In the end, it was discovered that the program being run on Windows 7 was the main reason for the perceived problem, so this situation was pretty much solved. Nevertheless, the following paragraphs describe a position on what to do when problem is yet not reproducible.
The first edit of the linked question added the following paragraph:
Update: following Slaw's comment I tried on multiple different hardware. What I found is that this issue doesn't manifest on any personal hardware. Only on the company one. On company hardware it also manifests on Win10, though an order of magnitude less. My bet is that some monitoring software / AV / etc messes up with windows clock, specific with the nanos
. Why, no idea, but this new information turns the problem as an isolated event and thus not really that interesting.
This means that there is a specific machine that reproduces the problem, yet not enough details were given about that particular machine that would enable other people to reproduce it. Without that, the question is not useful to future readers, and should therefore be closed for lacking a Minimal Reproducible Example, at least until the OP (in this case, you) figures out what's missing. Although the close reason only mentions "code", the environment that triggers the issue is still a very relevant part of the MCVE¹ all the same.
Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are not useful to other readers.
With that said, it is understandable to question whether, in a case such as this one, we should wait for the missing piece of the MCVE or vote to close as soon as possible. Usually, we are advised to vote to close immediately [1, 2]. For the specific case of problems which are significantly harder to reproduce, we have at least one diverging opinion. Emphasis on Tim Post's answer:
You should cast a close vote in these cases only if you feel that not doing so would result in someone else likely wasting their time. There's no real blanket flowchart sort of answer to it other than use your best judgement based on your knowledge of the language being used.
In other words, this challenges us to make a wise decision, based on our knowledge of the problem and the underlying technologies, on whether a question with a sub-complete MCVE should stay open or not, which is fairly reasonable. While I do not wish to carve my own statement in stone here, I may note that even a closed question can receive comments that can guide the OP towards the missing piece.
nanoTime()
and system time not lining up. That makes it a very useful and interesting question, IMHO. Please don't close it.