etime, dtime - return elapsed time
real function etime (time) real time(2)
real function dtime (time) real time(2)
These functions return elapsed time in seconds.
Versions of etime and dtime used by f95 use the system's low resolution clock by default, the resolution of which is one hundreth of a second. However, if the program is run under the SunOS utility ptime, ( /usr/proc/bin/ptime), etime and dtime use the high resolution clock.
NOTE: The very first call to etime or dtime may be inaccurate.
If there is an error:
Argument elements time(1) and time(2) are undefined
Function return value = -1.0
If there is no error:
Argument: user time in time(1) and system time in time(2)
Function return value: sum of time(1) and time(2)
dtime returns the elapsed time since the last call to dtime.
For dtime, the elapsed time is:
On the first call, elapsed time since the start of execution
On the second and subsequent calls, the elapsed time since the last call to dtime
For single processor, the time used by the CPU
For multiple processors, the sum of times for all the CPUs (not useful, use etime) Note: Do not call dtime from within a parallelized loop.
etime returns the elapsed time since the start of execution.
For etime, the elapsed time is:
For single processor: the CPU time for the calling process
For multiple processors: the wall-clock time while running your program Note: time(1) contains the wall clock time; time(2) is 0.0.
etime determines single versus multiple processing depending on whether the environment variables PARALLEL or OMP_NUM_THREADS are:
then the current run is single processor.
then the current run is multiple processor.
then the results are unpredictable.
libfsu.a, libfsu.so
Fortran User's Guide
Fortran Library Reference