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Full Discussion: process time
Top Forums Programming process time Post 6764 by LivinFree on Wednesday 12th of September 2001 04:13:19 AM
Old 09-12-2001
If it's something you are running manually, or from a script, you can simply use the time command! For example:

time sleep 2

real 0m2.009s
user 0m0.000s
sys 0m0.000s


So, in actuality, It took a total of 2.009 seconds of my time to watch this command complete. But, as you can see, it used virtually no processing time.
 

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timex(1)							   User Commands							  timex(1)

NAME
timex - time a command; report process data and system activity SYNOPSIS
timex [-o] [ -p [-fhkmrt]] [-s] command DESCRIPTION
The given command is executed; the elapsed time, user time and system time spent in execution are reported in seconds. Optionally, process accounting data for the command and all its children can be listed or summarized, and total system activity during the execution interval can be reported. The output of timex is written on standard error. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -o Report the total number of blocks read or written and total characters transferred by command and all its children. This option works only if the process accounting software is installed. -p List process accounting records for command and all its children. This option works only if the process accounting software is installed. Suboptions f, h, k, m, r, and t modify the data items reported. The options are as follows: -f Print the fork(2)/ exec(2) flag and system exit status columns in the output. -h Instead of mean memory size, show the fraction of total available CPU time consumed by the process during its execution. This ``hog factor'' is computed as (total CPU time)/(elapsed time). -k Instead of memory size, show total kcore-minutes. -m Show mean core size (the default). -r Show CPU factor (user time/(system-time + user-time)). -t Show separate system and user CPU times. The number of blocks read or written and the number of characters transferred are always reported. -s Report total system activity (not just that due to command) that occurred during the execution interval of command. All the data items listed in sar(1) are reported. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Examples of timex. A simple example: example% timex -ops sleep 60 A terminal session of arbitrary complexity can be measured by timing a sub-shell: example% timex -opskmt sh session commands EOT ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWaccu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
sar(1), time(1), exec(2), fork(2), times(2), attributes( 5) NOTES
Process records associated with command are selected from the accounting file /var/adm/pacct by inference, since process genealogy is not available. Background processes having the same user ID, terminal ID, and execution time window will be spuriously included. SunOS 5.10 14 Sep 1992 timex(1)
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