cpython/Lib/timeit.py
Guido van Rossum d59da4b432 Merged revisions 55407-55513 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/branches/p3yk

................
  r55413 | fred.drake | 2007-05-17 12:30:10 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line

  fix argument name in documentation; match the implementation
................
  r55430 | jack.diederich | 2007-05-18 06:39:59 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

  Implements class decorators, PEP 3129.
................
  r55432 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-05-18 08:09:41 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 2 lines

  obsubmit.
................
  r55434 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-05-18 09:39:10 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 3 lines

  Fix bug in test_inspect.  (I presume this is how it should be fixed;
  Jack Diedrich, please verify.)
................
  r55460 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 00:31:57 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines

  Remove the imageop module.  With imgfile already removed in Python 3.0 and
  rgbimg gone in Python 2.6 the unit tests themselves were made worthless.  Plus
  third-party libraries perform the same function much better.
................
  r55469 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:28:20 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 118 lines

  Merged revisions 55324-55467 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

  ........
    r55348 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-15 13:19:34 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 4 lines

    HTML-escape the plain traceback in cgitb's HTML output, to prevent
    the traceback inadvertently or maliciously closing the comment and
    injecting HTML into the error page.
  ........
    r55372 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-15 21:33:50 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 6 lines

    Port rev 55353 from Guido:
    Add what looks like a necessary call to PyErr_NoMemory() when PyMem_MALLOC()
    fails.

    Will backport.
  ........
    r55377 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-15 22:06:33 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 1 line

    Mention removal of some directories for obsolete platforms
  ........
    r55380 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-15 22:50:03 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Change the maintainer of the BeOS port.
  ........
    r55383 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-16 06:44:18 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Bug #1719995: don't use deprecated method in sets example.
  ........
    r55386 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 13:05:11 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 5 lines

    Fix bug in marshal where bad data would cause a segfault due to
    lack of an infinite recursion check.

    Contributed by Damien Miller at Google.
  ........
    r55389 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-16 15:42:29 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 6 lines

    Remove the gopherlib module.  It has been raising a DeprecationWarning since
    Python 2.5.

    Also remove gopher support from urllib/urllib2.  As both imported gopherlib the
    usage of the support would have raised a DeprecationWarning.
  ........
    r55394 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-16 18:08:04 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 1 line

    calendar.py gets no benefit from xrange() instead of range()
  ........
    r55395 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-16 19:02:56 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Complete deprecation of BaseException.message.  Some subclasses were directly
    accessing the message attribute instead of using the descriptor.
  ........
    r55396 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 23:11:36 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Reduce the max stack depth to see if this fixes the segfaults on
    Windows and some other boxes.  If this is successful, this rev should
    be backported.  I'm not sure how close to the limit we should push this.
  ........
    r55397 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 23:23:50 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Set the depth to something very small to try to determine if the
    crashes on Windows are really due to the stack size or possibly
    some other problem.
  ........
    r55398 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-17 00:04:46 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Last try for tweaking the max stack depth.  5000 was the original value,
    4000 didn't work either.  1000 does work on Windows.  If 2000 works,
    that will hopefully be a reasonable balance.
  ........
    r55412 | fred.drake | 2007-05-17 12:29:58 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line

    fix argument name in documentation; match the implementation
  ........
    r55427 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-17 22:47:16 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line

    Verify neither dumps or loads overflow the stack and segfault.
  ........
    r55446 | collin.winter | 2007-05-18 16:11:24 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Backport PEP 3110's new 'except' syntax to 2.6.
  ........
    r55448 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-18 18:11:16 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Improvements to NamedTuple's implementation, tests, and documentation
  ........
    r55449 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-18 18:50:11 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Fix beginner mistake -- don't mix spaces and tabs.
  ........
    r55450 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 20:48:47 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Clear data so random memory does not get freed.  Will backport.
  ........
    r55452 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 21:34:55 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Whoops, need to pay attention to those test failures.
    Move the clear to *before* the first use, not after.
  ........
    r55453 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 21:35:52 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Give some clue as to what happened if the test fails.
  ........
    r55455 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-19 11:09:26 -0700 (Sat, 19 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Fix docstring for add_package in site.py.
  ........
    r55458 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 00:09:50 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Remove the rgbimg module.  It has been deprecated since Python 2.5.
  ........
    r55465 | nick.coghlan | 2007-05-20 04:12:49 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    Fix typo in example (should be backported, but my maintenance branch is woefully out of date)
  ........
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  r55472 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 12:06:18 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

