| ################## |
| Benchmarking Class |
| ################## |
| |
| CodeIgniter has a Benchmarking class that is always active, enabling the |
| time difference between any two marked points to be calculated. |
| |
| .. note:: This class is initialized automatically by the system so there |
| is no need to do it manually. |
| |
| In addition, the benchmark is always started the moment the framework is |
| invoked, and ended by the output class right before sending the final |
| view to the browser, enabling a very accurate timing of the entire |
| system execution to be shown. |
| |
| .. contents:: Table of Contents |
| |
| Using the Benchmark Class |
| ========================= |
| |
| The Benchmark class can be used within your |
| :doc:`controllers </general/controllers>`, |
| :doc:`views </general/views>`, or your :doc:`models </general/models>`. |
| The process for usage is this: |
| |
| #. Mark a start point |
| #. Mark an end point |
| #. Run the "elapsed time" function to view the results |
| |
| Here's an example using real code:: |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('code_start'); |
| |
| // Some code happens here |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('code_end'); |
| |
| echo $this->benchmark->elapsed_time('code_start', 'code_end'); |
| |
| .. note:: The words "code_start" and "code_end" are arbitrary. They |
| are simply words used to set two markers. You can use any words you |
| want, and you can set multiple sets of markers. Consider this example:: |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('dog'); |
| |
| // Some code happens here |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('cat'); |
| |
| // More code happens here |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('bird'); |
| |
| echo $this->benchmark->elapsed_time('dog', 'cat'); |
| echo $this->benchmark->elapsed_time('cat', 'bird'); |
| echo $this->benchmark->elapsed_time('dog', 'bird'); |
| |
| |
| Profiling Your Benchmark Points |
| =============================== |
| |
| If you want your benchmark data to be available to the |
| :doc:`Profiler </general/profiling>` all of your marked points must |
| be set up in pairs, and each mark point name must end with _start and |
| _end. Each pair of points must otherwise be named identically. Example:: |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('my_mark_start'); |
| |
| // Some code happens here... |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('my_mark_end'); |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('another_mark_start'); |
| |
| // Some more code happens here... |
| |
| $this->benchmark->mark('another_mark_end'); |
| |
| Please read the :doc:`Profiler page </general/profiling>` for more |
| information. |
| |
| Displaying Total Execution Time |
| =============================== |
| |
| If you would like to display the total elapsed time from the moment |
| CodeIgniter starts to the moment the final output is sent to the |
| browser, simply place this in one of your view templates:: |
| |
| <?php echo $this->benchmark->elapsed_time();?> |
| |
| You'll notice that it's the same function used in the examples above to |
| calculate the time between two point, except you are **not** using any |
| parameters. When the parameters are absent, CodeIgniter does not stop |
| the benchmark until right before the final output is sent to the |
| browser. It doesn't matter where you use the function call, the timer |
| will continue to run until the very end. |
| |
| An alternate way to show your elapsed time in your view files is to use |
| this pseudo-variable, if you prefer not to use the pure PHP:: |
| |
| {elapsed_time} |
| |
| .. note:: If you want to benchmark anything within your controller |
| functions you must set your own start/end points. |
| |
| Displaying Memory Consumption |
| ============================= |
| |
| If your PHP installation is configured with --enable-memory-limit, you |
| can display the amount of memory consumed by the entire system using the |
| following code in one of your view file:: |
| |
| <?php echo $this->benchmark->memory_usage();?> |
| |
| .. note:: This function can only be used in your view files. The consumption |
| will reflect the total memory used by the entire app. |
| |
| An alternate way to show your memory usage in your view files is to use |
| this pseudo-variable, if you prefer not to use the pure PHP:: |
| |
| {memory_usage} |
| |