PHP must track the amount of CPU time a particular script has used in order to enforce the max_execution_time limit.
Is there a way to get access to this inside of the script? I'd like to include some logging with my tests about how much CPU was burnt in the actual PHP (the time is not incremented when the script is sitting and waiting for the database).
I am using a Linux box.
If all you need is the wall-clock time, rather than the CPU execution time, then it is simple to calculate:
//place this before any script you want to calculate time
$time_start = microtime(true);
//sample script
for($i=0; $i<1000; $i++){
//do anything
}
$time_end = microtime(true);
//dividing with 60 will give the execution time in minutes otherwise seconds
$execution_time = ($time_end - $time_start)/60;
//execution time of the script
echo '<b>Total Execution Time:</b> '.$execution_time.' Mins';
// if you get weird results, use number_format((float) $execution_time, 10)
Note that this will include the time that PHP is sat waiting for external resources such as disks or databases, which is not used for max_execution_time.
On unixoid systems (and in php 7+ on Windows as well), you can use getrusage, like:
// Script start
$rustart = getrusage();
// Code ...
// Script end
function rutime($ru, $rus, $index) {
return ($ru["ru_$index.tv_sec"]*1000 + intval($ru["ru_$index.tv_usec"]/1000))
- ($rus["ru_$index.tv_sec"]*1000 + intval($rus["ru_$index.tv_usec"]/1000));
}
$ru = getrusage();
echo "This process used " . rutime($ru, $rustart, "utime") .
" ms for its computations\n";
echo "It spent " . rutime($ru, $rustart, "stime") .
" ms in system calls\n";
Note that you don't need to calculate a difference if you are spawning a php instance for every test.
Shorter version of talal7860's answer
<?php
// At start of script
$time_start = microtime(true);
// Anywhere else in the script
echo 'Total execution time in seconds: ' . (microtime(true) - $time_start);
As pointed out, this is 'wallclock time' not 'cpu time'
<?php
// Randomize sleeping time
usleep(mt_rand(100, 10000));
// As of PHP 5.4.0, REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT is available in the $_SERVER superglobal array.
// It contains the timestamp of the start of the request with microsecond precision.
$time = microtime(true) - $_SERVER["REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT"];
echo "Did nothing in $time seconds\n";
?>
I created an ExecutionTime class out of phihag answer that you can use out of box:
class ExecutionTime
{
private $startTime;
private $endTime;
public function start() {
$this->startTime = getrusage();
}
public function end() {
$this->endTime = getrusage();
}
private function runTime($ru, $rus, $index) {
return ($ru["ru_$index.tv_sec"]*1000 + intval($ru["ru_$index.tv_usec"]/1000))
- ($rus["ru_$index.tv_sec"]*1000 + intval($rus["ru_$index.tv_usec"]/1000));
}
public function __toString() {
return "This process used " . $this->runTime($this->endTime, $this->startTime, "utime") .
" ms for its computations\nIt spent " . $this->runTime($this->endTime, $this->startTime, "stime") .
" ms in system calls\n";
}
}
Usage:
$executionTime = new ExecutionTime();
$executionTime->start();
// Code
$executionTime->end();
echo $executionTime;
Note: In PHP 5, the getrusage function only works in Unix-oid systems. Since PHP 7, it also works on Windows.
It is going to be prettier if you format the seconds output like:
echo "Process took ". number_format(microtime(true) - $start, 2). " seconds.";
will print
Process took 6.45 seconds.
This is much better than
Process took 6.4518549156189 seconds.
Gringod at developerfusion.com gives this good answer:
<!-- put this at the top of the page -->
<?php
$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$starttime = $mtime;
;?>
<!-- put other code and html in here -->
<!-- put this code at the bottom of the page -->
<?php
$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$endtime = $mtime;
$totaltime = ($endtime - $starttime);
echo "This page was created in ".$totaltime." seconds";
;?>
From (http://www.developerfusion.com/code/2058/determine-execution-time-in-php/)
To show minutes and seconds you can use:
$startTime = microtime(true);
$endTime = microtime(true);
$diff = round($endTime - $startTime);
$minutes = floor($diff / 60); // Only minutes
$seconds = $diff % 60; // Remaining seconds, using modulo operator
echo "script execution time: minutes:$minutes, seconds:$seconds"; // Value in seconds
The cheapest and dirtiest way to do it is simply make microtime() calls at places in your code you want to benchmark. Do it right before and right after database queries and it's simple to remove those durations from the rest of your script execution time.
