Provided by: perl-doc_5.18.2-2ubuntu1.7_all bug

NAME

       Time::HiRes - High resolution alarm, sleep, gettimeofday, interval timers

SYNOPSIS

         use Time::HiRes qw( usleep ualarm gettimeofday tv_interval nanosleep
                             clock_gettime clock_getres clock_nanosleep clock
                             stat );

         usleep ($microseconds);
         nanosleep ($nanoseconds);

         ualarm ($microseconds);
         ualarm ($microseconds, $interval_microseconds);

         $t0 = [gettimeofday];
         ($seconds, $microseconds) = gettimeofday;

         $elapsed = tv_interval ( $t0, [$seconds, $microseconds]);
         $elapsed = tv_interval ( $t0, [gettimeofday]);
         $elapsed = tv_interval ( $t0 );

         use Time::HiRes qw ( time alarm sleep );

         $now_fractions = time;
         sleep ($floating_seconds);
         alarm ($floating_seconds);
         alarm ($floating_seconds, $floating_interval);

         use Time::HiRes qw( setitimer getitimer );

         setitimer ($which, $floating_seconds, $floating_interval );
         getitimer ($which);

         use Time::HiRes qw( clock_gettime clock_getres clock_nanosleep
                             ITIMER_REAL ITIMER_VIRTUAL ITIMER_PROF ITIMER_REALPROF );

         $realtime   = clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME);
         $resolution = clock_getres(CLOCK_REALTIME);

         clock_nanosleep(CLOCK_REALTIME, 1.5e9);
         clock_nanosleep(CLOCK_REALTIME, time()*1e9 + 10e9, TIMER_ABSTIME);

         my $ticktock = clock();

         use Time::HiRes qw( stat );

         my @stat = stat("file");
         my @stat = stat(FH);

DESCRIPTION

       The "Time::HiRes" module implements a Perl interface to the "usleep", "nanosleep", "ualarm",
       "gettimeofday", and "setitimer"/"getitimer" system calls, in other words, high resolution time and
       timers. See the "EXAMPLES" section below and the test scripts for usage; see your system documentation
       for the description of the underlying "nanosleep" or "usleep", "ualarm", "gettimeofday", and
       "setitimer"/"getitimer" calls.

       If your system lacks "gettimeofday()" or an emulation of it you don't get "gettimeofday()" or the one-
       argument form of "tv_interval()".  If your system lacks all of "nanosleep()", "usleep()", "select()", and
       "poll", you don't get "Time::HiRes::usleep()", "Time::HiRes::nanosleep()", or "Time::HiRes::sleep()".  If
       your system lacks both "ualarm()" and "setitimer()" you don't get "Time::HiRes::ualarm()" or
       "Time::HiRes::alarm()".

       If you try to import an unimplemented function in the "use" statement it will fail at compile time.

       If your subsecond sleeping is implemented with "nanosleep()" instead of "usleep()", you can mix subsecond
       sleeping with signals since "nanosleep()" does not use signals.  This, however, is not portable, and you
       should first check for the truth value of &Time::HiRes::d_nanosleep to see whether you have nanosleep,
       and then carefully read your "nanosleep()" C API documentation for any peculiarities.

       If you are using "nanosleep" for something else than mixing sleeping with signals, give some thought to
       whether Perl is the tool you should be using for work requiring nanosecond accuracies.

       Remember that unless you are working on a hard realtime system, any clocks and timers will be imprecise,
       especially so if you are working in a pre-emptive multiuser system.  Understand the difference between
       wallclock time and process time (in UNIX-like systems the sum of user and system times).  Any attempt to
       sleep for X seconds will most probably end up sleeping more than that, but don't be surpised if you end
       up sleeping slightly less.

       The following functions can be imported from this module.  No functions are exported by default.

       gettimeofday ()
           In  array  context returns a two-element array with the seconds and microseconds since the epoch.  In
           scalar context returns floating seconds like "Time::HiRes::time()" (see below).

       usleep ( $useconds )
           Sleeps for the number of microseconds (millionths of a second)  specified.   Returns  the  number  of
           microseconds  actually  slept.   Can sleep for more than one second, unlike the "usleep" system call.
           Can  also  sleep  for  zero  seconds,  which  often  works   like   a   thread   yield.    See   also
           "Time::HiRes::usleep()", "Time::HiRes::sleep()", and "Time::HiRes::clock_nanosleep()".

