jay
jay

Reputation: 3667

Measure elapsed time in Swift

How can we measure the time elapsed for running a function in Swift? I am trying to display the elapsed time like this: "Elapsed time is .05 seconds". Saw that in Java, we can use System.nanoTime(), are there any equivalent methods available in Swift to accomplish this?

Please have a look at the sample program:

func isPrime(_ number: Int) -> Bool {
    var i = 0;
    for i=2; i<number; i++ {
        if number % i == 0, i != 0 {
            return false
        }
    }
    return true
}

var number = 5915587277

if isPrime(number) {
    print("Prime number")
} else {
    print("NOT a prime number")
}

Upvotes: 192

Views: 157272

Answers (20)

Sverrisson
Sverrisson

Reputation: 18177

Swift 5+

I have borrowed the idea from Klaas to create a lightweight struct to measure running and interval time:

Code Usage:

var timer = RunningTimer.init()
// Code to be timed
print("Running: \(timer) ") // Gives time interval
// Second code to be timed
print("Running: \(timer) ") // Gives final time

The stop function does not have to be called, as the print function will give the time lapsed. It may be called repeatedly to get the time lapsed. But to stop the timer at certain point in the code use timer.stop() it may also be used to return the time in seconds: let seconds = timer.stop() After the timer is stopped the interval timer will not, so the print("Running: \(timer) ") will give the correct time even after a few lines of code.

Following is the code for RunningTimer. It is tested for Swift 2.1:

import CoreFoundation
// Usage:    var timer = RunningTimer.init()
// Start:    timer.start() to restart the timer
// Stop:     timer.stop() returns the time and stops the timer
// Duration: timer.duration returns the time
// May also be used with print(" \(timer) ")

struct RunningTimer: CustomStringConvertible {
    var begin:CFAbsoluteTime
    var end:CFAbsoluteTime
    
    init() {
        begin = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
        end = 0
    }

    mutating func start() {
        begin = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
        end = 0
    }

    mutating func stop() -> Double {
        if (end == 0) { end = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent() }
        return Double(end - begin)
    }

    var duration:CFAbsoluteTime {
        get {
            if (end == 0) { return CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent() - begin } 
            else { return end - begin }
        }
    }

    var description:String {
         let time = duration
         if (time > 100) {return " \(time/60) min"}
         else if (time < 1e-6) {return " \(time*1e9) ns"}
         else if (time < 1e-3) {return " \(time*1e6) µs"}
         else if (time < 1) {return " \(time*1000) ms"}
         else {return " \(time) s"}
    }
}

Upvotes: 1

JeremyP
JeremyP

Reputation: 86691

Update

With Swift 5.7, everything below becomes obsolete. Swift 5.7 introduces the concept of a Clock which has a function designed to do exactly what is required here.

There are two concrete examples of a Clock provided: ContinuousClock and SuspendingClock. The former keeps ticking when the system is suspending and the latter does not.

The following is an example of what to do in Swift 5.7

func doSomething()
{
    for i in 0 ..< 1000000
    {
        if (i % 10000 == 0)
        {
            print(i)
        }
    }
}

let clock = ContinuousClock()

let result = clock.measure(doSomething)

print(result) // On my laptop, prints "0.552065882 seconds"

It also allows you to measure closures directly, of course

let clock = ContinuousClock()

let result = clock.measure {
    for i in 0 ..< 1000000
    {
        if (i % 10000 == 0)
        {
            print(i)
        }
    }
}

print(result) // "0.534663798 seconds"

Pre Swift 5.7

Here's a Swift function I wrote to measure Project Euler problems in Swift

As of Swift 3, there is now a version of Grand Central Dispatch that is "swiftified". So the correct answer is probably to use the DispatchTime API.

