I have this script to run through a bunch of queries and writes the results and runtime to a txt file.
This works ok for small data sets, but for larger longer queries I get a lot of
This stopwatch is already running. messages.
Here is the relevant code
Stopwatch timer = Stopwatch.createUnstarted();
for(String query: qrys) {
try {
timer.start();
resQryES = methodforQrys(url, query); // query result is saved in the iterable Map resQryES
timer.stop();
out.println("Query: " + query);
out.println("Query execution time: " + timer);
out.println("Query Results : " + resQryES);
} catch (Exception ex) {
System.out.println(ex.getMessage());
}
}
out.close();
I'm thinking perhaps its because the queries are executing in parallel , so a stopwatch is still running - so it works with smaller datasets as queries are so fast it doesn't run any in parallel.
Should I try using a different loop type where I use indexes, and create a matching map/array of timer values so none get mixed up ...
methodforQrys
start up a new thread?Stopwatch timer = Stopwatch.createUnstarted();
inside thefor
loop?Stopwatch.createStarted();