How can I get time in milliseconds in a Bash shell script?
17 Answers
date +"%T.%N"
returns the current time with nanoseconds.06:46:41.431857000
date +"%T.%6N"
returns the current time with nanoseconds rounded to the first 6 digits, which is microseconds.06:47:07.183172
date +"%T.%3N"
returns the current time with nanoseconds rounded to the first 3 digits, which is milliseconds.06:47:42.773
In general, every field of the date
command's format can be given an optional field width.
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4
date +%s%N
returns the number of seconds + current nanoseconds.
Therefore, echo $(($(date +%s%N)/1000000))
is what you need.
Example:
$ echo $(($(date +%s%N)/1000000))
1535546718115
date +%s
returns the number of seconds since the epoch, if that's useful.
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114
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41Question is asking for Linux command. @alper's answer works fine for date command with GNU coreutils. GNUtize your OSX: Install and Use GNU Command Line Tools on Mac OS X– caligariFeb 21, 2014 at 7:58
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96
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19On OSX you need to install the GNU version of date as part of
coreutils
using MacPorts or Homebrew - then use thegdate
command. See this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/9804966/…– PierzJun 23, 2015 at 22:10 -
2Although date +%s%3N seems to be easier or better, but using it in some other offset calculation caused the timestamp to be reduced by 1 millisecond! But this solution worked perfect with offset calculation– ArsinuxApr 20, 2018 at 12:59
Nano is 10−9 and milli 10−3. Hence, we can use the three first characters of nanoseconds to get the milliseconds:
date +%s%3N
From man date
:
%N nanoseconds (000000000..999999999)
%s seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
Source: Server Fault's How do I get the current Unix time in milliseconds in Bash?.
On OS X, where date
does not support the %N
flag, I recommend installing coreutils
using Homebrew. This will give you access to a command called gdate
that will behave as date
does on Linux systems.
brew install coreutils
For a more "native" experience, you can always add this to your .bash_aliases
:
alias date='gdate'
Then execute
$ date +%s%N
Here is a portable hack for Linux for getting time in milliseconds:
#!/bin/sh
read up rest </proc/uptime; t1="${up%.*}${up#*.}"
sleep 3 # your command
read up rest </proc/uptime; t2="${up%.*}${up#*.}"
millisec=$(( 10*(t2-t1) ))
echo $millisec
The output is:
3010
This is a very cheap operation, which works with shell internals and procfs.
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1I have now idea why I didn't find this sooner. This should be the accepted and perfect answer. I believed for so long there was no way to get sub-second accurate time in a posix shell (without involving a slow interpreter or hoping for date with %N support).– LinusCDENov 27 at 13:05
Pure bash solution
Since bash
5.0 (released on 7 Jan 2019) you can use the built-in variable EPOCHREALTIME
which contains the seconds since the epoch, including decimal places down to micro-second (μs) precision (echo $EPOCHREALTIME
prints something like 1547624774.371210
in English, or 1547624774,371210
in German, French, etc.). By removing the decimal separator and the last three places we get milliseconds:
Either use
(( t = ${EPOCHREALTIME/[^0-9]/} / 1000 ))
or
t=${EPOCHREALTIME/[^0-9]/} # remove the decimal separator (s → µs)
t=${t%???} # remove the last three digits (µs → ms)
Either way t
will be something like 1547624774371
.
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FYI the decimal separator is localized, so on my system in French, I'm getting
1695071065,749507
. You can force a period withLC_ALL=C
.– wjandreaSep 18 at 21:04 -
1@wjandrea Thank you for the hint. Very good point! I found
LC_ALL
to be complicated here, because we either have to use it in a subshell (which complicates settingt
) or restore it manually. Both are not ideal. But I found a short general solution and updated the answer.– SocowiSep 18 at 21:23
The other answers are probably sufficient in most cases but I thought I'd add my two cents as I ran into a problem on a BusyBox system.
The system in question did not support the %N
format option and doesn't have no Python or Perl interpreter.
After much head scratching, we (thanks Dave!) came up with this:
adjtimex | awk '/(time.tv_sec|time.tv_usec):/ { printf("%06d", $2) }'
It extracts the seconds and microseconds from the output of adjtimex
(normally used to set options for the system clock) and prints them without new lines (so they get glued together). Note that the microseconds field has to be pre-padded with zeros, but this doesn't affect the seconds field which is longer than six digits anyway. From this it should be trivial to convert microseconds to milliseconds.
If you need a trailing new line (maybe because it looks better) then try
adjtimex | awk '/(time.tv_sec|time.tv_usec):/ { printf("%06d", $2) }' && printf "\n"
Also note that this requires adjtimex
and awk
to be available. If not then with BusyBox you can point to them locally with:
ln -s /bin/busybox ./adjtimex
ln -s /bin/busybox ./awk
And then call the above as
./adjtimex | ./awk '/(time.tv_sec|time.tv_usec):/ { printf("%06d", $2) }'
Or of course you could put them in your PATH
EDIT:
The above worked on my BusyBox device. On Ubuntu I tried the same thing and realised that adjtimex
has different versions. On Ubuntu this worked to output the time in seconds with decimal places to microseconds (including a trailing new line)
sudo apt-get install adjtimex
adjtimex -p | awk '/raw time:/ { print $6 }'
I wouldn't do this on Ubuntu though. I would use date +%s%N
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1Wow, great alternative! Indeed your command works, but I don't have a clue why. Where do I find a documentation for the awk command?! How in hell did you find out how to build the string to extract the desired information out of the adjtimex output?– SatriaOct 26, 2018 at 23:28
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1If there is a possiblity to compile Busybox yourself, enabling "CONFIG_FEATURE_DATE_NANO" would be another approach. Aug 10, 2020 at 11:21
date
command didnt provide milli seconds on OS X, so used an alias from python
millis(){ python -c "import time; print(int(time.time()*1000))"; }
OR
alias millis='python -c "import time; print(int(time.time()*1000))"'
EDIT: following the comment from @CharlesDuffy. Forking any child process takes extra time.
