The C `clock()` function just returns a zero

Pietro picture Pietro · Jan 25, 2010 · Viewed 15.4k times · Source

The C clock() function just returns me a zero. I tried using different types, with no improvement... Is this a good way to measure time with good precision?

#include <time.h>
#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
    clock_t start, end;
    double cpu_time_used;

    char s[32];

    start = clock();

    printf("\nSleeping 3 seconds...\n\n");
    sleep(3);

    end = clock();

    cpu_time_used = ((double)(end - start)) / ((double)CLOCKS_PER_SEC);

    printf("start = %.20f\nend   = %.20f\n", start, end);
    printf("delta = %.20f\n", ((double) (end - start)));
    printf("cpu_time_used  = %.15f\n", cpu_time_used);
    printf("CLOCKS_PER_SEC = %i\n\n", CLOCKS_PER_SEC);

    return 0;
}
Sleeping 3 seconds...

start = 0.00000000000000000000
end   = 0.00000000000000000000
delta = 0.00000000000000000000
cpu_time_used  = 0.000000000000000
CLOCKS_PER_SEC = 1000000

Platform: Intel 32 bit, RedHat Linux, gcc 3.4.6

Answer

Fred Larson picture Fred Larson · Jan 25, 2010

clock() reports CPU time used. sleep() doesn't use any CPU time. So your result is probably exactly correct, just not what you want.