I want to calculate time elapsed during a function call in C, to the precision of 1 nanosecond.
Is there a timer function available in C to do it?
If yes ple
You are asking for something that is not possible this way. You would need HW level support to get to that level of precision and even then control the variables very carefully. What happens if you get an interrupt while running your code? What if the OS decides to run some other piece of code?
And what does your code do? Does it use RAM memory? What if your code and/or data is or is not in the cache?
In some environments you can use HW level counters for this job provided you control those variables. But how do you prevent context switches in Linux?
For instance, in Texas Instruments' DSP tools (Code Composer Studio) you can profile the code very exactly because the whole debugging environment is set such that the emulator (e.g. Blackhawk) receives info about every operation run. You can also set watchpoints which are coded directly into a HW block inside the chip in some processors. This works because the memory lanes are also routed to this debugging block.
They do offer functions in their CSL's (Chip Support Library) which are what you are asking for with the timing overhead being a few cycles. But this is only available for their processors and is completely dependant on reading the timer values from the HW registers.