$ time date +%s%N
1597103627N
date +%s%N 0.00s user 0.00s system 63% cpu 0.006 total
Python is still improving it's VM start time, and it is not as fast as ahead-of-time compiled code (such as date
).
On my machine, it took about 30ms - 60ms (that is 5x-10x of 6ms taken by date
)
$ time python -c "import time; print(int(time.time()*1000))"
1597103899460
python -c "import time; print(int(time.time()*1000))" 0.03s user 0.01s system 83% cpu 0.053 total
I figured awk
is lightweight than python
, so awk
takes in the range of 6ms to 12ms (i.e. 1x to 2x of date):
$ time awk '@load "time"; BEGIN{print int(1000 * gettimeofday())}'
1597103729525
awk '@load "time"; BEGIN{print int(1000 * gettimeofday())}' 0.00s user 0.00s system 74% cpu 0.010 total
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7...however, once you've
fork()
ed off a separate process,exec
ed your Python interpreter, let it load its libraries / otherwise initialize, write its result, and exit, that result will no longer be accurate. Apr 30, 2019 at 0:46
To show date with time and time-zone
date +"%d-%m-%Y %T.%N %Z"
Output : 22-04-2020 18:01:35.970289239 IST
I just wanted to add to Alper's answer what I had to do to get this stuff working:
On Mac, you'll need brew install coreutils
, so we can use gdate
. Otherwise on Linux, it's just date
. And this function will help you time commands without having to create temporary files or anything:
function timeit() {
start=`gdate +%s%N`
bash -c $1
end=`gdate +%s%N`
runtime=$(((end-start)/1000000000.0))
echo " seconds"
}
And you can use it with a string:
timeit 'tsc --noEmit'
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1I like this solution but I'm more interested in millis. I ported this function to my .bashrc in ubuntu:
function timeit () { start=$(date +%s%N); $*; end=$(date +%s%N); runtime=$(((end-start)/1000000)); echo "$runtime ms" }
– UluaivJan 30, 2020 at 12:45
When you use GNU AWK since version 4.1, you can load the time library and do:
$ awk '@load "time"; BEGIN{printf "%.6f", gettimeofday()}'
This will print the current time in seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00 in sub second accuracy.
the_time = gettimeofday()
Return the time in seconds that has elapsed since 1970-01-01 UTC as a floating-point value. If the time is unavailable on this platform, return-1
and setERRNO
. The returned time should have sub-second precision, but the actual precision may vary based on the platform. If the standard Cgettimeofday()
system call is available on this platform, then it simply returns the value. Otherwise, if on MS-Windows, it tries to useGetSystemTimeAsFileTime()
.source: GNU awk manual
On Linux systems, the standard C function getimeofday()
returns the time in microsecond accuracy.
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2specifically GAWK, right? I tried it on regular AWK, and it failed. Nov 25, 2020 at 2:27
I want to generate value from bash and use that value in Java code to convert back to date(java.util).
Following command works for me to generate the value in bash file:
date +%s000
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1Fine. I recommend we don’t use
java.util.Date
, though. That class is poorly designed and long outdated. Instead useInstant
from java.time, the modern Java date and time API. Then you need justdate %+s
in bash andInstant.ofEpochSecond()
in Java. Jun 29, 2021 at 12:47
Perl can be used for this, even on exotic platforms like AIX. Example:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use Time::HiRes qw(gettimeofday);
my ($t_sec, $usec) = gettimeofday ();
my $msec= int ($usec/1000);
my ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) =
localtime ($t_sec);
printf "%04d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d %03d\n",
1900+$year, 1+$mon, $mday, $hour, $min, $sec, $msec;
A Python script like this:
import time
cur_time = int(time.time()*1000)
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4this will not return the number of milliseconds, this will return the number of seconds expressed in milliseconds. Everything will be $SECONDS000– kiliancNov 20, 2015 at 19:08
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3
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1@jlliagre: But is the actual time resolution better than 16-17 ms (1/60 second) or not? Nov 18, 2019 at 13:15
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1Yes, Python's
time.time()
returns a float to 6 decimal places, at least on macOS. Dec 18, 2019 at 3:49
To print decimal seconds:
start=$(($(date +%s%N)/1000000)) \
&& sleep 2 \
&& end=$(($(date +%s%N)/1000000)) \
&& runtime=$((end - start))
divisor=1000 \
&& foo=$(printf "%s.%s" $(( runtime / divisor )) $(( runtime % divisor ))) \
&& printf "runtime %s\n" $foo # in bash integer cannot cast to float
Output: runtime 2.3
What about using the simple BASH intrinsic variable EPOCHREALTIME?
date +%s.%N
would give you nanoseconds, can you work with that?date -Ins