Util::TimeTracker(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Util::TimeTracker(3)NAMELog::Log4perl::Util::TimeTracker - Track time elapsed
SYNOPSIS
use Log::Log4perl::Util::TimeTracker;
my $timer = Log::Log4perl::Util::TimeTracker->new();
# equivalent to Time::HiRes::gettimeofday(), regardless
# if Time::HiRes is present or not.
my($seconds, $microseconds) = $timer->gettimeofday();
# reset internal timer
$timer->reset();
# return milliseconds since last reset
$msecs = $timer->milliseconds();
# return milliseconds since last call
$msecs = $timer->delta_milliseconds();
DESCRIPTION
This utility module helps tracking time elapsed for PatternLayout's
date and time placeholders. Its accuracy depends on the availability of
the Time::HiRes module. If it's available, its granularity is
milliseconds, if not, seconds.
The most common use of this module is calling the gettimeofday()
method:
my($seconds, $microseconds) = $timer->gettimeofday();
It returns seconds and microseconds of the current epoch time. If
Time::HiRes is installed, it will simply defer to its gettimeofday()
function, if it's missing, time() will be called instead and
$microseconds will always be 0.
To measure time elapsed in milliseconds, use the reset() method to
reset the timer to the current time, followed by one or more calls to
the milliseconds() method:
# reset internal timer
$timer->reset();
# return milliseconds since last reset
$msecs = $timer->milliseconds();
On top of the time span between the last reset and the current time,
the module keeps track of the time between calls to
delta_milliseconds():
$msecs = $timer->delta_milliseconds();
On the first call, this will return the number of milliseconds since
the last reset(), on subsequent calls, it will return the time elapsed
in milliseconds since the last call to delta_milliseconds() instead.
Note that reset() also resets the time of the last call.
The internal timer of this module gets its time input from the POSIX
time() function, or, if the Time::HiRes module is available, from its
gettimeofday() function. To figure out which one it is, use
if( $timer->hires_available() ) {
print "Hooray, we get real milliseconds!\n";
} else {
print "Milliseconds are just bogus\n";
}
For testing purposes, a different time source can be provided, so test
suites can simulate time passing by without actually having to wait:
my $start_time = time();
my $timer = Log::Log4perl::Util::TimeTracker->new(
time_function => sub {
return $start_time++;
},
);
Every call to $timer->epoch() will then return a time value that is one
second ahead of the the value returned on the previous call. This also
means that every call to delta_milliseconds() will return a value that
exceeds the value returned on the previous call by 1000.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2002-2009 by Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com> and Kevin Goess
<cpan@goess.org>.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.1 2011-05-02 Util::TimeTracker(3)