A hint: your PHP execution time is rarely going to be the thing that makes your script timeout. If a script times out it's almost always going to be a call to an external resource.
PHP microtime documentation:
http://us.php.net/microtime
I think you should look at xdebug. The profiling options will give you a head start toward knowing many process related items.
http://www.xdebug.org/
$_SERVER['REQUEST_TIME']
check out that too. i.e.
...
// your codes running
...
echo (time() - $_SERVER['REQUEST_TIME']);
when there is closure functionality in PHP, why not we get benefit out of it.
function startTime(){
$startTime = microtime(true);
return function () use ($startTime){
return microtime(true) - $startTime;
};
}
Now with the help of the above function, we can track time like this
$stopTime = startTime();
//some code block or line
$elapsedTime = $stopTime();
Every call to startTime function will initiate a separate time tracker. So you can initiate as many as you want and can stop them wherever you want them.
Small script that print, centered in bottom of the page, the script execution that started at server call with microsecond precision.
So as not to distort the result and to be 100% compatible with content in page, I used, to write the result on the page, a browser-side native javascript snippet.
//Uncomment the line below to test with 2 seconds
//usleep(2000000);
$prec = 5; // numbers after comma
$time = number_format(microtime(true) - $_SERVER['REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT'], $prec, '.', '');
echo "<script>
if(!tI) {
var tI=document.createElement('div');
tI.style.fontSize='8px';
tI.style.marginBottom='5px';
tI.style.position='absolute';
tI.style.bottom='0px';
tI.style.textAlign='center';
tI.style.width='98%';
document.body.appendChild(tI);
}
tI.innerHTML='$time';
</script>";
Another approach is to make the snippet as small as possible, and style it with a class in your stylesheet.
Replace the echo ...; part with the following:
echo "<script>if(!tI){var tI=document.createElement('div');tI.className='ldtme';document.body.appendChild(tI);}tI.innerHTML='$time';</script>";
In your CSS create and fill the .ldtme{...} class.
I wrote a function that check remaining execution time.
Warning: Execution time counting is different on Windows and on Linux platform.
/**
* Check if more that `$miliseconds` ms remains
* to error `PHP Fatal error: Maximum execution time exceeded`
*
* #param int $miliseconds
* #return bool
*/
function isRemainingMaxExecutionTimeBiggerThan($miliseconds = 5000) {
$max_execution_time = ini_get('max_execution_time');
if ($max_execution_time === 0) {
// No script time limitation
return true;
}
if (strtoupper(substr(PHP_OS, 0, 3)) === 'WIN') {
// On Windows: The real time is measured.
$spendMiliseconds = (microtime(true) - $_SERVER["REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT"]) * 1000;
} else {
// On Linux: Any time spent on activity that happens outside the execution
// of the script such as system calls using system(), stream operations
// database queries, etc. is not included.
// #see http://php.net/manual/en/function.set-time-limit.php
$resourceUsages = getrusage();
$spendMiliseconds = $resourceUsages['ru_utime.tv_sec'] * 1000 + $resourceUsages['ru_utime.tv_usec'] / 1000;
}
$remainingMiliseconds = $max_execution_time * 1000 - $spendMiliseconds;
return ($remainingMiliseconds >= $miliseconds);
}
Using:
while (true) {
// so something
if (!isRemainingMaxExecutionTimeBiggerThan(5000)) {
// Time to die.
// Safely close DB and done the iteration.
