"LAMMPS WWW Site"_lws - "LAMMPS Documentation"_ld - "LAMMPS Commands"_lc :c :link(lws,http://lammps.sandia.gov) :link(ld,Manual.html) :link(lc,Section_commands.html#comm) :line timer command :h3 [Syntax:] timer args :pre {args} = one or more of {off} or {loop} or {normal} or {full} or {sync} or {nosync} :l {off} = do not collect or print any timing information {loop} = collect only the total time for the simulation loop {normal} = collect timer information broken down by sections (default) {full} = like {normal} but also include CPU and thread utilzation {sync} = explicitly synchronize MPI tasks between sections {nosync} = do not synchronize MPI tasks between sections (default) :pre [Examples:] timer full sync timer loop :pre [Description:] Select the level of detail LAMMPS performs its CPU timings. During a simulation run LAMMPS collects information about how much time is spent in different sections of the code and thus can provide valuable information for determining performance and load imbalance problems. This can be done at different levels of detail and accuracy. For more information about the timing output, see this "discussion of screen output"_Section_start.html#start_8. The {off} setting will turn all time measurements off. The {loop} setting will only measure the total time for a run and not collect any detailed per section information. With the {normal} setting, timing information for portions of the timestep (pairwise calculations, neighbor list construction, output, etc) are collected as well as information about load imbalances for those sections across procsessors. The {full} setting adds information about CPU utilization and thread utilization, when multi-threading is enabled. With the {sync} setting, all MPI tasks are synchronized at each timer call which meaures load imbalance more accuractly, though it can also slow down the simulation. Using the {nosync} setting (which is the default) turns off this synchronization. Multiple keywords can be specified. For keywords that are mutually exclusive, the last one specified takes effect. NOTE: Using the {full} and {sync} options provides the most detailed and accurate timing information, but can also have a negative performance impact due to the overhead of the many required system calls. It is thus recommended to use these settings only when testing tests to identify performance bottlenecks. For calculations with few atoms or a very large number of processors, even the {normal} setting can have a measurable negative performance impact. In those cases you can just use the {loop} or {off} setting. [Restrictions:] none [Related commands:] "run post no"_run.html, "kspace_modify fftbench"_kspace_modify.html [Default:] timer normal nosync