My function would look something like:

// Swift 3
func evaluateProblem(problemNumber: Int, problemBlock: () -> Int) -> Answer
{
    print("Evaluating problem \(problemNumber)")

    let start = DispatchTime.now() // <<<<<<<<<< Start time
    let myGuess = problemBlock()
    let end = DispatchTime.now()   // <<<<<<<<<<   end time

    let theAnswer = self.checkAnswer(answerNum: "\(problemNumber)", guess: myGuess)

    let nanoTime = end.uptimeNanoseconds - start.uptimeNanoseconds // <<<<< Difference in nano seconds (UInt64)
    let timeInterval = Double(nanoTime) / 1_000_000_000 // Technically could overflow for long running tests

    print("Time to evaluate problem \(problemNumber): \(timeInterval) seconds")
    return theAnswer
}

Old answer

For Swift 1 and 2, my function uses NSDate:

// Swift 1
func evaluateProblem(problemNumber: Int, problemBlock: () -> Int) -> Answer
{
    println("Evaluating problem \(problemNumber)")

    let start = NSDate() // <<<<<<<<<< Start time
    let myGuess = problemBlock()
    let end = NSDate()   // <<<<<<<<<<   end time

    let theAnswer = self.checkAnswer(answerNum: "\(problemNumber)", guess: myGuess)

    let timeInterval: Double = end.timeIntervalSinceDate(start) // <<<<< Difference in seconds (double)

    println("Time to evaluate problem \(problemNumber): \(timeInterval) seconds")
    return theAnswer
}

Note that using NSdate for timing functions is discouraged: "The system time may decrease due to synchronization with external time references or due to an explicit user change of the clock.".

Upvotes: 341

glyvox
glyvox

Reputation: 58139

From Swift 5.7 (macOS 13.0, iOS 16.0, watchOS 9.0, tvOS 16.0), you can use ContinuousClock and the measure block, which returns a Duration object. It has components that contain the measured time in seconds or attoseconds, which is 1×10−18 of a second.

let clock = ContinuousClock()

let duration = clock.measure {
    // put here what you want to measure
}

print("Duration: \(duration.components.seconds) seconds")
print("Duration: \(duration.components.attoseconds) attoseconds")

Upvotes: 2

Franklin Yu
Franklin Yu

Reputation: 9958

Use clock, ProcessInfo.systemUptime, or DispatchTime for simple start-up time.


There are, as far as I know, at least ten ways to measure elapsed time:

Monotonic Clock based:

  1. ProcessInfo.systemUptime.
  2. mach_absolute_time with mach_timebase_info as mentioned in this answer.
  3. clock() in POSIX standard.
  4. times() in POSIX standard. (Too complicated since we need to consider user-time v.s. system-time, and child processes are involved.)
  5. DispatchTime (a wrapper around Mach time API) as mentioned by JeremyP in accepted answer.
  6. CACurrentMediaTime().

Wall Clock based:

(never use those for metrics: see below why)

  1. NSDate/Date as mentioned by others.
  2. CFAbsoluteTime as mentioned by others.
  3. DispatchWallTime.
  4. gettimeofday() in POSIX standard.

Option 1, 2 and 3 are elaborated below.

Option 1: Process Info API in Foundation

do {
    let info = ProcessInfo.processInfo
    let begin = info.systemUptime
    // do something
    let diff = (info.systemUptime - begin)
}

where diff:NSTimeInterval is the elapsed time by seconds.

Option 2: Mach C API

do {
    var info = mach_timebase_info(numer: 0, denom: 0)
    mach_timebase_info(&info)
    let begin = mach_absolute_time()
    // do something
    let diff = Double(mach_absolute_time() - begin) * Double(info.numer) / Double(info.denom)
}

where diff:Double is the elapsed time by nano-seconds.

Option 3: POSIX clock API

do {
    let begin = clock()
    // do something
    let diff = Double(clock() - begin) / Double(CLOCKS_PER_SEC)
}

where diff:Double is the elapsed time by seconds.

Why Not Wall-Clock Time for Elapsed Time?

In documentation of CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent:

Repeated calls to this function do not guarantee monotonically increasing results.

Reason is similar to currentTimeMillis vs nanoTime in Java:

You can't use the one for the other purpose. The reason is that no computer's clock is perfect; it always drifts and occasionally needs to be corrected. This correction might either happen manually, or in the case of most machines, there's a process that runs and continually issues small corrections to the system clock ("wall clock"). These tend to happen often. Another such correction happens whenever there is a leap second.

Here CFAbsoluteTime provides wall clock time instead of start-up time. NSDate is wall clock time as well.