}
}
Further expanding on Hamid's answer, I wrote a helper class that can be started and stopped repeatedly (for profiling inside a loop).
class ExecutionTime
{
private $startTime;
private $endTime;
private $compTime = 0;
private $sysTime = 0;
public function Start() {
$this->startTime = getrusage();
}
public function End() {
$this->endTime = getrusage();
$this->compTime += $this->runTime($this->endTime, $this->startTime, "utime");
$this->systemTime += $this->runTime($this->endTime, $this->startTime, "stime");
}
private function runTime($ru, $rus, $index) {
return ($ru["ru_$index.tv_sec"]*1000 + intval($ru["ru_$index.tv_usec"]/1000)) - ($rus["ru_$index.tv_sec"]*1000 + intval($rus["ru_$index.tv_usec"]/1000));
}
public function __toString() {
return "This process used " . $this->compTime . " ms for its computations\n" . "It spent " . $this->systemTime . " ms in system calls\n";
}
}
You may only want to know the execution time of parts of your script. The most flexible way to time parts or an entire script is to create 3 simple functions (procedural code given here but you could turn it into a class by putting class timer{} around it and making a couple of tweaks). This code works, just copy and paste and run:
$tstart = 0;
$tend = 0;
function timer_starts()
{
global $tstart;
$tstart=microtime(true); ;
}
function timer_ends()
{
global $tend;
$tend=microtime(true); ;
}
function timer_calc()
{
global $tstart,$tend;
return (round($tend - $tstart,2));
}
timer_starts();
file_get_contents('http://google.com');
timer_ends();
print('It took '.timer_calc().' seconds to retrieve the google page');
Just to contribute to this conversation:
what happens if the measurement targets two points A and B in different php files?
what if we need different measurements like time based, code execution duration, external resource access duration?
what if we need to organize our measurements in categories where every one has a different starting point?
As you suspect we need some global variables to be accessed by a class object or a static method: I choose the 2nd approach and here it is:
namespace g3;
class Utils {
public function __construct() {}
public static $UtilsDtStart = [];
public static $UtilsDtStats = [];
public static function dt() {
global $UtilsDtStart, $UtilsDtStats;
$obj = new \stdClass();
$obj->start = function(int $ndx = 0) use (&$UtilsDtStart) {
$UtilsDtStart[$ndx] = \microtime(true) * 1000;
};
$obj->codeStart = function(int $ndx = 0) use (&$UtilsDtStart) {
$use = \getrusage();
$UtilsDtStart[$ndx] = ($use["ru_utime.tv_sec"] * 1000) + ($use["ru_utime.tv_usec"] / 1000);
};
$obj->resourceStart = function(int $ndx = 0) use (&$UtilsDtStart) {
$use = \getrusage();
$UtilsDtStart[$ndx] = $use["ru_stime.tv_usec"] / 1000;
};
$obj->end = function(int $ndx = 0) use (&$UtilsDtStart, &$UtilsDtStats) {
$t = #$UtilsDtStart[$ndx];
if($t === null)
return false;
$end = \microtime(true) * 1000;
$dt = $end - $t;
$UtilsDtStats[$ndx][] = $dt;
return $dt;
};
$obj->codeEnd = function(int $ndx = 0) use (&$UtilsDtStart, &$UtilsDtStats) {
$t = #$UtilsDtStart[$ndx];
if($t === null)
return false;
$use = \getrusage();
$dt = ($use["ru_utime.tv_sec"] * 1000) + ($use["ru_utime.tv_usec"] / 1000) - $t;
$UtilsDtStats[$ndx][] = $dt;
return $dt;
};
$obj->resourceEnd = function(int $ndx = 0) use (&$UtilsDtStart, &$UtilsDtStats) {
$t = #$UtilsDtStart[$ndx];
if($t === null)
return false;
$use = \getrusage();
$dt = ($use["ru_stime.tv_usec"] / 1000) - $t;
$UtilsDtStats[$ndx][] = $dt;
return $dt;
};
$obj->stats = function(int $ndx = 0) use (&$UtilsDtStats) {
$s = #$UtilsDtStats[$ndx];
if($s !== null)
$s = \array_slice($s, 0);
else
$s = false;
return $s;
};
$obj->statsLength = function() use (&$UtilsDtStats) {
return \count($UtilsDtStats);
};
return $obj;
}
}
Now all you have is to call the method that belongs to the specific category with the index that denotes it's unique group:
File A
------
\call_user_func_array(\g3\Utils::dt()->start, [0]); // point A
...