  Remove imageop from the Windows build process.
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  r55486 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 23:59:52 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

  Remove callable() builtin
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  r55506 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:43:29 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 78 lines

  Merged revisions 55468-55505 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

  ........
    r55468 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:06:27 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    rotor is long gone.
  ........
    r55470 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:43:00 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    Update directories/files at the top-level.
  ........
    r55471 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 12:05:06 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Try to remove rgbimg from Windows builds.
  ........
    r55474 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:17:38 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Remove the macfs module.  This led to the deprecation of macostools.touched();
    it completely relied on macfs and is a no-op on OS X according to code
    comments.
  ........
    r55476 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:56:18 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Move imgfile import to the global namespace to trigger an import error ASAP to
    prevent creation of a test file.
  ........
    r55477 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:57:38 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Cause posixfile to raise a DeprecationWarning.  Documented as deprecated since
    Ptyhon 1.5.
  ........
    r55479 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-05-20 17:03:15 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    Note removed modules
  ........
    r55481 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-05-20 21:35:47 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Add Alexandre Vassalotti.
  ........
    r55482 | george.yoshida | 2007-05-20 21:41:21 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines

    fix against r55474 [Remove the macfs module]

    Remove "libmacfs.tex" from Makefile.deps and mac/mac.tex.
  ........
    r55487 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-21 01:13:35 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line

    Replace assertion with straight error-checking.
  ........
    r55489 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-21 09:40:10 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line

    Allow all alphanumeric and underscores in type and field names.
  ........
    r55490 | facundo.batista | 2007-05-21 10:32:32 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 5 lines


    Added timeout support to HTTPSConnection, through the
    socket.create_connection function. Also added a small
    test for this, and updated NEWS file.
  ........
    r55495 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-21 13:34:16 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Patch #1686487: you can now pass any mapping after '**' in function calls.
  ........
    r55502 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-21 23:03:36 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line

    Document new params to HTTPSConnection
  ........
    r55504 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:16:10 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 1 line

    Stop using METH_OLDARGS
  ........
    r55505 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:16:44 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 1 line

    Stop using METH_OLDARGS implicitly
  ........
................
2007-05-22 18:11:13 +00:00