           Do not expect usleep() to be exact down to one microsecond.

       nanosleep ( $nanoseconds )
           Sleeps  for  the  number  of  nanoseconds  (1e9ths  of  a  second)  specified.  Returns the number of
           nanoseconds actually slept (accurate only to microseconds, the nearest thousand of them).  Can  sleep
           for  more  than  one second.  Can also sleep for zero seconds, which often works like a thread yield.
           See also "Time::HiRes::sleep()", "Time::HiRes::usleep()", and "Time::HiRes::clock_nanosleep()".

           Do not expect nanosleep() to be exact down to one nanosecond.  Getting even accuracy of one  thousand
           nanoseconds is good.

       ualarm ( $useconds [, $interval_useconds ] )
           Issues a "ualarm" call; the $interval_useconds is optional and will be zero if unspecified, resulting
           in "alarm"-like behaviour.

           Returns the remaining time in the alarm in microseconds, or "undef" if an error occurred.

           ualarm(0) will cancel an outstanding ualarm().

           Note that the interaction between alarms and sleeps is unspecified.

       tv_interval
           tv_interval ( $ref_to_gettimeofday [, $ref_to_later_gettimeofday] )

           Returns   the   floating  seconds  between  the  two  times,  which  should  have  been  returned  by
           "gettimeofday()". If the second argument is omitted, then the current time is used.

       time ()
           Returns a floating seconds since the epoch. This function can be imported, resulting in a nice  drop-
           in replacement for the "time" provided with core Perl; see the "EXAMPLES" below.

           NOTE  1:  This  higher resolution timer can return values either less or more than the core "time()",
           depending on whether your platform rounds the higher resolution timer values  up,  down,  or  to  the
           nearest  second to get the core "time()", but naturally the difference should be never more than half
           a second.  See also "clock_getres", if available in your system.

           NOTE 2: Since Sunday, September 9th, 2001 at 01:46:40 AM GMT, when the "time()" seconds  since  epoch
           rolled  over  to 1_000_000_000, the default floating point format of Perl and the seconds since epoch
           have conspired to produce an apparent bug: if you print the value of "Time::HiRes::time()"  you  seem
           to be getting only five decimals, not six as promised (microseconds).  Not to worry, the microseconds
           are there (assuming your platform supports such granularity in the first place).  What is going on is
           that  the  default floating point format of Perl only outputs 15 digits.  In this case that means ten
           digits before the decimal separator and five after.  To see  the  microseconds  you  can  use  either
           "printf"/"sprintf" with "%.6f", or the "gettimeofday()" function in list context, which will give you
           the seconds and microseconds as two separate values.

       sleep ( $floating_seconds )
           Sleeps for the specified amount of seconds.  Returns the number of seconds actually slept (a floating
           point value).  This function can be imported, resulting in a nice drop-in replacement for the "sleep"
           provided with perl, see the "EXAMPLES" below.

           Note that the interaction between alarms and sleeps is unspecified.

       alarm ( $floating_seconds [, $interval_floating_seconds ] )
           The  "SIGALRM" signal is sent after the specified number of seconds.  Implemented using "setitimer()"
           if available, "ualarm()" if not.  The $interval_floating_seconds argument is  optional  and  will  be
           zero if unspecified, resulting in "alarm()"-like behaviour.  This function can be imported, resulting
           in a nice drop-in replacement for the "alarm" provided with perl, see the "EXAMPLES" below.

           Returns the remaining time in the alarm in seconds, or "undef" if an error occurred.

           NOTE  1: With some combinations of operating systems and Perl releases "SIGALRM" restarts "select()",
           instead of interrupting it.  This means that an "alarm()" followed by a "select()" may together  take
           the  sum  of  the  times  specified  for  the  "alarm()" and the "select()", not just the time of the
           "alarm()".

