Processor Time (The GNU C Library) (original) (raw)
21.4.2 Processor Time Inquiry
The times
function returns information about a process’ consumption of processor time in a struct tms
object, in addition to the process’ CPU time. See Time Basics. You should include the header file sys/times.h to use this facility.
Data Type: struct tms ¶
The tms
structure is used to return information about process times. It contains at least the following members:
clock_t tms_utime
This is the total processor time the calling process has used in executing the instructions of its program.
clock_t tms_stime
This is the processor time the system has used on behalf of the calling process.
clock_t tms_cutime
This is the sum of the tms_utime
values and the tms_cutime
values of all terminated child processes of the calling process, whose status has been reported to the parent process by wait
orwaitpid
; see Process Completion. In other words, it represents the total processor time used in executing the instructions of all the terminated child processes of the calling process, excluding child processes which have not yet been reported by wait
orwaitpid
.
clock_t tms_cstime
This is similar to tms_cutime
, but represents the total processor time the system has used on behalf of all the terminated child processes of the calling process.
All of the times are given in numbers of clock ticks. Unlike CPU time, these are the actual amounts of time; not relative to any event. See Creating a Process.
Macro: int CLK_TCK ¶
This is an obsolete name for the number of clock ticks per second. Usesysconf (_SC_CLK_TCK)
instead.
Function: clock_t times (struct tms *buffer) ¶
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The times
function stores the processor time information for the calling process in buffer.
The return value is the number of clock ticks since an arbitrary point in the past, e.g. since system start-up. times
returns(clock_t)(-1)
to indicate failure.
Portability Note: The clock
function described inCPU Time Inquiry is specified by the ISO C standard. Thetimes
function is a feature of POSIX.1. On GNU systems, the CPU time is defined to be equivalent to the sum of the tms_utime
and tms_stime
fields returned by times
.