(in-package "SB!IMPL")
-(defconstant sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second 1000
- #!+sb-doc
- "The number of internal time units that fit into a second. See
- GET-INTERNAL-REAL-TIME and GET-INTERNAL-RUN-TIME.")
-
-(defconstant micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit
- (/ 1000000 sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second))
+(defun time-reinit ()
+ (reinit-internal-real-time))
-(defconstant 100ns-per-internal-time-unit
- (/ 10000000 internal-time-units-per-second))
-\f
-;;; The base number of seconds for our internal "epoch". We initialize
-;;; this to the time of the first call to GET-INTERNAL-REAL-TIME, and
-;;; then subtract this out of the result.
-(defvar *internal-real-time-base-seconds* nil)
-(declaim (type (or (unsigned-byte 32) null) *internal-real-time-base-seconds*))
-
-(defun get-internal-real-time ()
- #!+sb-doc
- "Return the real time in the internal time format. (See
- INTERNAL-TIME-UNITS-PER-SECOND.) This is useful for finding elapsed time."
- (multiple-value-bind (ignore seconds useconds) (sb!unix:unix-gettimeofday)
- (declare (ignore ignore) (type (unsigned-byte 32) seconds useconds))
- (let ((base *internal-real-time-base-seconds*)
- (uint (truncate useconds
- micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit)))
- (declare (type (unsigned-byte 32) uint))
- (cond (base
- (+ (* (- seconds base)
- sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second)
- uint))
- (t
- (setq *internal-real-time-base-seconds* seconds)
- uint)))))
+;;; Implemented in unix.lisp and win32.lisp.
+#!+sb-doc
+(setf (fdocumentation 'get-internal-real-time 'function)
+ "Return the real time (\"wallclock time\") since startup in the internal
+time format. (See INTERNAL-TIME-UNITS-PER-SECOND.)")
(defun get-internal-run-time ()
#!+sb-doc
- "Return the run time in the internal time format. (See
- INTERNAL-TIME-UNITS-PER-SECOND.) This is useful for finding CPU usage."
- ;; FIXME: This is yet another creeping malaise: instead of #+/-win32
- ;; conditionals things like these need to be split into wholly separate
- ;; implementations of get-internal-run-time, probably one in
- ;; unix.lisp and one in win32.lisp -- that however requires also
- ;; cleaning up unix.lisp sufficiently to remove it from the Windows build.
- #-win32
- (multiple-value-bind (ignore utime-sec utime-usec stime-sec stime-usec)
- (sb!unix:unix-fast-getrusage sb!unix:rusage_self)
- (declare (ignore ignore)
- (type (unsigned-byte 31) utime-sec stime-sec)
- ;; (Classic CMU CL had these (MOD 1000000) instead, but
- ;; at least in Linux 2.2.12, the type doesn't seem to be
- ;; documented anywhere and the observed behavior is to
- ;; sometimes return 1000000 exactly.)
- (type (integer 0 1000000) utime-usec stime-usec))
- (let ((result (+ (* (+ utime-sec stime-sec)
- sb!xc:internal-time-units-per-second)
- (floor (+ utime-usec
- stime-usec
- (floor micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit 2))
- micro-seconds-per-internal-time-unit))))
- result))
- #!+win32
- (multiple-value-bind
- (creation-time exit-time kernel-time user-time)
- (sb!win32:get-process-times)
- (declare (ignore creation-time exit-time))
- (values (floor (+ user-time kernel-time) 100ns-per-internal-time-unit))))
+ "Return the run time used by the process in the internal time format. (See
+INTERNAL-TIME-UNITS-PER-SECOND.) This is useful for finding CPU usage.
+Includes both \"system\" and \"user\" time."
+ (system-internal-run-time))
\f
;;;; Encode and decode universal times.
(defun get-universal-time ()
#!+sb-doc
- "Return a single integer for the current time of
- day in universal time format."
+ "Return a single integer for the current time of day in universal time
+format."
(multiple-value-bind (res secs) (sb!unix:unix-gettimeofday)
(declare (ignore res))
(+ secs unix-to-universal-time)))