Could somebody please explain how to make a countdown timer using clock_gettime, under Linux. I know you can use the clock() function to get cpu time, and multiply it by CLOCKS_PER_SEC to get actual time, but I’m told the clock() function is not well suited for this.
So far I have attempted this (a billion is to pause for one second)
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#define BILLION 1000000000
int main()
{
struct timespec rawtime;
clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW, &rawtime);
unsigned long int current = ( rawtime.tv_sec + rawtime.tv_nsec );
unsigned long int end = (( rawtime.tv_sec + rawtime.tv_nsec ) + BILLION );
while ( current < end )
{
clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW, &rawtime);
current = ( rawtime.tv_sec + rawtime.tv_nsec );
}
return 0;
}
I know this wouldn’t be very useful on its own, but once I’ve found out how to time correctly I can use this in my projects. I know that sleep() can be used for this purpose, but I want to code the timer myself so that I can better integrate it in my projects – such as the possibility of it returning the time left, as opposed to pausing the whole program.
Please, do not do that. You’re burning CPU power for nothing in a busy loop.
Why not use the
nanosleep()function instead? It’s perfectly suited to the use case you outlined. Or, if you want an easier interface, perhaps something likeThe difference is that using this one the CPU is free to do something else, rather than spin like a crazed squirrel on speed.