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I have a unit of work I want to have occur every N seconds. If I use the simplistic

minute = 60
while True:
    doSomeWork()
    time.sleep(minute)

depending on how long doSomeWork() takes, the real loop period will be one minute plus that time. If the time taken by doSomeWork() is not deterministic, then the period of the work is even more unpredictable.

What I'd like to do is something like this

minute = 60
start = time.process_time() #? i can imagine using this, but maybe there's something better?
while True:
    doSomeWork()
    start += minute
    sleep_until(start) #? this is the function I'm in search of

(I'm using python 3.3)

Update:

On Linux/OSX, I can use an itimer from signal to do what I'm looking for:

import signal
import datetime

def tick(_, __):
    # doSomeWork()
    print(datetime.datetime.now())

signal.setitimer(signal.ITIMER_REAL, 60, 60)
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, tick)

while True:
    signal.pause()

It looks like the tulip stuff being developed for python3.4 will also make this easy to do.

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1 Answer 1

5

sleep_until(timestamp) is basically time.sleep(timestamp - time.time()).

Your code is fine actually (making sure you don't pass negative times to sleep is still a good idea though):

import time

minute = 60
next_time = time.time()
while True:
    doSomeWork()
    next_time += minute
    sleep_time = next_time - time.time()
    if sleep_time > 0:
        time.sleep(sleep_time)

 

I personally would make a generator of 60-second-spaced timestamps and use it:

import time
import itertools

minute = 60

for next_time in itertools.count(time.time() + minute, minute):
    doSomeWork()
    sleep_time = next_time - time.time()
    if sleep_time > 0:
        time.sleep(sleep_time)
12
  • Won't this still introduce some skew (albeit less)? The expression that computes the time burnt up already, plus the time it takes to queue the remaining sleep, will burn up some (small but) unaccounted for time. Mar 17, 2013 at 0:09
  • How much accuracy do you need? time.time() - start takes 100 ns on my machine. You'll have to doSomeWork 10 million times for a second to accumulate. Mar 17, 2013 at 0:13
  • And if you're doing this over and over again, you could even account for the amount of time that time.time takes (on average) by using timeit.
    – mgilson
    Mar 17, 2013 at 0:14
  • @PavelAnossov I guess it's the principle of the thing. I've done that idiom in many other environments (languages/libraries). Once you can do that, you don't ever have to care about how long that part takes and do the math of how much matters. Mar 17, 2013 at 0:16
  • 3
    You probably want to skip sleep if the next_schedule is before the current time - which will happen if doSomeWork takes over a minute. And since you're using an itertool, you can use for instead of while: for next_time in scnedule: if next_time >= time.time(): sleep(next_time - time.time()) ... Mar 17, 2013 at 0:26

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