File B
------
$dt = \call_user_func_array(\g3\Utils::dt()->end, [0]); // point B
Value $dt contains the milliseconds of wall clock duration between points A and B.
To estimate the time took for php code to run:
File A
------
\call_user_func_array(\g3\Utils::dt()->codeStart, [1]); // point A
...
File B
------
$dt = \call_user_func_array(\g3\Utils::dt()->codeEnd, [1]); // point B
Notice how we changed the index that we pass at the methods.
The code is based on the closure effect that happens when we return an object/function from a function (see that \g3\Utils::dt() repeated at the examples).
I tested with php unit and between different test methods at the same test file it behaves fine so far!
Hope that helps someone!
As an alternative you can just put this line in your code blocks and check php logs, for really slow functions it's pretty useful:
trigger_error("Task done at ". strftime('%H:%m:%S', time()), E_USER_NOTICE);
For serious debugging use XDebug + Cachegrind, see https://blog.nexcess.net/2011/01/29/diagnosing-slow-php-execution-with-xdebug-and-kcachegrind/
There are several way of doing this, listed here. But each have their own pro's and con's. And (in my opinion) the readability of all longer answers are terrible.
So I decided to put it all together in one answer, that is easily usable and readable.
Usage
$start = get_timers();
for( $i = 0; $i < 100000; $i++ ){
// Code to check
}
$end = get_timers();
display_timer_statistics( $start, $end );
Function definitions
function display_timer_statistics( $start_timers, $end_timers ){
// Settings
$key_width = '100px';
$decimals = 4;
$decimals_wallclock = $decimals;
$decimals_request_time_float = $decimals;
// Variables
$start_resource_usage_timer = $start_timers[0];
$start_wallclock = $start_timers[1];
$end_resource_usage_timer = $end_timers[0];
$end_wallclock = $end_timers[1];
// # User time
// Add seconds and microseconds for the start/end, and subtract from another
$end_user_time_seconds = $end_resource_usage_timer["ru_utime.tv_sec"]*1000;
$end_user_time_microseconds = intval($end_resource_usage_timer["ru_utime.tv_usec"]/1000);
$start_user_time_seconds = $start_resource_usage_timer["ru_utime.tv_sec"]*1000;
$start_user_time_microseconds = intval($start_resource_usage_timer["ru_utime.tv_usec"]/1000);
$total_user_time = ($end_user_time_seconds + $end_user_time_microseconds) - ($start_user_time_seconds + $start_user_time_microseconds);
// # System time
// Add seconds and microseconds for the start/end, and subtract from another
$end_system_time_seconds = $end_resource_usage_timer["ru_stime.tv_sec"]*1000;
$end_system_time_microseconds = intval($end_resource_usage_timer["ru_stime.tv_usec"]/1000);
$start_system_time_seconds = $start_resource_usage_timer["ru_stime.tv_sec"]*1000;
$start_system_time_microseconds = intval($start_resource_usage_timer["ru_stime.tv_usec"]/1000);
$total_system_time = ($end_system_time_seconds + $end_system_time_microseconds) - ($start_system_time_seconds + $start_system_time_microseconds);
// Wallclock
$total_wallclock_time = number_format( ( $end_wallclock - $start_wallclock), $decimals_wallclock );
// Server request_time_float
$request_time_float = microtime(true) - $_SERVER["REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT"];
$request_time_float = number_format( $request_time_float, $decimals_request_time_float );
// Print
$span_start = "<span style='width: $key_width; display: inline-block;'>";
$span_end = "</span>";
$output = "# RUNTIME AND TIMERS " . PHP_EOL ;
$output .= PHP_EOL;
$output .= $span_start . $total_user_time . $span_end . " User time (utime)" . PHP_EOL;
$output .= $span_start . $total_system_time . $span_end . " System time (stime)" . PHP_EOL;
$output .= PHP_EOL;
$output .= $span_start . $total_wallclock_time . $span_end . " Wallclock" . PHP_EOL;
$output .= PHP_EOL;
$output .= $span_start . $request_time_float . $span_end . " REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT" . PHP_EOL . PHP_EOL . PHP_EOL;
echo nl2br( $output );
}
function get_timers(){
return [ getrusage(), microtime( true ) ];
}
Glossary
All gotten from PHP docs for getrusage
Wallclock = How long it takes
ru = Resource usage
utime = User time used
stime = System time used
tv_sec = In seconds.