           Note that the interaction between alarms and sleeps is unspecified.

       setitimer ( $which, $floating_seconds [, $interval_floating_seconds ] )
           Start up an interval timer: after a certain time, a signal ($which) arrives,  and  more  signals  may
           keep  arriving  at certain intervals.  To disable an "itimer", use $floating_seconds of zero.  If the
           $interval_floating_seconds is set to zero (or unspecified), the timer  is  disabled  after  the  next
           delivered signal.

           Use  of  interval  timers may interfere with "alarm()", "sleep()", and "usleep()".  In standard-speak
           the "interaction is unspecified", which means that anything may happen: it may work, it may not.

           In scalar context, the remaining time in the timer is returned.

           In list context, both the remaining time and the interval are returned.

           There are usually three or four interval timers (signals) available: the $which can be "ITIMER_REAL",
           "ITIMER_VIRTUAL", "ITIMER_PROF", or "ITIMER_REALPROF".  Note that which ones are  available  depends:
           true  UNIX  platforms  usually have the first three, but only Solaris seems to have "ITIMER_REALPROF"
           (which is used to profile multithreaded programs).  Win32 unfortunately does not haveinterval timers.

           "ITIMER_REAL" results in "alarm()"-like behaviour.  Time is counted in real time; that is,  wallclock
           time.  "SIGALRM" is delivered when the timer expires.

           "ITIMER_VIRTUAL"  counts  time  in (process) virtual time; that is, only when the process is running.
           In multiprocessor/user/CPU systems this may be more or less than real or wallclock time.  (This  time
           is also known as the user time.)  "SIGVTALRM" is delivered when the timer expires.

           "ITIMER_PROF"  counts  time  when  either  the  process  virtual time or when the operating system is
           running on behalf of the process (such as I/O).  (This time is also known as the system time.)   (The
           sum  of  user  time and system time is known as the CPU time.)  "SIGPROF" is delivered when the timer
           expires.  "SIGPROF" can interrupt system calls.

           The semantics of interval timers for multithreaded programs are system-specific, and some systems may
           support additional interval timers.  For example, it is unspecified which thread  gets  the  signals.
           See your "setitimer()" documentation.

       getitimer ( $which )
           Return the remaining time in the interval timer specified by $which.

           In scalar context, the remaining time is returned.

           In  list context, both the remaining time and the interval are returned.  The interval is always what
           you put in using "setitimer()".

       clock_gettime ( $which )
           Return as seconds the current value of the POSIX high resolution  timer  specified  by  $which.   All
           implementations that support POSIX high resolution timers are supposed to support at least the $which
           value   of   "CLOCK_REALTIME",  which  is  supposed  to  return  results  close  to  the  results  of
           "gettimeofday", or the number of seconds since 00:00:00:00 January 1, 1970 Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
           Do not assume that CLOCK_REALTIME is zero, it might be one, or something else.   Another  potentially
           useful  (but  not  available everywhere) value is "CLOCK_MONOTONIC", which guarantees a monotonically
           increasing time value (unlike time() or gettimeofday(), which can  be  adjusted).   See  your  system
           documentation for other possibly supported values.

       clock_getres ( $which )
           Return  as  seconds  the  resolution  of  the  POSIX  high resolution timer specified by $which.  All
           implementations that support POSIX high resolution timers are supposed to support at least the $which
           value of "CLOCK_REALTIME", see "clock_gettime".

       clock_nanosleep ( $which, $nanoseconds, $flags = 0)
           Sleeps for the number of  nanoseconds  (1e9ths  of  a  second)  specified.   Returns  the  number  of
           nanoseconds   actually   slept.    The  $which  is  the  "clock  id",  as  with  clock_gettime()  and
           clock_getres().  The flags default to zero  but  "TIMER_ABSTIME"  can  specified  (must  be  exported
           explicitly)  which  means that $nanoseconds is not a time interval (as is the default) but instead an
           absolute time.  Can sleep for more than one second.  Can also sleep for  zero  seconds,  which  often
           works   like   a   thread  yield.   See  also  "Time::HiRes::sleep()",  "Time::HiRes::usleep()",  and
           "Time::HiRes::nanosleep()".

