In bash I am able to write a script that contains something like this:
{ time {
#series of commands
echo \"something\"
echo \"another command\"
echo \"blah
If you want to profile your code you have a few alternatives:
Time subshell execution like:
time ( commands ... )
Use REPORTTIME to check for slow commands:
export REPORTTIME=3 # display commands with execution time >= 3 seconds
setop xtrace
as explained here
The zprof module
You can also use the times
POSIX shell builtin in conjunction with functions.
It will report the user and system time used by the shell and its children. See
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/times.html
Example:
somefunc() {
code you want to time here
times
}
The reason for using a shell function is that it creates a new shell context, at the start of which times
is all zeros (try it). Otherwise the result contains the contribution of the current shell as well. If that is what you want, forget about the function and put times
last in your script.
Try the following instead:
{ time ( echo hello ; sleep 10s; echo hola ; ) } 2>&1
Try replace { with ( ? I think this should help