tv_usec = In microseconds.
tv = ?? Dunno
return microtime(true) - $_SERVER["REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT"];
Related
I got the following two functions that I use to lock a Redis key. I am trying to prevent concurrency execution of a block of code using Redis. So what I do is use the following functions in such a way that they prevent the execution of the same code by different threads.
lockRedisKey("ABC");
CODE THAT I DON'T WANT TO RUN CONCURRENTLY!
unlockRedisKey("ABC");
Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to work and causes an infinitely loop at lockRedisKey() until exit_time is reached. What could be wrong?
static public function lockRedisKey($key, $value = "true") {
$redis = RedisClient::getInstance();
$time = microtime(true);
$exit_time = $time + 10;
$sleep = 10000;
do {
// Lock Redis with PX and NX
$lock = $redis->setnx("lock:" . $key, $value);
if ($lock == 1) {
$redis->expire("lock:" . $key, "10");
return true;
}
usleep($sleep);
} while (microtime(true) < $exit_time);
return false;
}
static public function unlockRedisKey($key) {
$redis = RedisClient::getInstance();
$redis->del("lock:" . $key);
}
I'm aware that I might be facing deadlocks, so I decided to use transactions, but I continue to face the issue.
static public function lockRedisKey($key, $value = "true") {
$redis = RedisClient::getInstance();
$time = microtime(true);
$exit_time = $time + 10;
$sleep = 10000;
do {
// Lock Redis with PX and NX
$redis->multi();
$redis->set('lock:' . $key, $value, array('nx', 'ex' => 10));
$ret = $redis->exec();
if ($ret[0] == true) {
return true;
}
usleep($sleep);
} while (microtime(true) < $exit_time);
return false;
}
static public function unlockRedisKey($key) {
$redis = RedisClient::getInstance();
$redis->multi();
$redis->del("lock:" . $key);
$redis->exec();
}
The locking is working fine. It's just the code between the locking that is crashing and causing the lock not to be released :-)
First of all, PHP isn't async script language as JS f.e. You haven't any control on the script execution ordering, so it means you can't run code that below lockRedisKey() call in concurent way.
I assume you're not completely understand what usleep function is actually doing, it's just delay process and not postpone it, so it just blocks process for $sleep time and after this continue script execution. So you're not performing concurrent write by calling your script.
So I'd like to add the current time to the database, to a specific user when he does something, and later on read it, and check if that time has passed (by checking current time and substracting that from the one in database; to check if it has passed or not)
So how would I do this? I tried with something like this:
$date = date("YmWjis");
$calculate = $date - $info['lastvisit'];
if($calculate <= -1)
{
echo "you need to wait before visiting again"; // (just an example)
} else {
//do something
}
I also tried both:
!$calculate < 0
$calculate < 0
etc. But I can't get it to work. Can anyone help me? :P
edit for Parag;
$date = date("YmWjis");
$dote = date("YmWjis") + $time; // ($time is set earlier and is 30 seconds)
echo "wait " . $date = $date - $dote . " seconds until next visit";
work?
It says like "wait 20138269786674 seconds until next visit".