Upvotes: 77

Klaas
Klaas

Reputation: 22773

This is a handy timer class based on CoreFoundations CFAbsoluteTime:

import CoreFoundation

class ParkBenchTimer {
    let startTime: CFAbsoluteTime
    var endTime: CFAbsoluteTime?

    init() {
        startTime = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
    }

    func stop() -> CFAbsoluteTime {
        endTime = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()

        return duration!
    }

    var duration: CFAbsoluteTime? {
        if let endTime = endTime {
            return endTime - startTime
        } else {
            return nil
        }
    }
}

You can use it like this:

let timer = ParkBenchTimer()

// ... a long runnig task ...

print("The task took \(timer.stop()) seconds.")

Upvotes: 87

Mauricio Chirino
Mauricio Chirino

Reputation: 1232

Swift 4 shortest answer:

let startingPoint = Date()
//  ... intensive task
print("\(startingPoint.timeIntervalSinceNow * -1) seconds elapsed")

It will print you something like 1.02107906341553 seconds elapsed (time of course will vary depending on the task, I'm just showing this for you guys to see the decimal precision level for this measurement).

Hope it helps someone in Swift 4 from now on!

Update

If you want to have a generic way of testing portions of code, I'd suggest the next snippet:

func measureTime(for closure: @autoclosure () -> Any) {
    let start = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
    closure()
    let diff = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent() - start
    print("Took \(diff) seconds")
}

Usage

measureTime(for: <insert method signature here>)

Console log

Took xx.xxxxx seconds

Upvotes: 60

Witek Bobrowski
Witek Bobrowski

Reputation: 4269

It looks like iOS 13 introduced a new API to use with DispatchTime that removes a need to calculate the difference between two timestamps manually.

distance(to:)

let start: DispatchTime = .now()
heavyTaskToMeasure()
let duration = start.distance(to: .now())
print(duration) 
// prints: nanoseconds(NUMBER_OF_NANOSECONDS_BETWEEN_TWO_TIMESTAMPS)

Sadly the documentation is not provided, but after doing some tests it looks like the .nanoseconds case is always returned.

With a simple extension you could convert the DispatchTimeInterval to TimeInterval. credit

extension TimeInterval {
    init?(dispatchTimeInterval: DispatchTimeInterval) {
        switch dispatchTimeInterval {
        case .seconds(let value):
            self = Double(value)
        case .milliseconds(let value):
            self = Double(value) / 1_000
        case .microseconds(let value):
            self = Double(value) / 1_000_000
        case .nanoseconds(let value):
            self = Double(value) / 1_000_000_000
        case .never:
            return nil
        }
    }
}

Upvotes: 7

J. Doe
J. Doe

Reputation: 13103

The recommend way to check elapsed time/performance is using the measure function that is available in XCTests.

It isn't reliable to write your own measure blocks, since the performance (and therefore execution/elapsed time) of a block of code is influenced by e.g. CPU caches.

The second time a function is invoked, would likely be quicker than the first time it is invoked, although it can vary a few %. Therefore 'benchmarking' by using your own closures (given all over the place here) by executing it once, can give different results than your code being executed in production by real users.

The measure function invokes your block of code several times, mimicking the performance/elapsed time of your code like it is used in production (at least gives more accurate results).

Upvotes: 2

ShaileshAher
ShaileshAher

Reputation: 823

Just Copy and Paste this function. Written in swift 5. Copying JeremyP here.

func calculateTime(block : (() -> Void)) {
        let start = DispatchTime.now()
        block()
        let end = DispatchTime.now()
        let nanoTime = end.uptimeNanoseconds - start.uptimeNanoseconds
        let timeInterval = Double(nanoTime) / 1_000_000_000
        print("Time: \(timeInterval) seconds")
    }

Use it like

calculateTime {
     exampleFunc()// function whose execution time to be calculated
}

Upvotes: 20

Vasily  Bodnarchuk
Vasily Bodnarchuk

Reputation: 25294

Based on Franklin Yu answer and Cœur comments

Details

  • Xcode 10.1 (10B61)
  • Swift 4.2

Solution 1

measure(_:)