           Do not expect clock_nanosleep() to be exact down to one nanosecond.  Getting  even  accuracy  of  one
           thousand nanoseconds is good.

       clock()
           Return  as seconds the process time (user + system time) spent by the process since the first call to
           clock() (the definition is not "since the start of the process", though if you are lucky these  times
           may  be  quite  close  to each other, depending on the system).  What this means is that you probably
           need to store the result of your first call to clock(), and subtract that value  from  the  following
           results of clock().

           The  time returned also includes the process times of the terminated child processes for which wait()
           has been executed.  This value is somewhat like the second value returned  by  the  times()  of  core
           Perl,  but  not  necessarily  identical.   Note  that  due  to backward compatibility limitations the
           returned value may wrap around at about 2147 seconds or at about 36 minutes.

       stat
       stat FH
       stat EXPR
           As "stat" in perlfunc but with the access/modify/change file timestamps in subsecond  resolution,  if
           the  operating  system  and  the  filesystem  both support such timestamps.  To override the standard
           stat():

               use Time::HiRes qw(stat);

           Test for the value of &Time::HiRes::d_hires_stat to find out whether the  operating  system  supports
           subsecond  file  timestamps: a value larger than zero means yes. There are unfortunately no easy ways
           to find out whether the filesystem supports such timestamps.  UNIX filesystems often do;  NTFS  does;
           FAT doesn't (FAT timestamp granularity is two seconds).

           A zero return value of &Time::HiRes::d_hires_stat means that Time::HiRes::stat is a no-op passthrough
           for CORE::stat(), and therefore the timestamps will stay integers.  The same thing will happen if the
           filesystem does not do subsecond timestamps, even if the &Time::HiRes::d_hires_stat is non-zero.

           In  any  case  do not expect nanosecond resolution, or even a microsecond resolution.  Also note that
           the  modify/access  timestamps  might  have  different  resolutions,  and  that  they  need  not   be
           synchronized, e.g.  if the operations are

               write
               stat # t1
               read
               stat # t2

           the access time stamp from t2 need not be greater-than the modify time stamp from t1: it may be equal
           or less.

EXAMPLES

         use Time::HiRes qw(usleep ualarm gettimeofday tv_interval);

         $microseconds = 750_000;
         usleep($microseconds);

         # signal alarm in 2.5s & every .1s thereafter
         ualarm(2_500_000, 100_000);
         # cancel that ualarm
         ualarm(0);

         # get seconds and microseconds since the epoch
         ($s, $usec) = gettimeofday();

         # measure elapsed time
         # (could also do by subtracting 2 gettimeofday return values)
         $t0 = [gettimeofday];
         # do bunch of stuff here
         $t1 = [gettimeofday];
         # do more stuff here
         $t0_t1 = tv_interval $t0, $t1;

         $elapsed = tv_interval ($t0, [gettimeofday]);
         $elapsed = tv_interval ($t0); # equivalent code

         #
         # replacements for time, alarm and sleep that know about
         # floating seconds
         #
         use Time::HiRes;
         $now_fractions = Time::HiRes::time;
         Time::HiRes::sleep (2.5);
         Time::HiRes::alarm (10.6666666);

         use Time::HiRes qw ( time alarm sleep );
         $now_fractions = time;
         sleep (2.5);
         alarm (10.6666666);

         # Arm an interval timer to go off first at 10 seconds and
         # after that every 2.5 seconds, in process virtual time

         use Time::HiRes qw ( setitimer ITIMER_VIRTUAL time );

