So, I know I can get current time in milliseconds using JavaScript. But, is it possible to get the current time in nanoseconds instead?
8 Answers
Achieve microsecond accuracy in most browsers using:
window.performance.now()
See also:
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1The 'webkit' prefix was removed around Chrome 24. developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/…– JohannCommented Feb 5, 2014 at 20:35
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3Note that window.performance.now() returns the time relative to the navigationStart of the page rather than to the UNIX epoch. See my answer below for code snippet for current time.– RonenzCommented Nov 2, 2016 at 0:53
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23Yet, microseconds are not nanoseconds, so
performance.now()
is useless here. Commented Mar 29, 2017 at 8:27 -
2Apparently browsers don’t actually return nanosecond precision due to security considerations, according to the hint on the MDN site you linked: “[B]rowsers currently round the results to varying degrees. […] Some browsers may also slightly randomize the timestamp.” Commented Feb 3, 2020 at 19:35
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4"The performance.now() method returns a DOMHighResTimeStamp, measured in milliseconds", according to the link you posted. Milliseconds are not nanoseconds.– aviskCommented Aug 28, 2021 at 17:23
Building on Jeffery's answer, to get an absolute time-stamp (as the OP wanted) the code would be:
var TS = window.performance.timing.navigationStart + window.performance.now();
result is in millisecond units but is a floating-point value reportedly "accurate to one thousandth of a millisecond".
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7WARNING
performance.timing.navigationStart
has been deprecated. Commented Apr 30, 2020 at 16:40
Milliseconds since the UNIX epoch, with the microseconds resolution.
performance.timing.navigationStart
has been deprecated! Use the following instead:
(performance.now() + performance.timeOrigin)
Relevant quotes from the specification
This specification defines an API that provides the time origin, and current time in sub-millisecond resolution, such that it is not subject to system clock skew or adjustments.
The
timeOrigin
attribute MUST return aDOMHighResTimeStamp
representing the high resolution time of the time origin timestamp for the relevant global object of thePerformance
object.The time origin timestamp is the high resolution time value at which time origin is zero.
The time origin is the time value from which time is measured
The
now()
method MUST return the current high resolution time.The current high resolution time is the high resolution time from the time origin to the present time (typically called “now”).
Note that actually it is not that accurate for security reasons (to prevent side-channel attacks)
This specification defines an API that provides sub-millisecond time resolution, which is more accurate than the previously available millisecond resolution exposed by
DOMTimeStamp
. However, even without this new API an attacker may be able to obtain high-resolution estimates through repeat execution and statistical analysis. To ensure that the new API does not significantly improve the accuracy or speed of such attacks, the minimum resolution of theDOMHighResTimeStamp
type should be inaccurate enough to prevent attacks: the current minimum recommended resolution is no less than 5 microseconds and, where necessary, should be set higher by the User Agent to address privacy and security concerns due to architecture or software constraints, or other considerations.
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2
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Maybe you should mention that it returns using decimals. So it is still milliseconds, so we don't have to go through that error.– mjsCommented Oct 13, 2020 at 11:03
In Server side environments like Node.js you can use the following function to get time in nanosecond
function getNanoSecTime() {
var hrTime = process.hrtime();
return hrTime[0] * 1000000000 + hrTime[1];
}
Also get micro seconds in a similar way as well:
function getMicSecTime() {
var hrTime = process.hrtime();
return hrTime[0] * 1000000 + parseInt(hrTime[1] / 1000);
}
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7This does NOT return the CURRENT timestamp when using Node 7.4.0 and 7.5.0. Commented Feb 17, 2017 at 3:44
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4I happened to see this in api of
process.hrtime
: "These times are relative to an arbitrary time in the past, and not related to the time of day and therefore not subject to clock drift. The primary use is for measuring performance between intervals".– CaliosCommented Mar 15, 2019 at 2:53
Yes! Try the excellent sazze's nano-time
let now = require('nano-time');
now(); // '1476742925219947761' (returns as string due to JS limitation)
No. There is not a chance you will get nanosecond accuracy at the JavaScript layer.
If you're trying to benchmark some very quick operation, put it in a loop that runs it a few thousand times.
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2+1 ...and why would you want to? If it needs to be that precise it should probably not be JavaScript in the first place. PS: Hey, mod: deleting flame comments should leave the valid comments intact. Just an idea.– TomalakCommented May 14, 2011 at 16:18
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1@evandentremont Microseconds are an entire three orders of magnitude above nanoseconds! Commented Dec 2, 2014 at 10:01
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7Resurrecting this discussion, benchmarks aren't the only use case for time precision. There are some algorithms where it may be needed, and if I want to run it on a browser, JS is a necessity. Commented Apr 2, 2015 at 18:06
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3@EduardoMelo For example, LRU replacement in a page fault simulator (a project I'm working on now). Millisecond precision isn't good enough because the code runs too fast and the timestamp on my pages all have the same values per 1k pages or so... Commented Apr 15, 2015 at 21:38
JavaScript records time in milliseconds, so you won't be able to get time to that precision. The smart-aleck answer is to "multiply by 1,000,000".
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This is actually exactly what I wanted, I don't actually care about the nanosecond time just need a Date to go into the correct format ;) Commented Dec 29, 2020 at 4:34
I was looking for something similar to this, this is what i came up with in the end, it may not be 100% accurate but its the closest i could get.
var precision = 3;
var timestring = new Date().toLocaleTimeString() + "." + (((performance.now() + performance.timeOrigin)) / 1000).toFixed(precision).toString().split(".")[1]);
for (i=0;i<1000;i++){
var precision = 3;
var timestring = new Date().toLocaleTimeString() + "." + (((performance.now() + performance.timeOrigin)) / 1000).toFixed(precision).toString().split(".")[1];
var newEl = document.createElement('div');
newEl.innerHTML = timestring;
document.getElementById("timestamps").appendChild(newEl);
}
<p>Timstamps:</p>
<div id="timestamps"></div>