Solution 2

import Foundation

class Measurer<T: Numeric> {

    private let startClosure: ()->(T)
    private let endClosure: (_ beginningTime: T)->(T)

    init (startClosure: @escaping ()->(T), endClosure: @escaping (_ beginningTime: T)->(T)) {
        self.startClosure = startClosure
        self.endClosure = endClosure
    }

    init (getCurrentTimeClosure: @escaping ()->(T)) {
        startClosure = getCurrentTimeClosure
        endClosure = { beginningTime in
            return getCurrentTimeClosure() - beginningTime
        }
    }

    func measure(closure: ()->()) -> T {
        let value = startClosure()
        closure()
        return endClosure(value)
    }
}

Usage of solution 2

// Sample with ProcessInfo class

m = Measurer { ProcessInfo.processInfo.systemUptime }
time = m.measure {
    _ = (1...1000).map{_ in Int(arc4random()%100)}
}
print("ProcessInfo: \(time)")

// Sample with Posix clock API

m = Measurer(startClosure: {Double(clock())}) { (Double(clock()) - $0 ) / Double(CLOCKS_PER_SEC) }
time = m.measure {
    _ = (1...1000).map{_ in Int(arc4random()%100)}
}
print("POSIX: \(time)")

Upvotes: 0

Gjchoza
Gjchoza

Reputation: 187

Static Swift3 class for basic function timing. It will keep track of each timer by name. Call it like this at the point you want to start measuring:

Stopwatch.start(name: "PhotoCapture")

Call this to capture and print the time elapsed:

Stopwatch.timeElapsed(name: "PhotoCapture")

This is the output: *** PhotoCapture elapsed ms: 1402.415125 There is a "useNanos" parameter if you want to use nanos. Please feel free to change as needed.

   class Stopwatch: NSObject {

  private static var watches = [String:TimeInterval]()

  private static func intervalFromMachTime(time: TimeInterval, useNanos: Bool) -> TimeInterval {
     var info = mach_timebase_info()
     guard mach_timebase_info(&info) == KERN_SUCCESS else { return -1 }
     let currentTime = mach_absolute_time()
     let nanos = currentTime * UInt64(info.numer) / UInt64(info.denom)
     if useNanos {
        return (TimeInterval(nanos) - time)
     }
     else {
        return (TimeInterval(nanos) - time) / TimeInterval(NSEC_PER_MSEC)
     }
  }

  static func start(name: String) {
     var info = mach_timebase_info()
     guard mach_timebase_info(&info) == KERN_SUCCESS else { return }
     let currentTime = mach_absolute_time()
     let nanos = currentTime * UInt64(info.numer) / UInt64(info.denom)
     watches[name] = TimeInterval(nanos)
  }

  static func timeElapsed(name: String) {
     return timeElapsed(name: name, useNanos: false)
  }

  static func timeElapsed(name: String, useNanos: Bool) {
     if let start = watches[name] {
        let unit = useNanos ? "nanos" : "ms"
        print("*** \(name) elapsed \(unit): \(intervalFromMachTime(time: start, useNanos: useNanos))")
     }
  }

}

Upvotes: 1

BilalReffas
BilalReffas

Reputation: 8328

This is how I wrote it.

 func measure<T>(task: () -> T) -> Double {
        let startTime = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
        task()
        let endTime = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
        let result = endTime - startTime
        return result
    }

To measure a algorithm use it like that.

let time = measure {
    var array = [2,4,5,2,5,7,3,123,213,12]
    array.sorted()
}

print("Block is running \(time) seconds.")

Upvotes: 0

hasen
hasen

Reputation: 166322

This is the snippet I came up with and it seems to work for me on my Macbook with Swift 4.

Never tested on other systems, but I thought it's worth sharing anyway.

typealias MonotonicTS = UInt64
let monotonic_now: () -> MonotonicTS = mach_absolute_time

let time_numer: UInt64
let time_denom: UInt64
do {
    var time_info = mach_timebase_info(numer: 0, denom: 0)
    mach_timebase_info(&time_info)
    time_numer = UInt64(time_info.numer)
    time_denom = UInt64(time_info.denom)
}

// returns time interval in seconds
func monotonic_diff(from: MonotonicTS, to: MonotonicTS) -> TimeInterval {
    let diff = (to - from)
    let nanos = Double(diff * time_numer / time_denom)
    return nanos / 1_000_000_000
}

func seconds_elapsed(since: MonotonicTS) -> TimeInterval {
    return monotonic_diff(from: since, to:monotonic_now())
}