You can try something like this:
$dateDiff = new DateTime("2014-04-27 22:00:15");
$date = new DateTime();
$diff = $date->diff($dateDiff);
if($diff->invert == 0)
{
echo "you need to wait before visiting again"; // (just an example)
} else {
//do something
}
$db_time = "2014/04/28 15:15:15";
$cur_time = "2014/04/28 18:15:15";
if(strtotime($cur_time) > strtotime($db_time))
{
// Current time exceeds DB time
$diff = date('Y/m/d H:i:s', strtotime($cur_time)-strtotime($db_time));
echo $diff;
}
else
{
// Current time didn't exceeds DB time
}
UPDATE
$date = strtotime(date("YmWjis"));
$dote = strtotime(date("YmWjis")) + $time; // ($time is set earlier and is 30 seconds)
echo "wait " . $date = $date - $dote . " seconds until next visit";
DEMO
http://3v4l.org/LBIXu
Don't use a database. This does the job without the db overhead. It uses PHP sessions.
<?php
session_start();
if (!isset($_SESSION['lastVisitTime'])) {
$_SESSION['lastVisitTime']=new DateTime();
} else {
$now=new DateTime();
if ($_SESSION['lastVisitTime']->diff($now) > $someMaxValueYouDefine) {
echo "You must wait before visiting again.";
}
}
An interesting problem, for a piece of Uni coursework we have been challenged to run a simulation of a server receiving requests and then processing them. I have build and rebuild this multiple times and I think have made it as efficient as I am able, is there anything you can see to improve the efficiency of this program?
The simulation is run for $simulationLength and at each $currentTime there is a 1/$arrival_rate chance of a new request arriving. A queue of size $maxQueueSize holds these requests and rejects them if the queue is full. For each $currentTime a CPU may remove an item from the $queue and work on it for $executionTime seconds at which point the CPU (server) is removed from the busy queue and is free to work on another request.
My code:
<?php
...SNIP error checking...
$queue_size = isset($argv[1]) ? $argv[1] : 10000;
$arrival_rate = isset($argv[2]) ? $argv[2] : 3;
$number_of_servers = isset($argv[3]) ? $argv[3] : 2;
$execution_time = isset($argv[4]) ? $argv[4] : 25;
...SNIP error checking...
$simulationLength = 1000000;
$arrivalRate = $arrival_rate;
$executionTime = $execution_time;
$busyServers = array();
$freeServers = $number_of_servers;
$currentTime = 0;
$currentQueueSize = 0;
$maxQueueSize = $queue_size; //Max
$queue = array();
//Stats
$totalRequests = 0;
$rejectedRequests = 0;
$queueSize = array_fill(0, 100, $simulationLength);
$totalWaitingTime = 0;
//while the simulation is running
while($currentTime++ < $simulationLength) {
//a request has arrived
if(mt_rand(1, $arrival_rate)==1) {
$totalRequests++;
//Adding to the queue
if($currentQueueSize < $maxQueueSize) {
$currentQueueSize++;
array_push($queue, $currentTime); //add to the end of the queue
} else {
$rejectedRequests++;
}
} //end request arrived
//Only one server can fetch requests at a time
if(!empty($busyServers)&&reset($busyServers) < $currentTime) {
unset($busyServers[key($busyServers)]); //remove first element - efficient
$freeServers++; //increase free servers
}
//Only one server can fetch requests at a time
if($currentQueueSize>0&&$freeServers>1) {
$currentQueueSize--;
reset($queue); //reset pointer
$queueTime = $queue[key($queue)]; //read of the front
unset($busyServers[key($busyServers)]); //delete off print
$freeServers--; //use up a server
$busyServers[] = $currentTime + $executionTime; //mark when free
$totalWaitingTime += ($currentTime - $queueTime) + $executionTime;
}
$queueSize[$currentTime] = $currentQueueSize;
}
printf("Requests served %d\n", $totalRequests);
printf("Rejected requests %d\n", $rejectedRequests);
printf("Total waiting time %d\n", $totalWaitingTime);
printf("Percentage of rejected requests %0.1f\n", $rejectedRequests/$totalRequests);
printf("The average queue size %d\n", array_sum($queueSize)/sizeof($queueSize));
printf("Average response time %d\n", $totalWaitingTime/$totalRequests);
?>
Thanks for your time,
Micro-optimisations but:
When in a heavy loop like this, --$preIncrement is faster than
$postIncrement++
array_push($queue, $currentTime); is a function call
overhead: use $queue[] = $currentTime; instead
$currentTime + $executionTime is being calculated twice, calculate it once and store the result, then use that
I have several hosting accounts with different companies, and I'm trying to evaluate which one will run a stock Wordpress installation the fastest (without having to install wordpress on each of them first).