328 lines
12 KiB
Python

#! /usr/bin/env python
"""Tool for measuring execution time of small code snippets.
This module avoids a number of common traps for measuring execution
times. See also Tim Peters' introduction to the Algorithms chapter in
the Python Cookbook, published by O'Reilly.
Library usage: see the Timer class.
Command line usage:
python timeit.py [-n N] [-r N] [-s S] [-t] [-c] [-h] [statement]
Options:
-n/--number N: how many times to execute 'statement' (default: see below)
-r/--repeat N: how many times to repeat the timer (default 3)
-s/--setup S: statement to be executed once initially (default 'pass')
-t/--time: use time.time() (default on Unix)
-c/--clock: use time.clock() (default on Windows)
-v/--verbose: print raw timing results; repeat for more digits precision
-h/--help: print this usage message and exit
statement: statement to be timed (default 'pass')
A multi-line statement may be given by specifying each line as a
separate argument; indented lines are possible by enclosing an
argument in quotes and using leading spaces. Multiple -s options are
treated similarly.
If -n is not given, a suitable number of loops is calculated by trying
successive powers of 10 until the total time is at least 0.2 seconds.
The difference in default timer function is because on Windows,
clock() has microsecond granularity but time()'s granularity is 1/60th
of a second; on Unix, clock() has 1/100th of a second granularity and
time() is much more precise. On either platform, the default timer
functions measure wall clock time, not the CPU time. This means that
other processes running on the same computer may interfere with the
timing. The best thing to do when accurate timing is necessary is to
repeat the timing a few times and use the best time. The -r option is
good for this; the default of 3 repetitions is probably enough in most
cases. On Unix, you can use clock() to measure CPU time.
Note: there is a certain baseline overhead associated with executing a
pass statement. The code here doesn't try to hide it, but you should
be aware of it. The baseline overhead can be measured by invoking the
program without arguments.
The baseline overhead differs between Python versions! Also, to
fairly compare older Python versions to Python 2.3, you may want to
use python -O for the older versions to avoid timing SET_LINENO
instructions.
"""
import gc
import sys
import time
try:
import itertools
except ImportError:
# Must be an older Python version (see timeit() below)
itertools = None
__all__ = ["Timer"]
dummy_src_name = "<timeit-src>"
default_number = 1000000
default_repeat = 3
if sys.platform == "win32":
# On Windows, the best timer is time.clock()
default_timer = time.clock
else:
# On most other platforms the best timer is time.time()
default_timer = time.time
# Don't change the indentation of the template; the reindent() calls
# in Timer.__init__() depend on setup being indented 4 spaces and stmt
# being indented 8 spaces.
template = """
def inner(_it, _timer):
%(setup)s
_t0 = _timer()
for _i in _it:
%(stmt)s
_t1 = _timer()
return _t1 - _t0
"""
def reindent(src, indent):
"""Helper to reindent a multi-line statement."""
return src.replace("\n", "\n" + " "*indent)
def _template_func(setup, func):
"""Create a timer function. Used if the "statement" is a callable."""
def inner(_it, _timer):
setup()
_t0 = _timer()
for _i in _it:
func()
_t1 = _timer()
return _t1 - _t0
return inner
class Timer:
"""Class for timing execution speed of small code snippets.
The constructor takes a statement to be timed, an additional
statement used for setup, and a timer function. Both statements
default to 'pass'; the timer function is platform-dependent (see
module doc string).
To measure the execution time of the first statement, use the
timeit() method. The repeat() method is a convenience to call
timeit() multiple times and return a list of results.
The statements may contain newlines, as long as they don't contain
multi-line string literals.
"""
def __init__(self, stmt="pass", setup="pass", timer=default_timer):
"""Constructor. See class doc string."""
self.timer = timer
ns = {}
if isinstance(stmt, basestring):
stmt = reindent(stmt, 8)
if isinstance(setup, basestring):
setup = reindent(setup, 4)
src = template % {'stmt': stmt, 'setup': setup}
elif hasattr(setup, '__call__'):
src = template % {'stmt': stmt, 'setup': '_setup()'}
ns['_setup'] = setup
else:
raise ValueError("setup is neither a string nor callable")
self.src = src # Save for traceback display
code = compile(src, dummy_src_name, "exec")
exec(code, globals(), ns)
self.inner = ns["inner"]
elif hasattr(stmt, '__call__'):
self.src = None
if isinstance(setup, basestring):
_setup = setup
def setup():
exec(_setup, globals(), ns)
elif not hasattr(setup, '__call__'):
raise ValueError("setup is neither a string nor callable")
self.inner = _template_func(setup, stmt)
else:
raise ValueError("stmt is neither a string nor callable")
def print_exc(self, file=None):
