or process. System activity may lengthen the sleep by an indeterminate amount. This function is implemented using nanosleep(2) by pausing for seconds seconds or until a signal occurs. Consequently, in this implementa- tion, sleeping has no effect on the state of process timers, and there is no special handling for SIGALRM. RETURN VALUES
If the sleep() function returns because the requested time has elapsed, the value returned will be zero. If the sleep() function returns due to the delivery of a signal, the value returned will be the unslept amount (the requested time minus the time actually slept) in seconds. SEE ALSO
nanosleep(2), usleep(3) STANDARDS
The sleep() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990 (``POSIX.1''). HISTORY
A sleep() function appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX. BSD
February 13, 1998 BSD
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