I found a php benchmarking script to try and determine which one would work best and I'm having strange results.
<?php
/*
##########################################################################
# PHP Benchmark Performance Script #
# © 2010 Code24 BV #
# #
# Author : Alessandro Torrisi #
# Company : Code24 BV, The Netherlands #
# Date : July 31, 2010 #
# version : 1.0 #
# License : Creative Commons CC-BY license #
# Website : http://www.php-benchmark-script.com #
# #
##########################################################################
*/
function test_Math($count = 140000) {
$time_start = microtime(true);
$mathFunctions = array("abs", "acos", "asin", "atan", "bindec", "floor", "exp", "sin", "tan", "pi", "is_finite", "is_nan", "sqrt");
foreach ($mathFunctions as $key => $function) {
if (!function_exists($function)) unset($mathFunctions[$key]);
}
for ($i=0; $i < $count; $i++) {
foreach ($mathFunctions as $function) {
$r = call_user_func_array($function, array($i));
}
}
return number_format(microtime(true) - $time_start, 3);
}
function test_StringManipulation($count = 130000) {
$time_start = microtime(true);
$stringFunctions = array("addslashes", "chunk_split", "metaphone", "strip_tags", "md5", "sha1", "strtoupper", "strtolower", "strrev", "strlen", "soundex", "ord");
foreach ($stringFunctions as $key => $function) {
if (!function_exists($function)) unset($stringFunctions[$key]);
}
$string = "the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog";
for ($i=0; $i < $count; $i++) {
foreach ($stringFunctions as $function) {
$r = call_user_func_array($function, array($string));
}
}
return number_format(microtime(true) - $time_start, 3);
}
function test_Loops($count = 19000000) {
$time_start = microtime(true);
for($i = 0; $i < $count; ++$i);
$i = 0; while($i < $count) ++$i;
return number_format(microtime(true) - $time_start, 3);
}
function test_IfElse($count = 9000000) {
$time_start = microtime(true);
for ($i=0; $i < $count; $i++) {
if ($i == -1) {
} elseif ($i == -2) {
} else if ($i == -3) {
}
}
return number_format(microtime(true) - $time_start, 3);
}
$total = 0;
$functions = get_defined_functions();
$line = str_pad("-",38,"-");
echo "<pre>$line\n|".str_pad("PHP BENCHMARK SCRIPT",36," ",STR_PAD_BOTH)."|\n$line\nStart : ".date("Y-m-d H:i:s")."\nServer : {$_SERVER['SERVER_NAME']}#{$_SERVER['SERVER_ADDR']}\nPHP version : ".PHP_VERSION."\nPlatform : ".PHP_OS. "\n$line\n";
foreach ($functions['user'] as $user) {
if (preg_match('/^test_/', $user)) {
$total += $result = $user();
echo str_pad($user, 25) . " : " . $result ." sec.\n";
}
}
echo str_pad("-", 38, "-") . "\n" . str_pad("Total time:", 25) . " : " . $total ." sec.</pre>";
?>
Now on one server I'm getting an average of about 10, and on another 15 (so far so good), but on a third, the average is like 45 seconds. It's strange because that server has a working Wordpress install that runs pretty quickly (about 1.5 second page load times).
My question is, why might this server be showing me such high results, but seems to be working fine? And second, does this mean that this isn't a good method to determine which host would ultimately run Wordpress the fastest (all other things being equal)? And if this isn't a good method, do you have any suggestions?