Here's an example of how to use it:

let t1 = monotonic_now()
// .. some code to run ..
let elapsed = seconds_elapsed(since: t1)
print("Time elapsed: \(elapsed*1000)ms")

Another way is to do it more explicitly:

let t1 = monotonic_now()
// .. some code to run ..
let t2 = monotonic_now()
let elapsed = monotonic_diff(from: t1, to: t2)
print("Time elapsed: \(elapsed*1000)ms")

Upvotes: 0

Vadim Ahmerov
Vadim Ahmerov

Reputation: 777

Simple helper function for measuring execution time with closure.

func printExecutionTime(withTag tag: String, of closure: () -> ()) {
    let start = CACurrentMediaTime()
    closure()
    print("#\(tag) - execution took \(CACurrentMediaTime() - start) seconds")
}

Usage:

printExecutionTime(withTag: "Init") {
    // Do your work here
}

Result: #Init - execution took 1.00104497105349 seconds

Upvotes: 3

Suragch
Suragch

Reputation: 512586

Here is my try for the simplest answer:

let startTime = Date().timeIntervalSince1970  // 1512538946.5705 seconds

// time passes (about 10 seconds)

let endTime = Date().timeIntervalSince1970    // 1512538956.57195 seconds
let elapsedTime = endTime - startTime         // 10.0014500617981 seconds

Notes

  • startTime and endTime are of the type TimeInterval, which is just a typealias for Double, so it is easy to convert it to an Int or whatever. Time is measured in seconds with sub-millisecond precision.
  • See also DateInterval, which includes an actual start and end time.
  • Using the time since 1970 is similar to Java timestamps.

Upvotes: 2

RiceAndBytes
RiceAndBytes

Reputation: 1286

Wrap it up in a completion block for easy use.

public class func secElapsed(completion: () -> Void) {
    let startDate: NSDate = NSDate()
    completion()
    let endDate: NSDate = NSDate()
    let timeInterval: Double = endDate.timeIntervalSinceDate(startDate)
    println("seconds: \(timeInterval)")
}

Upvotes: 1

user3370455
user3370455

Reputation: 199

let start = NSDate()

for index in 1...10000 {
    // do nothing
}

let elapsed = start.timeIntervalSinceNow

// elapsed is a negative value.

Upvotes: 18

Peheje
Peheje

Reputation: 14224

I use this:

public class Stopwatch {
    public init() { }
    private var start_: NSTimeInterval = 0.0;
    private var end_: NSTimeInterval = 0.0;

    public func start() {
        start_ = NSDate().timeIntervalSince1970;
    }

    public func stop() {
        end_ = NSDate().timeIntervalSince1970;
    }

    public func durationSeconds() -> NSTimeInterval {
        return end_ - start_;
    }
}

I don't know if it's more or less accurate than previously posted. But the seconds have a lot of decimals and seem to catch small code changes in algorithms like QuickSort using swap() vs. implementing swap urself etc.

Remember to crank up your build optimizations when testing performance:

Swift compiler optimizations

Upvotes: 2

Mellson
Mellson

Reputation: 2948

You could create a time function for measuring you calls. I am inspired by Klaas' answer.

func time <A> (f: @autoclosure () -> A) -> (result:A, duration: String) {
    let startTime = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
    let result = f()
    let endTime = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()
    return (result, "Elapsed time is \(endTime - startTime) seconds.")
}

This function would allow you to call it like this time (isPrime(7)) which would return a tuple containing the result and a string description of the elapsed time.

If you only wish the elapsed time you can do this time (isPrime(7)).duration

Upvotes: 6

holex
holex

Reputation: 24031

you can measure the nanoseconds like e.g. this:

let startDate: NSDate = NSDate()

// your long procedure

let endDate: NSDate = NSDate()
let dateComponents: NSDateComponents = NSCalendar(calendarIdentifier: NSCalendarIdentifierGregorian).components(NSCalendarUnit.CalendarUnitNanosecond, fromDate: startDate, toDate: endDate, options: NSCalendarOptions(0))
println("runtime is nanosecs : \(dateComponents.nanosecond)")

Upvotes: 2

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