36

I'm wondering what the most accurate way of converting a big nanoseconds value is to milliseconds and nanoseconds, with an upper limit on the nanoseconds of 999999. The goal is to combine the nanoseconds and milliseconds values to ensure the maximum resolution possible with the limit given. This is for comparability with the sleep / wait methods and some other external library that gives out large nanosecond values.

Edit: my code looks like the following now:

while (hasNS3Events()) {                                
    long delayNS = getNS3EventTSDelay();
    long delayMS = 0;
    if (delayNS <= 0) runOneNS3Event();
    else {
        try {
            if (delayNS > 999999) {
                delayMS = delayNS / 1000000;
                delayNS = delayNS % 1000000;
            }

            EVTLOCK.wait(delayMS, (int)delayNS);
        } catch (InterruptedException e) {

        }
    }
}

Cheers, Chris

1
  • 1
    it is worth noting that this time is a hint to the OS to wait at least this long. In Windows and Linux, the delay is usually within 2 ms, but it can be much long. IMHO You shouldn't worry about the nano-second timing as you are highly unlikely to see any difference. Nov 29, 2010 at 8:31

4 Answers 4

119

For an ever shorter conversion using java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit, equivalent to what Shawn wrote above, you can use:

    long durationInMs = TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS.toMillis(delayNS);
1
  • 5
    As others mentioned , this truncates the result. So 3.9999 would be 3
    – Yeikel
    Mar 5, 2019 at 21:02
105

Why not use the built in Java methods. The TimeUnit is part of the concurrent package so built exactly for you needs

  long durationInMs = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.convert(delayNS, TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS);
2
  • 8
    This method truncate to 0 if, for example, 999999 nanoseconds was used
    – Gilian
    Apr 29, 2016 at 0:02
  • 1
    This does not work and also does not answer the question. The question was to convert to millis AND nanos, wchich you need for example for the Thread.sleep(millis, nanos) call. Mar 6, 2017 at 17:51
29

Just take the divmod of it with 1000000.

3
  • Could you check that the pasted code is correct? Cheers :D One thing I'm weary about is the upper limit of 999999 instead of 1000000 (so the Javadoc says). Could that cause any problem? Nov 29, 2010 at 3:44
  • 2
    The math is correct. The check isn't strictly necessary, and it smells like a magic number. Nov 29, 2010 at 3:48
  • 4
    An integer modulus by n will always result in a remainder with the upper limit of n - 1. Nov 29, 2010 at 3:49
0

The TimeUnit.timedWait(Object obj, long timeout) is what you should use. It does this calculation for you and then calls wait on the object.

https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/TimeUnit.html#timedWait(java.lang.Object,%20long)

The implementation from Java 8 (to see that it is computing the ms and ns based off nanoseconds):

public void timedWait(Object obj, long timeout)
        throws InterruptedException {
    if (timeout > 0) {
        long ms = toMillis(timeout);
        int ns = excessNanos(timeout, ms);
        obj.wait(ms, ns);
    }
}

So you would use

TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS.timedWait(EVTLOCK, delayNS);

There are also sleep and timedJoin methods that are similar.

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