Thanks a lot, Ted. Appreciate your help!

The approaches specified in the below links, are giving a very good level of 
accuracy. Solves my problem for now.

Thanks
--------------------------------------------------
Dhruv Kumar
PhD Candidate
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
University of Minnesota
www.dhruvkumar.me

> On May 15, 2018, at 13:11, Ted Yu <yuzhih...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Please see the following:
> 
> http://www.rationaljava.com/2015/10/measuring-microsecond-in-java.html 
> <http://www.rationaljava.com/2015/10/measuring-microsecond-in-java.html>
> 
> https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11498585/how-to-suspend-a-java-thread-for-a-small-period-of-time-like-100-nanoseconds
>  
> <https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11498585/how-to-suspend-a-java-thread-for-a-small-period-of-time-like-100-nanoseconds>
> 
> On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 10:40 AM, Dhruv Kumar <gargdhru...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:gargdhru...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> Hi
> 
> I am trying to replay a log file in which each record has a timestamp 
> associated with it. The time difference between the records is of the order 
> of microseconds. I am trying to replay this log maintaining the same delay 
> between the records (using Thread.sleep()) and sending it to a socket. And 
> then the Flink program reads the incoming data from this socket. Currently, 
> replay of the entire log file takes much more time (3 times) then the 
> expected time (last_timstamp - first_timstamp).
> 
> I wanted to know what are the standard ways of replaying log files if one 
> wants to maintain the same arrival delay between the records.
> 
> Let me know if I am not clear above.
> 
> Thanks 
> --------------------------------------------------
> Dhruv Kumar
> PhD Candidate
> Department of Computer Science and Engineering
> University of Minnesota
> www.dhruvkumar.me <http://www.dhruvkumar.me/>
> 

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