As described in SQLite Documentation one could use:
sqlite> .timer ON
or add the same command to ~/.sqliterc
When this is done, the SQLite shell responds with user and sys components of CPU Time for every query executed:
user@machine% sqlite3 test.db
-- Loading resources from ~/.sqliterc
SQLite version 3.7.14 2012-09-03 15:42:36
Enter ".help" for instructions
Enter SQL statements terminated with a ";"
sqlite> select count(*) from my_table;
count(*)
10143270
CPU Time: user 0.199970 sys 1.060838
While I found this answer providing evidence for the units of time being in seconds, I am having a hard time agreeing with it. When timing the execution of a query using a stopwatch, I find almost every query to be taking longer than what the shell times it as taking. For example, the query timed in the above example approximately took a little over 1 minute and 54 seconds in real time. What is the reason for this discrepancy?
So once again, what are the units? What are user and sys components?
I am running SQLite 3.7.14 on a Debian GNU/Linux 6.0.6 (squeeze) distribution accessible over NFS.