I want to log how long something takes in real walltime. Currently I'm doing this:
startTime = time.time()
someSQLOrSomething()
print "That took %.3f seconds" % (time.time() - startTime)
But that will fail (produce incorrect results) if the time is adjusted while the SQL query (or whatever it is) is running.
I don't want to just benchmark it. I want to log it in a live application in order to see trends on a live system.
I want something like clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC,...), but in Python. And preferably without having to write a C module that calls clock_gettime().
That function is simple enough that you can use ctypes to access it:
#!/usr/bin/env python
__all__ = ["monotonic_time"]
import ctypes, os
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW = 4 # see <linux/time.h>
class timespec(ctypes.Structure):
_fields_ = [
('tv_sec', ctypes.c_long),
('tv_nsec', ctypes.c_long)
]
librt = ctypes.CDLL('librt.so.1', use_errno=True)
clock_gettime = librt.clock_gettime
clock_gettime.argtypes = [ctypes.c_int, ctypes.POINTER(timespec)]
def monotonic_time():
t = timespec()
if clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW , ctypes.pointer(t)) != 0:
errno_ = ctypes.get_errno()
raise OSError(errno_, os.strerror(errno_))
return t.tv_sec + t.tv_nsec * 1e-9
if __name__ == "__main__":
print monotonic_time()