If you want to do multiple commands with time, either put them in a script and 
time the script, or do something like:

echo "command 1 ; command 2" | time sh



----- Original Message -----
From: "Gabriel" <gto...@inti.gob.ar>
To: openwrt-devel@lists.openwrt.org
Sent: Friday, November 23, 2012 3:14:09 PM
Subject: Re: [OpenWrt-Devel] milliseconds time measurements

Thank you for your answers!

I've tried with the time command, but I couldn't use it for various 
commands together as in my pc using parentheses like

time (command 1; command 2)

with date +%s I get a seconds count:

root@E10:~# while true; do date; date +%s; sleep 1; done
Fri Nov 23 17:10:11 ART 2012
1353701411
Fri Nov 23 17:10:12 ART 2012
1353701412
Fri Nov 23 17:10:13 ART 2012
1353701413

Regarding /proc/uptime, I didn't know about it, I think will be enough 
for what I wanted!

Best regards

Gabriel


El 23/11/12 13:56, Bastian Bittorf escribió:
>> /proc/uptime is much simplier :-)
> and it's even monotonic...and...fast.
> (date +%s can jump into future and past)
>
>>> read t1 trash </proc/uptime
>>> do_something()
>>> read t2 trash </proc/uptime
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