/* * Created by Phil on 05/08/2013. * Copyright 2013 Two Blue Cubes Ltd. All rights reserved. * * Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying * file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) */ #include "catch_timer.h" #include static const uint64_t nanosecondsInSecond = 1000000000; namespace Catch { auto getCurrentNanosecondsSinceEpoch() -> uint64_t { return std::chrono::duration_cast( std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now().time_since_epoch() ).count(); } namespace { auto estimateClockResolution() -> uint64_t { uint64_t sum = 0; static const uint64_t iterations = 1000000; auto startTime = getCurrentNanosecondsSinceEpoch(); for( std::size_t i = 0; i < iterations; ++i ) { uint64_t ticks; uint64_t baseTicks = getCurrentNanosecondsSinceEpoch(); do { ticks = getCurrentNanosecondsSinceEpoch(); } while( ticks == baseTicks ); auto delta = ticks - baseTicks; sum += delta; // If we have been calibrating for over 3 seconds -- the clock // is terrible and we should move on. // TBD: How to signal that the measured resolution is probably wrong? if (ticks > startTime + 3 * nanosecondsInSecond) { return sum / i; } } // We're just taking the mean, here. To do better we could take the std. dev and exclude outliers // - and potentially do more iterations if there's a high variance. return sum/iterations; } } auto getEstimatedClockResolution() -> uint64_t { static auto s_resolution = estimateClockResolution(); return s_resolution; } void Timer::start() { m_nanoseconds = getCurrentNanosecondsSinceEpoch(); } auto Timer::getElapsedNanoseconds() const -> uint64_t { return getCurrentNanosecondsSinceEpoch() - m_nanoseconds; } auto Timer::getElapsedMicroseconds() const -> uint64_t { return getElapsedNanoseconds()/1000; } auto Timer::getElapsedMilliseconds() const -> unsigned int { return static_cast(getElapsedMicroseconds()/1000); } auto Timer::getElapsedSeconds() const -> double { return getElapsedMicroseconds()/1000000.0; } } // namespace Catch