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In our logfiles we store response times for the requests. What's the most efficient way to calculate the median response time, the "75/90/95% of requests were served in less than N time" numbers etc? (I guess a variation of my question is: What's the best way to calculate the median and standard deviation of a bunch stream of numbers).

The best I came up with was just reading all the numbers, ordering them and then picking out the numbers, but that seems really goofy. Isn't there a smarter way?

We use Perl, but solutions for any language might be helpful.

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  • Show a sample of your logfile
    – xxxxxxx
    Sep 29, 2009 at 7:56
  • hi spx2 - our logs are just line-terminated JSON structures, where one of the elements is a list of various time counters (actual time, cpu time, etc). I don't think it's too interesting; we'll do a map-reduce type thing to pull out list of response times (by page type, etc). Sep 29, 2009 at 8:07
  • I would have thought with your magic that 110% of the requests were served before they even left the requestor. :) Sep 29, 2009 at 23:57
  • Though old: use a tool that's made for this: R. There are R-interfaces for perl, like metacpan.org/pod/Statistics::R . Vice versa seems not to be supported: well, prepare files by perl and process them by R ...
    – MS-SPO
    Sep 19, 2023 at 15:45

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