TIME(1) manual page
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time - time a simple command or give resource usage
time
[options] command [arguments...]
The time command runs the specified
program command with the given arguments. When command finishes, time writes
a message to standard error giving timing statistics about this program
run. These statistics consist of (i) the elapsed real time between invocation
and termination, (ii) the user CPU time (the sum of the tms_utime and tms_cutime
values in a struct tms as returned by times(2)
), and (iii) the system CPU
time (the sum of the tms_stime and tms_cstime values in a struct tms as
returned by times(2)
).
Note: some shells (e.g., bash(1)
) have a built-in time
command that provides less functionality than the command described here.
To access the real command, you may need to specify its pathname (something
like /usr/bin/time).
- -p
- When in the POSIX locale, use the precise
traditional format
- "real %f\nuser %f\nsys %f\n"
-
- (with numbers in seconds)
- where the number of decimals in the output for %f is unspecified but is
sufficient to express the clock tick accuracy, and at least one.
If
command was invoked, the exit status is that of command. Otherwise, it is
127 if command could not be found, 126 if it could be found but could not
be invoked, and some other nonzero value (1-125) if something else went
wrong.
The variables LANG, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES, LC_NUMERIC,
NLSPATH, and PATH are used. The last one to search for command. The remaining
ones for the text and formatting of the output.
Below a description
of the GNU 1.7 version of time. Disregarding the name of the utility, GNU
makes it output lots of useful information, not only about time used, but
also on other resources like memory, I/O and IPC calls (where available).
The output is formatted using a format string that can be specified using
the -f option or the TIME environment variable.
The default format string
is:
%Uuser %Ssystem %Eelapsed %PCPU (%Xtext+%Ddata %Mmax)k
%Iinputs+%Ooutputs (%Fmajor+%Rminor)pagefaults %Wswaps
When the -p option is given the (portable) output format
real %e
user %U
sys %S
is used.
The format is interpreted in the usual printf-like
way. Ordinary characters are directly copied, tab, newline and backslash
are escaped using \t, \n and \\, a percent sign is represented by %%, and otherwise
% indicates a conversion. The program time will always add a trailing newline
itself. The conversions follow. All of those used by tcsh(1)
are supported.
Time
- %E
- Elapsed real time (in [hours:]minutes:seconds).
- %e
- (Not in tcsh.)
Elapsed real time (in seconds).
- %S
- Total number of CPU-seconds that the process
spent in kernel mode.
- %U
- Total number of CPU-seconds that the process spent
in user mode.
- %P
- Percentage of the CPU that this job got, computed as (%U
+ %S) / %E.
Memory
- %M
- Maximum resident set size of the process during its
lifetime, in Kbytes.
- %t
- (Not in tcsh.) Average resident set size of the process,
in Kbytes.
- %K
- Average total (data+stack+text) memory use of the process,
in Kbytes.
- %D
- Average size of the process’s unshared data area, in Kbytes.
- %p
- (Not in tcsh.) Average size of the process’s unshared stack space, in
Kbytes.
- %X
- Average size of the process’s shared text space, in Kbytes.
- %Z
- (Not in tcsh.) System’s page size, in bytes. This is a per-system constant,
but varies between systems.
- %F
- Number of major page faults that occurred
while the process was running. These are faults where the page has to be
read in from disk.
- %R
- Number of minor, or recoverable, page faults. These
are faults for pages that are not valid but which have not yet been claimed
by other virtual pages. Thus the data in the page is still valid but the
system tables must be updated.
- %W
- Number of times the process was swapped
out of main memory.
- %c
- Number of times the process was context-switched involuntarily
(because the time slice expired).
- %w
- Number of waits: times that the program
was context-switched voluntarily, for instance while waiting for an I/O
operation to complete.
I/O
- %I
- Number of filesystem inputs by the process.
- %O
- Number of filesystem outputs by the process.
- %r
- Number of socket messages
received by the process.
- %s
- Number of socket messages sent by the process.
- %k
- Number of signals delivered to the process.
- %C
- (Not in tcsh.) Name and
command-line arguments of the command being timed.
- %x
- (Not in tcsh.) Exit
status of the command.
- -f FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
- Specify output
format, possibly overriding the format specified in the environment variable
TIME.
- -p, --portability
- Use the portable output format.
- -o FILE, --output=FILE
- Do not send the results to stderr, but overwrite the specified file.
- -a,
--append
- (Used together with -o.) Do not overwrite but append.
- -v, --verbose
- Give
very verbose output about all the program knows about.
- --help
- Print a usage message on standard output and exit successfully.
- -V, --version
- Print version information on standard output, then exit successfully.
- --
- Terminate
option list.
Not all resources are measured by all versions of UNIX,
so some of the values might be reported as zero. The present selection was
mostly inspired by the data provided by 4.2 or 4.3BSD.
GNU time version 1.7
is not yet localized. Thus, it does not implement the POSIX requirements.
The environment variable TIME was badly chosen. It is not unusual for systems
like autoconf(1)
or make(1)
to use environment variables with the name
of a utility to override the utility to be used. Uses like MORE or TIME
for options to programs (instead of program pathnames) tend to lead to
difficulties.
It seems unfortunate that -o overwrites instead of appends.
(That is, the -a option should be the default.)
Mail suggestions and bug
reports for GNU time to
bug-utils@prep.ai.mit.edu
Please include the version of time, which you can get by running
time --version
and the operating system and C compiler you used.
tcsh(1)
,
times(2)
, wait3(2)
This page is part of release 3.78 of the Linux
man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting
bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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