/opt/alt/python311/lib64/python3.11
#! /opt/alt/python311/bin/python3.11 """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] [-p] [-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 5) -s/--setup S: statement to be executed once initially (default 'pass'). Execution time of this setup statement is NOT timed. -p/--process: use time.process_time() (default is time.perf_counter()) -v/--verbose: print raw timing results; repeat for more digits precision -u/--unit: set the output time unit (nsec, usec, msec, or sec) -h/--help: print this usage message and exit --: separate options from statement, use when statement starts with - 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 increasing numbers from the sequence 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, ... until the total time is at least 0.2 seconds. Note: there is a certain baseline overhead associated with executing a pass statement. It differs between versions. 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. Classes: Timer Functions: timeit(string, string) -> float repeat(string, string) -> list default_timer() -> float """ import gc import itertools import sys import time __all__ = ["Timer", "timeit", "repeat", "default_timer"] dummy_src_name = "<timeit-src>" default_number = 1000000 default_repeat = 5 default_timer = time.perf_counter _globals = globals # 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{init}): {setup} _t0 = _timer() for _i in _it: {stmt} pass _t1 = _timer() return _t1 - _t0 """ def reindent(src, indent): """Helper to reindent a multi-line statement.""" return src.replace("\n", "\n" + " " * indent) 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). If 'globals' is specified, the code will be executed within that namespace (as opposed to inside timeit's namespace). 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, globals=None): """Constructor. See class doc string.""" self.timer = timer local_ns = {} global_ns = _globals() if globals is None else globals init = '' if isinstance(setup, str): # Check that the code can be compiled outside a function compile(setup, dummy_src_name, "exec") stmtprefix = setup + '\n' setup = reindent(setup, 4) elif callable(setup): local_ns['_setup'] = setup init += ', _setup=_setup' stmtprefix = '' setup = '_setup()' else: raise ValueError("setup is neither a string nor callable") if isinstance(stmt, str): # Check that the code can be compiled outside a function compile(stmtprefix + stmt, dummy_src_name, "exec") stmt = reindent(stmt, 8) elif callable(stmt): local_ns['_stmt'] = stmt init += ', _stmt=_stmt' stmt = '_stmt()' else: raise ValueError("stmt is neither a string nor callable") src = template.format(stmt=stmt, setup=setup, init=init) self.src = src # Save for traceback display code = compile(src, dummy_src_name, "exec") exec(code, global_ns, local_ns) self.inner = local_ns["inner"] 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 float seconds if using the default timer. 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. """ it = itertools.repeat(None, number) gcold = gc.isenabled() gc.disable() try: timing = self.inner(it, self.timer) finally: 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 5; 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 autorange(self, callback=None): """Return the number of loops and time taken so that total time >= 0.2. Calls the timeit method with increasing numbers from the sequence 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, ... until the time taken is at least 0.2 second. Returns (number, time_taken). If *callback* is given and is not None, it will be called after each trial with two arguments: ``callback(number, time_taken)``. """ i = 1 while True: for j in 1, 2, 5: number = i * j time_taken = self.timeit(number) if callback: callback(number, time_taken) if time_taken >= 0.2: return (number, time_taken) i *= 10 def timeit(stmt="pass", setup="pass", timer=default_timer, number=default_number, globals=None): """Convenience function to create Timer object and call timeit method.""" return Timer(stmt, setup, timer, globals).timeit(number) def repeat(stmt="pass", setup="pass", timer=default_timer, repeat=default_repeat, number=default_number, globals=None): """Convenience function to create Timer object and call repeat method.""" return Timer(stmt, setup, timer, globals).repeat(repeat, number) def main(args=None, *, _wrap_timer=None): """Main program, used when run as a script. The optional 'args' 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. '_wrap_timer' is an internal interface used for unit testing. If it is not None, it must be a callable that accepts a timer function and returns another timer function (used for unit testing). """ if args is None: args = sys.argv[1:] import getopt try: opts, args = getopt.getopt(args, "n:u:s:r:tcpvh", ["number=", "setup=", "repeat=", "time", "clock", "process", "verbose", "unit=", "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 time_unit = None units = {"nsec": 1e-9, "usec": 1e-6, "msec": 1e-3, "sec": 1.0} 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 ("-u", "--unit"): if a in units: time_unit = a else: print("Unrecognized unit. Please select nsec, usec, msec, or sec.", file=sys.stderr) return 2 if o in ("-r", "--repeat"): repeat = int(a) if repeat <= 0: repeat = 1 if o in ("-p", "--process"): timer = time.process_time 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) if _wrap_timer is not None: timer = _wrap_timer(timer) t = Timer(stmt, setup, timer) if number == 0: # determine number so that 0.2 <= total time < 2.0 callback = None if verbose: def callback(number, time_taken): msg = "{num} loop{s} -> {secs:.{prec}g} secs" plural = (number != 1) print(msg.format(num=number, s='s' if plural else '', secs=time_taken, prec=precision)) try: number, _ = t.autorange(callback) except: t.print_exc() return 1 if verbose: print() try: raw_timings = t.repeat(repeat, number) except: t.print_exc() return 1 def format_time(dt): unit = time_unit if unit is not None: scale = units[unit] else: scales = [(scale, unit) for unit, scale in units.items()] scales.sort(reverse=True) for scale, unit in scales: if dt >= scale: break return "%.*g %s" % (precision, dt / scale, unit) if verbose: print("raw times: %s" % ", ".join(map(format_time, raw_timings))) print() timings = [dt / number for dt in raw_timings] best = min(timings) print("%d loop%s, best of %d: %s per loop" % (number, 's' if number != 1 else '', repeat, format_time(best))) best = min(timings) worst = max(timings) if worst >= best * 4: import warnings warnings.warn_explicit("The test results are likely unreliable. " "The worst time (%s) was more than four times " "slower than the best time (%s)." % (format_time(worst), format_time(best)), UserWarning, '', 0) return None if __name__ == "__main__": sys.exit(main())
.
