##// END OF EJS Templates
util: introduce timer()...
util: introduce timer() As documented for timeit.default_timer, there are better timers available for performance measures on some platforms. These timers don't have a set epoch, and thus are only useful for interval measurements, but have higher resolution, and thus get you a better measurement overall. Use the same selection logic as Python's timeit.default_timer. This is a platform clock on Python 2 and early Python 3, and time.perf_counter on Python 3.3 and later (where time.perf_counter is introduced as the best timer to use).

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hgclient.h
30 lines | 846 B | text/x-c | CLexer
/*
* A command server client that uses Unix domain socket
*
* Copyright (c) 2011 Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org>
*
* This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
* GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
*/
#ifndef HGCLIENT_H_
#define HGCLIENT_H_
#include <sys/types.h>
struct hgclient_tag_;
typedef struct hgclient_tag_ hgclient_t;
hgclient_t *hgc_open(const char *sockname);
void hgc_close(hgclient_t *hgc);
pid_t hgc_peerpgid(const hgclient_t *hgc);
pid_t hgc_peerpid(const hgclient_t *hgc);
const char **hgc_validate(hgclient_t *hgc, const char *const args[],
size_t argsize);
int hgc_runcommand(hgclient_t *hgc, const char *const args[], size_t argsize);
void hgc_attachio(hgclient_t *hgc);
void hgc_setenv(hgclient_t *hgc, const char *const envp[]);
#endif /* HGCLIENT_H_ */