         $SIG{VTALRM} = sub { print time, "\n" };
         setitimer(ITIMER_VIRTUAL, 10, 2.5);

         use Time::HiRes qw( clock_gettime clock_getres CLOCK_REALTIME );
         # Read the POSIX high resolution timer.
         my $high = clock_getres(CLOCK_REALTIME);
         # But how accurate we can be, really?
         my $reso = clock_getres(CLOCK_REALTIME);

         use Time::HiRes qw( clock_nanosleep TIMER_ABSTIME );
         clock_nanosleep(CLOCK_REALTIME, 1e6);
         clock_nanosleep(CLOCK_REALTIME, 2e9, TIMER_ABSTIME);

         use Time::HiRes qw( clock );
         my $clock0 = clock();
         ... # Do something.
         my $clock1 = clock();
         my $clockd = $clock1 - $clock0;

         use Time::HiRes qw( stat );
         my ($atime, $mtime, $ctime) = (stat("istics"))[8, 9, 10];

C API

       In addition to the perl API described above, a C API is available for extension writers.  The following C
       functions are available in the modglobal hash:

         name             C prototype
         ---------------  ----------------------
         Time::NVtime     double (*)()
         Time::U2time     void (*)(pTHX_ UV ret[2])

       Both  functions  return  equivalent information (like "gettimeofday") but with different representations.
       The names "NVtime" and "U2time" were selected mainly  because  they  are  operating  system  independent.
       ("gettimeofday" is Unix-centric, though some platforms like Win32 and VMS have emulations for it.)

       Here is an example of using "NVtime" from C:

         double (*myNVtime)(); /* Returns -1 on failure. */
         SV **svp = hv_fetch(PL_modglobal, "Time::NVtime", 12, 0);
         if (!svp)         croak("Time::HiRes is required");
         if (!SvIOK(*svp)) croak("Time::NVtime isn't a function pointer");
         myNVtime = INT2PTR(double(*)(), SvIV(*svp));
         printf("The current time is: %f\n", (*myNVtime)());

DIAGNOSTICS

   useconds or interval more than ...
       In  ualarm()  you  tried  to  use  number  of  microseconds  or interval (also in microseconds) more than
       1_000_000 and setitimer() is not available in your system to emulate that case.

   negative time not invented yet
       You tried to use a negative time argument.

   internal error: useconds < 0 (unsigned ... signed ...)
       Something went horribly wrong-- the number of  microseconds  that  cannot  become  negative  just  became
       negative.  Maybe your compiler is broken?

   useconds or uinterval equal to or more than 1000000
       In some platforms it is not possible to get an alarm with subsecond resolution and later than one second.

   unimplemented in this platform
       Some calls simply aren't available, real or emulated, on every platform.

CAVEATS

       Notice  that  the  core "time()" maybe rounding rather than truncating.  What this means is that the core
       "time()" may be reporting the time as one second later than "gettimeofday()" and "Time::HiRes::time()".

       Adjusting the system clock (either manually or by services like ntp) may cause problems,  especially  for
       long  running  programs that assume a monotonously increasing time (note that all platforms do not adjust
       time as gracefully as UNIX ntp does).  For example in Win32 (and derived platforms like Cygwin and MinGW)
       the Time::HiRes::time() may temporarily drift off from the system clock (and the original time())  by  up
       to  0.5  seconds.  Time::HiRes  will notice this eventually and recalibrate.  Note that since Time::HiRes
       1.77  the  clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC)  might  help  in   this   (in   case   your   system   supports
       CLOCK_MONOTONIC).

       Some  systems  have  APIs but not implementations: for example QNX and Haiku have the interval timer APIs
       but not the functionality.

SEE ALSO

       Perl modules BSD::Resource, Time::TAI64.

       Your   system   documentation   for   "clock",   "clock_gettime",   "clock_getres",    "clock_nanosleep",
       "clock_settime", "getitimer", "gettimeofday", "setitimer", "sleep", "stat", "ualarm".

AUTHORS

       D.  Wegscheid  <wegscd@whirlpool.com> R. Schertler <roderick@argon.org> J. Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi> G. Aas
       <gisle@aas.no>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (c) 1996-2002 Douglas E. Wegscheid.  All rights reserved.

       Copyright (c) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Jarkko Hietaniemi.  All rights reserved.

       Copyright (C) 2011, 2012 Andrew Main (Zefram) <zefram@fysh.org>

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under  the  same  terms  as  Perl
       itself.

perl v5.18.2                                       2014-01-06                                 Time::HiRes(3perl)