"""Helper to print a traceback from the timed code.
Typical use:
t = Timer(...) # outside the try/except
try:
t.timeit(...) # or t.repeat(...)
except:
t.print_exc()
The advantage over the standard traceback is that source lines
in the compiled template will be displayed.
The optional file argument directs where the traceback is
sent; it defaults to sys.stderr.
"""
import linecache, traceback
if self.src is not None:
linecache.cache[dummy_src_name] = (len(self.src),
None,
self.src.split("\n"),
dummy_src_name)
# else the source is already stored somewhere else
traceback.print_exc(file=file)
def timeit(self, number=default_number):
"""Time 'number' executions of the main statement.
To be precise, this executes the setup statement once, and
then returns the time it takes to execute the main statement
a number of times, as a float measured in seconds. The
argument is the number of times through the loop, defaulting
to one million. The main statement, the setup statement and
the timer function to be used are passed to the constructor.
"""
if itertools:
it = itertools.repeat(None, number)
else:
it = [None] * number
gcold = gc.isenabled()
gc.disable()
timing = self.inner(it, self.timer)
if gcold:
gc.enable()
return timing
def repeat(self, repeat=default_repeat, number=default_number):
"""Call timeit() a few times.
This is a convenience function that calls the timeit()
repeatedly, returning a list of results. The first argument
specifies how many times to call timeit(), defaulting to 3;
the second argument specifies the timer argument, defaulting
to one million.
Note: it's tempting to calculate mean and standard deviation
from the result vector and report these. However, this is not
very useful. In a typical case, the lowest value gives a
lower bound for how fast your machine can run the given code
snippet; higher values in the result vector are typically not
caused by variability in Python's speed, but by other
processes interfering with your timing accuracy. So the min()
of the result is probably the only number you should be
interested in. After that, you should look at the entire
vector and apply common sense rather than statistics.
"""
r = []
for i in range(repeat):
t = self.timeit(number)
r.append(t)
return r
def timeit(stmt="pass", setup="pass", timer=default_timer,
number=default_number):
"""Convenience function to create Timer object and call timeit method."""
return Timer(stmt, setup, timer).timeit(number)
def repeat(stmt="pass", setup="pass", timer=default_timer,
repeat=default_repeat, number=default_number):
"""Convenience function to create Timer object and call repeat method."""
return Timer(stmt, setup, timer).repeat(repeat, number)
def main(args=None):
"""Main program, used when run as a script.
The optional argument specifies the command line to be parsed,
defaulting to sys.argv[1:].
The return value is an exit code to be passed to sys.exit(); it
may be None to indicate success.
When an exception happens during timing, a traceback is printed to
stderr and the return value is 1. Exceptions at other times
(including the template compilation) are not caught.
"""
if args is None:
args = sys.argv[1:]
import getopt
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(args, "n:s:r:tcvh",
["number=", "setup=", "repeat=",
"time", "clock", "verbose", "help"])
except getopt.error as err:
print(err)
print("use -h/--help for command line help")
return 2
timer = default_timer
stmt = "\n".join(args) or "pass"
number = 0 # auto-determine
setup = []
repeat = default_repeat
verbose = 0
precision = 3
for o, a in opts:
if o in ("-n", "--number"):
number = int(a)
if o in ("-s", "--setup"):
setup.append(a)
if o in ("-r", "--repeat"):
repeat = int(a)
if repeat <= 0:
repeat = 1
if o in ("-t", "--time"):
timer = time.time
if o in ("-c", "--clock"):
timer = time.clock
if o in ("-v", "--verbose"):
if verbose:
precision += 1
verbose += 1
if o in ("-h", "--help"):
print(__doc__, end=' ')
return 0
setup = "\n".join(setup) or "pass"
# Include the current directory, so that local imports work (sys.path
# contains the directory of this script, rather than the current
# directory)
import os
sys.path.insert(0, os.curdir)
t = Timer(stmt, setup, timer)
if number == 0:
# determine number so that 0.2 <= total time < 2.0
for i in range(1, 10):
number = 10**i
try:
x = t.timeit(number)
except:
t.print_exc()
return 1
if verbose:
print("%d loops -> %.*g secs" % (number, precision, x))
if x >= 0.2:
break
try:
r = t.repeat(repeat, number)
except:
t.print_exc()
return 1
best = min(r)
if verbose:
print("raw times:", " ".join(["%.*g" % (precision, x) for x in r]))
print("%d loops," % number, end=' ')
usec = best * 1e6 / number
if usec < 1000:
print("best of %d: %.*g usec per loop" % (repeat, precision, usec))
else:
msec = usec / 1000
if msec < 1000:
print("best of %d: %.*g msec per loop" % (repeat, precision, msec))
else:
sec = msec / 1000
print("best of %d: %.*g sec per loop" % (repeat, precision, sec))
return None
if __name__ == "__main__":
sys.exit(main())