For some testing I'm doing I need a C# function that takes around 10 seconds to execute. It will be called from an ASPX page, but I need the function to eat up CPU time on the server, not rendering time. A slow query into the Northwinds database would work, or some very slow calculations. Any ideas?
6 Answers
Try to calculate nth prime number to simulate CPU intensive work -
public void Slow()
{
long nthPrime = FindPrimeNumber(1000); //set higher value for more time
}
public long FindPrimeNumber(int n)
{
int count=0;
long a = 2;
while(count<n)
{
long b = 2;
int prime = 1;// to check if found a prime
while(b * b <= a)
{
if(a % b == 0)
{
prime = 0;
break;
}
b++;
}
if(prime > 0)
{
count++;
}
a++;
}
return (--a);
}
How much time it will take will depend on the hardware configuration of the system.
So try with input as 1000 then either increase input value or decrease it.
This function will simulate CPU intensive work.
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2Above function clearly gives some real task to execute instead of looping in a while loop. I dont know why fellow developer downvoted without any comment/doubt/clarification. Any further discussion on this would really help community to tackel similar problems. :) Nov 21, 2012 at 16:18
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Your function is quite neat. I validated it here with some random numbers: primes.utm.edu/nthprime/index.php#nth– Avatar33Apr 2, 2014 at 6:27
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6
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This function is great! It allowed me to test having multiple threads crunching the CPU at the same time for some proof of concept Jul 18, 2018 at 23:35
Arguably the simplest such function is this:
public void Slow()
{
var end = DateTime.Now + TimeSpan.FromSeconds(10);
while (DateTime.Now < end)
/* nothing here */ ;
}
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This uses a lot of IO to the Kernel, it does not necessary hammer the CPU Mar 28 at 10:59
You can use a 'while' loop to make the CPU busy.
void CpuIntensive()
{
var startDt = DateTime.Now;
while (true)
{
if ((DateTime.Now - startDt).TotalSeconds >= 10)
break;
}
}
This method will stay in the while loop for 10 seconds. Also, if you run this method in multiple threads, you can make all CPU cores busy.
For maxing out multiple cores I adjusted @Motti's answer a bit, and got the following:
Enumerable
.Range(1, Environment.ProcessorCount) // replace with lesser number if 100% usage is not what you are after.
.AsParallel()
.Select(i => {
var end = DateTime.Now + TimeSpan.FromSeconds(10);
while (DateTime.Now < end)
/*nothing here */ ;
return i;
})
.ToList(); // ToList makes the query execute.
This is CPU intensive on a single thread/CPU, and lasts 10 seconds.
var endTime = DateTime.Now.AddSeconds(10);
while(true) {
if (DateTime.Now >= endTime)
break;
}
As a side note, you should not normally do this.
Just use
Thread.Sleep(number of milliseconds here);
You will have to add using System.Threading;
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They you could just try calculating the factorial of a really large number– user2891129May 24, 2017 at 14:58
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Had you proposed that as an answer instead, then your answer wouldn't be entirely incorrect. You choose not to do so.– ServyMay 24, 2017 at 14:59
not rendering time
. Do you mean you want the server to run at 100% while your application is not blocked in code?