NAME
time2posix
,
posix2time
—
convert seconds since the
Epoch
SYNOPSIS
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include <time.h>
time_t
time2posix
(time_t
t);
time_t
posix2time
(time_t
t);
DESCRIPTION
IEEE Std 1003.1 (“POSIX.1”) legislates that a time_t value of 536457599 shall correspond to “Wed Dec 31 23:59:59 UTC 1986”. This effectively implies that a POSIX time_t cannot include leap seconds and, therefore, that the system time must be adjusted as each leap occurs.
If the time package is configured with leap-second support enabled, however, no such adjustment is needed and time_t values continue to increase over leap events (as a true ‘seconds since...’ value). This means that these values will differ from those required by POSIX by the net number of leap seconds inserted since the Epoch.
Typically this is not a problem as the type time_t is intended to be (mostly) opaque. time_t values should only be obtained from and passed to functions such as time(3), localtime(3), mktime(3), and difftime(3). However, POSIX gives an arithmetic expression for directly computing a time_t value from a given date/time, and the same relationship is assumed by some (usually older) applications. Any programs creating/dissecting time_t values using such a relationship will typically not handle intervals over leap seconds correctly.
The
time2posix
()
and
posix2time
()
functions are provided to address this time_t mismatch
by converting between local time_t values and their
POSIX equivalents. This is done by accounting for the number of time-base
changes that would have taken place on a POSIX system as leap seconds were
inserted or deleted. These converted values can then be used in lieu of
correcting the older applications, or when communicating with
POSIX-compliant systems.
time2posix
()
is single-valued. That is, every local time_t
corresponds to a single POSIX time_t.
posix2time
()
is less well-behaved: for a positive leap second hit the result is not
unique, and for a negative leap second hit the corresponding POSIX
time_t doesn't exist so an adjacent value is returned.
Both of these are good indicators of the inferiority of the POSIX
representation.
The following table summarizes the relationship between a time T and its conversion to, and back from, the POSIX representation over the leap second inserted at the end of June, 1993.
DATE | TIME | T | X=time2posix(T) | posix2time(X) |
93/06/30 | 23:59:59 | A+0 | B+0 | A+0 |
93/06/30 | 23:59:60 | A+1 | B+1 | A+1 or A+2 |
93/07/01 | 00:00:00 | A+2 | B+1 | A+1 or A+2 |
93/07/01 | 00:00:01 | A+3 | B+2 | A+3 |
A leap second deletion would look like...
DATE | TIME | T | X=time2posix(T) | posix2time(X) |
??/06/30 | 23:59:58 | A+0 | B+0 | A+0 |
??/07/01 | 00:00:00 | A+1 | B+2 | A+1 |
??/07/01 | 00:00:01 | A+2 | B+3 | A+2 |
[Note: posix2time(B+1) => A+0 or A+1]
If leap-second support is not enabled, local
time_t and POSIX time_t are
equivalent, and both
time2posix
()
and
posix2time
()
degenerate to the identity function.