public final class Stopwatch extends Object
System.nanoTime()
for a few reasons:
nanoTime
, the value returned has no absolute
meaning, and can only be interpreted as relative to another timestamp
returned by nanoTime
at a different time. Stopwatch
is a
more effective abstraction because it exposes only these relative values,
not the absolute ones.
Basic usage:
Stopwatch stopwatch = Stopwatch.createStarted
(); doSomething(); stopwatch.stop
(); // optional long millis = stopwatch.elapsed(MILLISECONDS); log.info("time: " + stopwatch); // formatted string like "12.3 ms"
Stopwatch methods are not idempotent; it is an error to start or stop a stopwatch that is already in the desired state.
When testing code that uses this class, use
#createUnstarted(Ticker)
or #createStarted(Ticker)
to
supply a fake or mock ticker.
This allows you to
simulate any valid behavior of the stopwatch.
Note: This class is not thread-safe.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
static Stopwatch |
createUnstarted()
Creates (but does not start) a new stopwatch using
System.nanoTime()
as its time source. |
Stopwatch |
start()
Starts the stopwatch.
|
String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of the current elapsed time.
|
public static Stopwatch createUnstarted()
System.nanoTime()
as its time source.public Stopwatch start()
Stopwatch
instanceIllegalStateException
- if the stopwatch is already running.Copyright © 2007-2024, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Use is subject to license terms.