/* * Copyright 2011 Google Inc. * * Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file. */ #include "SysTimer_windows.h" #include static ULONGLONG win_cpu_time() { FILETIME createTime; FILETIME exitTime; FILETIME usrTime; FILETIME sysTime; if (0 == GetProcessTimes(GetCurrentProcess(), &createTime, &exitTime, &sysTime, &usrTime)) { return 0; } ULARGE_INTEGER start_cpu_sys; ULARGE_INTEGER start_cpu_usr; start_cpu_sys.LowPart = sysTime.dwLowDateTime; start_cpu_sys.HighPart = sysTime.dwHighDateTime; start_cpu_usr.LowPart = usrTime.dwLowDateTime; start_cpu_usr.HighPart = usrTime.dwHighDateTime; return start_cpu_sys.QuadPart + start_cpu_usr.QuadPart; } void SysTimer::startCpu() { fStartCpu = win_cpu_time(); } double SysTimer::endCpu() { ULONGLONG end_cpu = win_cpu_time(); return static_cast(end_cpu - fStartCpu) / 10000.0L; } // On recent Intel chips (roughly, "has Core or Atom in its name") __rdtsc will always tick // at the CPU's maximum rate, even while power management clocks the CPU up and down. // That's great, because it makes measuring wall time super simple. void SysTimer::startWall() { fStartWall = __rdtsc(); } double SysTimer::endWall() { unsigned __int64 end = __rdtsc(); // This seems to, weirdly, give the CPU frequency in kHz. That's exactly what we want! LARGE_INTEGER freq_khz; QueryPerformanceFrequency(&freq_khz); return static_cast(end - fStartWall) / static_cast(freq_khz.QuadPart); }