Use time.time() instead of time.clock()

This commit is contained in:
Erik Johnston 2015-01-06 16:34:26 +00:00
parent d5ae67e67d
commit 36a2a877e2

View File

@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ class LoggingTransaction(object):
# Don't let logging failures stop SQL from working
pass
start = time.clock() * 1000
start = time.time() * 1000
try:
return self.txn.execute(
sql, *args, **kwargs
@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ class LoggingTransaction(object):
logger.exception("[SQL FAIL] {%s}", self.name)
raise
finally:
end = time.clock() * 1000
end = time.time() * 1000
sql_logger.debug("[SQL time] {%s} %f", self.name, end - start)
@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ class SQLBaseStore(object):
def inner_func(txn, *args, **kwargs):
with LoggingContext("runInteraction") as context:
current_context.copy_to(context)
start = time.clock() * 1000
start = time.time() * 1000
txn_id = SQLBaseStore._TXN_ID
# We don't really need these to be unique, so lets stop it from
@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ class SQLBaseStore(object):
logger.exception("[TXN FAIL] {%s}", name)
raise
finally:
end = time.clock() * 1000
end = time.time() * 1000
transaction_logger.debug(
"[TXN END] {%s} %f",
name, end - start