com.google.common.base.Stopwatch Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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/*
* Copyright (C) 2008 The Guava Authors
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except
* in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License
* is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express
* or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
* the License.
*/
package com.google.common.base;
import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull;
import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkState;
import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.DAYS;
import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.HOURS;
import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.MICROSECONDS;
import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS;
import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.MINUTES;
import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS;
import static java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.SECONDS;
import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
/**
* An object that accurately measures elapsed time: the measured duration between two
* successive readings of "now" in the same process.
*
* In contrast, wall time is a reading of "now" as given by a method like
* {@link System#currentTimeMillis()}, best represented as an {@link java.time.Instant}. Such values
* can be subtracted to obtain a {@code Duration} (such as by {@code Duration.between}), but
* doing so does not give a reliable measurement of elapsed time, because wall time readings
* are inherently approximate, routinely affected by periodic clock corrections. Because this class
* (by default) uses {@link System#nanoTime}, it is unaffected by these changes.
*
*
Use this class instead of direct calls to {@link System#nanoTime} for two reasons:
*
*
* - The raw {@code long} values returned by {@code nanoTime} are meaningless and unsafe to use
* in any other way than how {@code Stopwatch} uses them.
*
- An alternative source of nanosecond ticks can be substituted, for example for testing or
* performance reasons, without affecting most of your code.
*
*
* The one downside of {@code Stopwatch} relative to {@link System#nanoTime()} is that {@code
* Stopwatch} requires object allocation and additional method calls, which can reduce the accuracy
* of the elapsed times reported. {@code Stopwatch} is still suitable for logging and metrics where
* reasonably accurate values are sufficient. If the uncommon case that you need to maximize
* accuracy, use {@code System.nanoTime()} directly instead.
*
*
Basic usage:
*
*
{@code
* Stopwatch stopwatch = Stopwatch.createStarted();
* doSomething();
* stopwatch.stop(); // optional
*
* long millis = stopwatch.elapsed(MILLISECONDS);
*
* log.info("time: " + stopwatch); // formatted string like "12.3 ms"
* }
*
* The state-changing methods are not idempotent; it is an error to start or stop a stopwatch
* that is already in the desired state.
*
*
When testing code that uses this class, use {@link #createUnstarted(Ticker)} or {@link
* #createStarted(Ticker)} to supply a fake or mock ticker. This allows you to simulate any valid
* behavior of the stopwatch.
*
*
Note: This class is not thread-safe.
*
*
Warning for Android users: a stopwatch with default behavior may not continue to keep
* time while the device is asleep. Instead, create one like this:
*
*
{@code
* Stopwatch.createStarted(
* new Ticker() {
* public long read() {
* return android.os.SystemClock.elapsedRealtimeNanos(); // requires API Level 17
* }
* });
* }
*
* @author Kevin Bourrillion
* @since 10.0
*/
@GwtCompatible(emulated = true)
@SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // lots of violations
@ElementTypesAreNonnullByDefault
public final class Stopwatch {
private final Ticker ticker;
private boolean isRunning;
private long elapsedNanos;
private long startTick;
/**
* Creates (but does not start) a new stopwatch using {@link System#nanoTime} as its time source.
*
* @since 15.0
*/
public static Stopwatch createUnstarted() {
return new Stopwatch();
}
/**
* Creates (but does not start) a new stopwatch, using the specified time source.
*
* @since 15.0
*/
public static Stopwatch createUnstarted(Ticker ticker) {
return new Stopwatch(ticker);
}
/**
* Creates (and starts) a new stopwatch using {@link System#nanoTime} as its time source.
*
* @since 15.0
*/
public static Stopwatch createStarted() {
return new Stopwatch().start();
}
/**
* Creates (and starts) a new stopwatch, using the specified time source.
*
* @since 15.0
*/
public static Stopwatch createStarted(Ticker ticker) {
return new Stopwatch(ticker).start();
}
Stopwatch() {
this.ticker = Ticker.systemTicker();
}
Stopwatch(Ticker ticker) {
this.ticker = checkNotNull(ticker, "ticker");
}
/**
* Returns {@code true} if {@link #start()} has been called on this stopwatch, and {@link #stop()}
* has not been called since the last call to {@code start()}.
*/
public boolean isRunning() {
return isRunning;
}
/**
* Starts the stopwatch.
*
* @return this {@code Stopwatch} instance
* @throws IllegalStateException if the stopwatch is already running.
*/
@CanIgnoreReturnValue
public Stopwatch start() {
checkState(!isRunning, "This stopwatch is already running.");
isRunning = true;
startTick = ticker.read();
return this;
}
/**
* Stops the stopwatch. Future reads will return the fixed duration that had elapsed up to this
* point.
*
* @return this {@code Stopwatch} instance
* @throws IllegalStateException if the stopwatch is already stopped.
*/
@CanIgnoreReturnValue
public Stopwatch stop() {
long tick = ticker.read();
checkState(isRunning, "This stopwatch is already stopped.");
isRunning = false;
elapsedNanos += tick - startTick;
return this;
}
/**
* Sets the elapsed time for this stopwatch to zero, and places it in a stopped state.
*
* @return this {@code Stopwatch} instance
*/
@CanIgnoreReturnValue
public Stopwatch reset() {
elapsedNanos = 0;
isRunning = false;
return this;
}
private long elapsedNanos() {
return isRunning ? ticker.read() - startTick + elapsedNanos : elapsedNanos;
}
/**
* Returns the current elapsed time shown on this stopwatch, expressed in the desired time unit,
* with any fraction rounded down.
*
* Note that the overhead of measurement can be more than a microsecond, so it is generally not
* useful to specify {@link TimeUnit#NANOSECONDS} precision here.
*
* @since 14.0 (since 10.0 as {@code elapsedTime()})
*/
public long elapsed(TimeUnit desiredUnit) {
return desiredUnit.convert(elapsedNanos(), NANOSECONDS);
}
/** Returns a string representation of the current elapsed time. */
@Override
public String toString() {
long nanos = elapsedNanos();
TimeUnit unit = chooseUnit(nanos);
double value = (double) nanos / NANOSECONDS.convert(1, unit);
// Too bad this functionality is not exposed as a regular method call
return Platform.formatCompact4Digits(value) + " " + abbreviate(unit);
}
private static TimeUnit chooseUnit(long nanos) {
if (DAYS.convert(nanos, NANOSECONDS) > 0) {
return DAYS;
}
if (HOURS.convert(nanos, NANOSECONDS) > 0) {
return HOURS;
}
if (MINUTES.convert(nanos, NANOSECONDS) > 0) {
return MINUTES;
}
if (SECONDS.convert(nanos, NANOSECONDS) > 0) {
return SECONDS;
}
if (MILLISECONDS.convert(nanos, NANOSECONDS) > 0) {
return MILLISECONDS;
}
if (MICROSECONDS.convert(nanos, NANOSECONDS) > 0) {
return MICROSECONDS;
}
return NANOSECONDS;
}
private static String abbreviate(TimeUnit unit) {
switch (unit) {
case NANOSECONDS:
return "ns";
case MICROSECONDS:
return "\u03bcs"; // μs
case MILLISECONDS:
return "ms";
case SECONDS:
return "s";
case MINUTES:
return "min";
case HOURS:
return "h";
case DAYS:
return "d";
default:
throw new AssertionError();
}
}
}