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tss (1)

tss is like ts from moreutils, but prints relative durations (with millisecond precision) by default, and can be shipped as a compiled binary.

Try it out:

$ (sleep 1; echo "hello"; sleep 2; echo "two sec") | tss
   995ms          hello
      3s   2.005s two sec

The first column is the amount of time that has elapsed since the program started. The second column is the amount of time that has elapsed since the last line printed.

Installation

Find your target operating system (darwin, windows, linux) and desired bin directory, and modify the command below as appropriate:

curl --silent --location --output /usr/local/bin/tss https://github.com/kevinburke/tss/releases/download/0.4/tss-linux-amd64 && chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/tss

The latest version is 0.4.

If you have a Go development environment, you can also install via source code:

go get -u github.com/kevinburke/tss

The corresponding library is available at github.com/kevinburke/tss/lib. View the library documentation at godoc.org.

Usage Notes

  • Piping commands to tss may result in programs buffering their output before flushing it to stdout file descriptor. You can avoid this by wrapping the target program in a command like unbuffer (via the expect package) or stdbuf from the coreutils package. On Macs you can install with brew install expect and brew install coreutils respectively; the stdbuf command may be prefixed with a 'g': gstdbuf.

    stdbuf --output=L <mycommand> | tss
    
  • Piping commands may also change the return code from non-zero to zero, since Bash by default uses the return code of the last command in the pipe to decide how to exit. This means if you are piping output to tss or ts you may accidentally change a failing program to a passing one. Use set -o pipefail in Bash scripts to ensure that Bash will return a non-zero return code if any part of a pipe operation fails. Or add this to a Makefile:

    SHELL = /bin/bash -o pipefail