Monotime
A sensible interface to Ruby's monotonic clock, inspired by Rust.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'monotime'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install monotime
Monotime
is tested on Ruby 2.7+, TruffleRuby, and JRuby.
Usage
require 'monotime'
require 'monotime/include'
Monotime
offers a Duration
type for describing spans of time, and an
Instant
type for describing points in time. Both operate at nanosecond
resolution to the limits of whatever your Ruby implementation supports.
For example, to measure an elapsed time, either create an Instant
to mark the
start point, perform the action and then ask for the Duration
that has elapsed
since:
start = Instant.now
do_something
elapsed = start.elapsed
Or use a convenience method:
elapsed = Duration.measure { do_something }
return_value, elapsed = Duration.with_measure { compute_something }
Duration
offers formatting:
Duration.millis(42).to_s
Duration.nanos(12345).to_s
Duration.secs(1.12345).to_s(2)
Conversions:
Duration.secs(10).millis
Duration.micros(12345).secs
And basic mathematical operations:
(Duration.millis(42) + Duration.secs(1)).to_s
(Duration.millis(42) - Duration.secs(1)).to_s
(Duration.secs(42) * 2).to_s
(Duration.secs(42) / 2).to_s
Instant
does some simple maths too:
(Instant.now - Duration.secs(1)).elapsed.to_s
(Instant.now - Instant.now).to_s
Duration
and Instant
are also Comparable
with other instances of their
type, and can be used in hashes, sets, and similar structures.
Sleeping
Duration
can be used to sleep a thread, assuming it's positive (time travel
is not yet implemented):
sleep(Duration.secs(1).secs)
Duration.secs(1).sleep
So can Instant
, taking a Duration
and sleeping until the given Duration
past the time the Instant
was created, if any. This can be useful for
maintaining a precise cadence between tasks:
interval = Duration.secs(60)
start = Instant.now
loop do
do_stuff
start.sleep(interval)
start += interval
end
Or you can declare an Instant
in the future and sleep to that point:
interval = Duration.secs(60)
deadline = Instant.now + interval
loop do
do_stuff
deadline.sleep
deadline += interval
end
Instant#sleep
returns a Duration
which was slept, or a negative Duration
indicating that the desired sleep point was in the past.
Duration duck typing
Operations taking a Duration
can also accept any type which implements
#to_nanos
, returning an (Integer) number of nanoseconds the value represents.
For example, to treat built-in numeric types as second durations, you could do:
class Numeric
def to_nanos
Integer(self * 1_000_000_000)
end
end
(Duration.secs(1) + 41).to_s
(Instant.now - 42).to_s
Development
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/Freaky/monotime.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
See Also
Core Ruby
For a zero-dependency alternative upon which monotime
is based, see
Process.clock_gettime
.
Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC
is a safe default, but other options may offer higher
resolution or alternative behaviour in light of system suspend/resume or NTP
frequency skew.
Other Gems
hitimes is a popular and mature alternative
which also includes a variety of features for gathering statistics about
measurements.
concurrent-ruby includes
Concurrent.monotonic_time
, which is at the time of writing a trivial proxy to
the aforementioned Process::clock_gettime
with Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC
.