Re: Timing program execution on Windows

  • From: "Jared Still" <jkstill@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "Mercadante, Thomas F (LABOR)" <Thomas.Mercadante@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 1 Dec 2006 10:56:04 -0800

On 12/1/06, Mercadante, Thomas F (LABOR) <
Thomas.Mercadante@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

   Jared,


You can get the times from the Rman repository (if you are using one).  In
the RC_BACKUP_SET view there are starttime and endtime columns (date
fields).  Other than that, you can "echo time /t" in your NT script to get
start and end times.


Not using a repository, but thanks for the suggestion.
echo time /t would require me to write a script to do the
math myself (don't want to).  I'm sure it's been done.

In fact, it has:  http://search.cpan.org/dist/ppt/
the 'time' command uses the Benchmark module



Tom


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 *From:* oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:
oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] *On Behalf Of *Jared Still
*Sent:* Friday, December 01, 2006 12:47 PM
*To:* Oracle-L Freelists
*Subject:* Timing program execution on Windows




Any suggestions for a unix like 'time' command that
can be used from the command line, just on unix/linux?

I need to time some RMAN operations on Win32 box.

I've already DL'd and looked at Windows SFU (unix services),
but that is a pretty heavy install to just get the 'time' command.

Thanks,

--
Jared Still
Certifiable Oracle DBA and Part Time Perl Evangelist




--
Jared Still
Certifiable Oracle DBA and Part Time Perl Evangelist

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