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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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USLEEP(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 USLEEP(3)

NAME
usleep - suspend execution for microsecond intervals SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> int usleep(useconds_t usec); Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)): usleep(): _BSD_SOURCE || _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 500 DESCRIPTION
The usleep() function suspends execution of the calling process for (at least) usec microseconds. The sleep may be lengthened slightly by any system activity or by the time spent processing the call or by the granularity of system timers. RETURN VALUE
0 on success, -1 on error. ERRORS
EINTR Interrupted by a signal; see signal(7). EINVAL usec is not smaller than 1000000. (On systems where that is considered an error.) CONFORMING TO
4.3BSD, POSIX.1-2001. POSIX.1-2001 declares this function obsolete; use nanosleep(2) instead. POSIX.1-2008 removes the specification of usleep(). On the original BSD implementation, and in glibc before version 2.2.2, the return type of this function is void. The POSIX version returns int, and this is also the prototype used since glibc 2.2.2. Only the EINVAL error return is documented by SUSv2 and POSIX.1-2001. NOTES
The type useconds_t is an unsigned integer type capable of holding integers in the range [0,1000000]. Programs will be more portable if they never mention this type explicitly. Use #include <unistd.h> ... unsigned int usecs; ... usleep(usecs); The interaction of this function with the SIGALRM signal, and with other timer functions such as alarm(2), sleep(3), nanosleep(2), setitimer(2), timer_create(2), timer_delete(2), timer_getoverrun(2), timer_gettime(2), timer_settime(2), ualarm(3) is unspecified. SEE ALSO
alarm(2), getitimer(2), nanosleep(2), select(2), setitimer(2), sleep(3), ualarm(3), time(7) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. 2007-07-26 USLEEP(3)
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