Module tokio::time [−][src]
Utilities for tracking time.
This module provides a number of types for executing code after a set period of time.
-
Sleep
is a future that does no work and completes at a specificInstant
in time. -
Interval
is a stream yielding a value at a fixed period. It is initialized with aDuration
and repeatedly yields each time the duration elapses. -
Timeout
: Wraps a future or stream, setting an upper bound to the amount of time it is allowed to execute. If the future or stream does not complete in time, then it is canceled and an error is returned.
These types are sufficient for handling a large number of scenarios involving time.
These types must be used from within the context of the Runtime
.
Examples
Wait 100ms and print “100 ms have elapsed”
use tokio::time::sleep; use std::time::Duration; #[tokio::main] async fn main() { sleep(Duration::from_millis(100)).await; println!("100 ms have elapsed"); }
Require that an operation takes no more than 300ms. Note that this uses the
timeout
function on the FutureExt
trait. This trait is included in the
prelude.
use tokio::time::{timeout, Duration}; async fn long_future() { // do work here } let res = timeout(Duration::from_secs(1), long_future()).await; if res.is_err() { println!("operation timed out"); }
A simple example using interval
to execute a task every two seconds.
The difference between interval
and sleep
is that an
interval
measures the time since the last tick, which means that
.tick().await
may wait for a shorter time than the duration specified
for the interval if some time has passed between calls to .tick().await
.
If the tick in the example below was replaced with sleep
, the task
would only be executed once every three seconds, and not every two
seconds.
use tokio::time; async fn task_that_takes_a_second() { println!("hello"); time::sleep(time::Duration::from_secs(1)).await } #[tokio::main] async fn main() { let interval = time::interval(time::Duration::from_secs(2)); tokio::pin!(interval); for _i in 0..5 { interval.as_mut().tick().await; task_that_takes_a_second().await; } }
Re-exports
pub use std::time::Duration; |
Modules
error | Time error types. |
Structs
Instant | A measurement of a monotonically nondecreasing clock.
Opaque and useful only with |
Interval | Stream returned by |
Sleep | Future returned by |
Timeout | Future returned by |
Functions
interval | Creates new |
interval_at | Creates new |
sleep | Waits until |
sleep_until | Waits until |
timeout | Require a |
timeout_at | Require a |