I always find measuring and reporting run time of code it in a human readable format troublesome.
This crate provides a few simple interfaces to do just that.
-
Measure & report manually using Timer stopwatch:
use took::Timer; let timer = Timer::new(); // Run heavy task println!("Done! Took {}", timer.took()); // Prints: // Done! Took 1.00 s
-
Measure a function, report manually:
use took::took; let (took, result) = took(|| { // Run heavy task }); println!("Done, took {}", took); // Prints: // Done! Took 1.00 s
-
Measure & report a function automatically using attribute:
#[macro_use] extern crate took_macro; my_function(); other_function(); #[took] pub fn my_function() { // Run heavy task } #[took(description = "Render finished,")] pub fn other_function() { // Run heavy task } // Prints: // my_function() took 1.00 s // Render finished, took 1.00 s
- Rust 1.33 or newer (with
std
)
Add the dependencies in your Cargo.toml
. The took-macro
dependency is only
required if you'll be using the #[took]
attribute macro.
[dependencies]
took = "0.1"
took-macro = "0.1" # if using macros
Import and start using:
use took::{Timer, took};
let timer = Timer::new();
println!("Done! Took {}", timer.took());
let (took, result) = took(|| {
// Run heavy task
});
println!("Done, took {}", took);
If you'll be using #[took]
attribute macro, explicitly import it:
#[macro_use]
extern crate took_macro;
#[took]
pub fn function_one() {}
#[took(description = "Some heavy logic finished,")]
pub fn function_two() {}
- Support
#[took]
attribute for almost anything (function call, blocks, if-statements, ...) - Time formatting configurability
- Use more precise timers
- Print elapsed time to more than just
stderr
This project is released under the MIT license. Check out the LICENSE file for more information.