You need to actually install wordpress to know for sure.
I would just edit the index.php file of each and require this file.
<?php
/**
* Front to the WordPress application. This file doesn't do anything, but loads
* wp-blog-header.php which does and tells WordPress to load the theme.
*
* #package WordPress
*/
require('benchmark.php');
/**
* Tells WordPress to load the WordPress theme and output it.
*
* #var bool
*/
define('WP_USE_THEMES', true);
/** Loads the WordPress Environment and Template */
require('./wp-blog-header.php');
I've done benchmarking for a while and this will give you good information about the current memory usage and processing speed of the server. You could even hit the server with httperf a few hundred times to get TRUE server ability.
You definitely have to install wordpress in order to analyze the performance in each one. In fact, you should have the complete wordpress environment installed in all three, with this I mean, all wordpress plugins should be installed, because they could have a big impact in performance. Also apache, mysql and php should be tuned the same in all three servers.
Once you do that, you can use jMeter (http://jmeter.apache.org/) to really test your server, and see how many requests can your server serve.
How to find my code execution time?
I am using the below snippet.
I am not happy with that?
list ($msec, $sec) = explode(' ', microtime());
$microtime = (float)$msec + (float)$sec;
I have created this simple class for that:
class timer
{
private $start_time = NULL;
private $end_time = NULL;
private function getmicrotime()
{
list($usec, $sec) = explode(" ", microtime());
return ((float)$usec + (float)$sec);
}
function start()
{
$this->start_time = $this->getmicrotime();
}
function stop()
{
$this->end_time = $this->getmicrotime();
}
function result()
{
if (is_null($this->start_time))
{
exit('Timer: start method not called !');
return false;
}
else if (is_null($this->end_time))
{
exit('Timer: stop method not called !');
return false;
}
return round(($this->end_time - $this->start_time), 4);
}
# an alias of result function
function time()
{
$this->result();
}
}
To time scripts, you can put it to use like:
$timer = new timer();
$timer->start();
// your code now
$timer->stop();
// show result now
echo $timer->result();
I'm using following class to determine time elapsed:
class StopWatch {
private static $total;
public static function start() {
self::$total = microtime(true);
}
public static function elapsed() {
return microtime(true) - self::$total;
}
}
You just have to call StopWatch::start at the beginning and StopWatch::elapsed whenever you want to know how much time elapsed from the start.
You can use the parameter of microtime :
$microtime = microtime(true);
If you want to profile your script, use XDebug + {K,Win}Cachegrind, these are free tools that provide a visual map of your code's execution.
If you want the actual processor timings:
$rUsage = getrusage();
echo 'User time = '.sprintf('%.4f',($rUsage['ru_utime.tv_sec'] * 1e6 + $rUsage['ru_utime.tv_usec']) / 1e6).' seconds';
echo 'system time = '.sprintf('%.4f',($rUsage['ru_stime.tv_sec'] * 1e6 + $rUsage['ru_stime.tv_usec']) / 1e6).' seconds';
In LINUX:
For one simple code:
time php -r "echo 'hello';"
output:
hello
real 0m0.095s
user 0m0.033s
sys 0m0.055s
For a php file:
time php hello.php
output:
hello
real 0m0.073s
user 0m0.025s
sys 0m0.047s
Thanks for sharing your information.
The below one also LITTLE BIT near of my solution.
function microtime_float() {
list($usec, $sec) = explode(" ", microtime());
return ((float)$usec + (float)$sec);
}
$time_start = microtime_float();
SOURCE CODE
$time_end = microtime_float();
$time = round($time_end - $time_start, 4);
echo "Last uncached content render took $time seconds";
If running Unix, take a look at the time command:
<?php
// Randomize sleeping time
usleep(mt_rand(100, 10000));
// As of PHP 5.4.0, REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT is available in the $_SERVER superglobal array.
// It contains the timestamp of the start of the request with microsecond precision.
$time = microtime(true) - $_SERVER["REQUEST_TIME_FLOAT"];
echo "Did nothing in $time seconds\n";
?>