% File src/library/base/man/setTimeLimit.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2011 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{setTimeLimit} \alias{setTimeLimit} \alias{setSessionTimeLimit} \title{Set CPU and/or Elapsed Time Limits} \description{ Functions to set CPU and/or elapsed time limits for top-level computations or the current session. } \usage{ setTimeLimit(cpu = Inf, elapsed = Inf, transient = FALSE) setSessionTimeLimit(cpu = Inf, elapsed = Inf) } \arguments{ \item{cpu}{double. Limit on total cpu time.} \item{elapsed}{double. Limit on elapsed time.} \item{transient}{logical. If \code{TRUE}, the limits apply only to the rest of the current computation.} } \details{ \code{setTimeLimit} sets limits which apply to each top-level computation, that is a command line (including any continuation lines) entered at the console or from a file. If it is called from within a computation the limits apply to the rest of the computation and (unless \code{transient = TRUE}) to subsequent top-level computations. \code{setSessionTimeLimit} sets limits for the rest of the session. Once a session limit is reached it is reset to \code{Inf}. Setting any limit has a small overhead -- well under 1\% on the systems measured. Time limits are checked whenever a user interrupt could occur. This will happen frequently in \R code and during \code{\link{Sys.sleep}}, but only at points in compiled C and Fortran code identified by the code author. #ifdef unix \sQuote{Total cpu time} includes that used by child processes where the latter is reported. #endif } \keyword{ utilities }