Important

This documentation covers IPython versions 6.0 and higher. Beginning with version 6.0, IPython stopped supporting compatibility with Python versions lower than 3.3 including all versions of Python 2.7.

If you are looking for an IPython version compatible with Python 2.7, please use the IPython 5.x LTS release and refer to its documentation (LTS is the long term support release).

Module: utils.timing

Utilities for timing code execution.

7 Functions

IPython.utils.timing.clocku() floating point number

Return the USER CPU time in seconds since the start of the process. This is done via a call to resource.getrusage, so it avoids the wraparound problems in time.clock().

IPython.utils.timing.clocks() floating point number

Return the SYSTEM CPU time in seconds since the start of the process. This is done via a call to resource.getrusage, so it avoids the wraparound problems in time.clock().

IPython.utils.timing.clock() floating point number

Return the TOTAL USER+SYSTEM CPU time in seconds since the start of the process. This is done via a call to resource.getrusage, so it avoids the wraparound problems in time.clock().

IPython.utils.timing.clock2()

Similar to clock(), but return a tuple of user/system times.

IPython.utils.timing.timings_out(reps, func, *args, **kw)

Execute a function reps times, return a tuple with the elapsed total CPU time in seconds, the time per call and the function’s output.

Under Unix, the return value is the sum of user+system time consumed by the process, computed via the resource module. This prevents problems related to the wraparound effect which the time.clock() function has.

Under Windows the return value is in wall clock seconds. See the documentation for the time module for more details.

IPython.utils.timing.timings(reps, func, *args, **kw)

Execute a function reps times, return a tuple with the elapsed total CPU time in seconds and the time per call. These are just the first two values in timings_out().

IPython.utils.timing.timing(func, *args, **kw) t_total

Execute a function once, return the elapsed total CPU time in seconds. This is just the first value in timings_out().