Edit
..
Edit
LICENSE.txt
Edit
__future__.py
Edit
__hello__.py
Edit
__pycache__
Edit
_aix_support.py
Edit
_bootsubprocess.py
Edit
_collections_abc.py
Edit
_compat_pickle.py
Edit
_compression.py
Edit
_markupbase.py
Edit
_osx_support.py
Edit
_py_abc.py
Edit
_pydecimal.py
Edit
_pyio.py
Edit
_sitebuiltins.py
Edit
_strptime.py
Edit
_sysconfigdata__linux_x86_64-linux-gnu.py
Edit
_sysconfigdata_d_linux_x86_64-linux-gnu.py
Edit
_threading_local.py
Edit
_weakrefset.py
Edit
abc.py
Edit
aifc.py
Edit
antigravity.py
Edit
argparse.py
Edit
ast.py
Edit
asynchat.py
Edit
asyncio
Edit
asyncore.py
Edit
base64.py
Edit
bdb.py
Edit
bisect.py
Edit
bz2.py
Edit
cProfile.py
Edit
calendar.py
Edit
cgi.py
Edit
cgitb.py
Edit
chunk.py
Edit
cmd.py
Edit
code.py
Edit
codecs.py
Edit
codeop.py
Edit
collections
Edit
colorsys.py
Edit
compileall.py
Edit
concurrent
Edit
config-3.11-x86_64-linux-gnu
Edit
configparser.py
Edit
contextlib.py
Edit
contextvars.py
Edit
copy.py
Edit
copyreg.py
Edit
crypt.py
Edit
csv.py
Edit
ctypes
Edit
curses
Edit
dataclasses.py
Edit
datetime.py
Edit
dbm
Edit
decimal.py
Edit
difflib.py
Edit
dis.py
Edit
distutils
Edit
doctest.py
Edit
email
Edit
encodings
Edit
ensurepip
Edit
enum.py
Edit
filecmp.py
Edit
fileinput.py
Edit
fnmatch.py
Edit
fractions.py
Edit
ftplib.py
Edit
functools.py
Edit
genericpath.py
Edit
getopt.py
Edit
getpass.py
Edit
gettext.py
Edit
glob.py
Edit
graphlib.py
Edit
gzip.py
Edit
hashlib.py
Edit
heapq.py
Edit
hmac.py
Edit
html
Edit
http
Edit
imaplib.py
Edit
imghdr.py
Edit
imp.py
Edit
importlib
Edit
inspect.py
Edit
io.py
Edit
ipaddress.py
Edit
json
Edit
keyword.py
Edit
lib-dynload
Edit
lib2to3
Edit
linecache.py
Edit
locale.py
Edit
logging
Edit
lzma.py
Edit
mailbox.py
Edit
mailcap.py
Edit
mimetypes.py
Edit
modulefinder.py
Edit
multiprocessing
Edit
netrc.py
Edit
nntplib.py
Edit
ntpath.py
Edit
nturl2path.py
Edit
numbers.py
Edit
opcode.py
Edit
operator.py
Edit
optparse.py
Edit
os.py
Edit
pathlib.py
Edit
pdb.py
Edit
pickle.py
Edit
pickletools.py
Edit
pipes.py
Edit
pkgutil.py
Edit
platform.py
Edit
plistlib.py
Edit
poplib.py
Edit
posixpath.py
Edit
pprint.py
Edit
profile.py
Edit
pstats.py
Edit
pty.py
Edit
py_compile.py
Edit
pyclbr.py
Edit
pydoc.py
Edit
pydoc_data
Edit
queue.py
Edit
quopri.py
Edit
random.py
Edit
re
Edit
reprlib.py
Edit
rlcompleter.py
Edit
runpy.py
Edit
sched.py
Edit
secrets.py
Edit
selectors.py
Edit
shelve.py
Edit
shlex.py
Edit
shutil.py
Edit
signal.py
Edit
site-packages
Edit
site.py
Edit
smtpd.py
Edit
smtplib.py
Edit
sndhdr.py
Edit
socket.py
Edit
socketserver.py
Edit
sqlite3
Edit
sre_compile.py
Edit
sre_constants.py
Edit
sre_parse.py
Edit
ssl.py
Edit
stat.py
Edit
statistics.py
Edit
string.py
Edit
stringprep.py
Edit
struct.py
Edit
subprocess.py
Edit
sunau.py
Edit
symtable.py
Edit
sysconfig.py
Edit
tabnanny.py
Edit
tarfile.py
Edit
telnetlib.py
Edit
tempfile.py
Edit
textwrap.py
Edit
this.py
Edit
threading.py
Edit
timeit.py
Edit
token.py
Edit
tokenize.py
Edit
tomllib
Edit
trace.py
Edit
traceback.py
Edit
tracemalloc.py
Edit
tty.py
Edit
types.py
Edit
typing.py
Edit
unittest
Edit
urllib
Edit
uu.py
Edit
uuid.py
Edit
venv
Edit
warnings.py
Edit
wave.py
Edit
weakref.py
Edit
webbrowser.py
Edit
wsgiref
Edit
xdrlib.py
Edit
xml
Edit
xmlrpc
Edit
zipapp.py
Edit
zipfile.py
Edit
zipimport.py
Edit
zoneinfo
Edit