| /* A part of the Native C Library for Windows NT |
| Copyright 2007-2015 PC GO Ld. |
| |
| This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
| |
| This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. |
| */ |
| |
| // Based on the GNU C Library |
| |
| #include <time.h> |
| #include <string.h> |
| #include <limits.h> |
| |
| /* Shift A right by B bits portably, by dividing A by 2**B and |
| truncating towards minus infinity. A and B should be free of side |
| effects, and B should be in the range 0 <= B <= INT_BITS - 2, where |
| INT_BITS is the number of useful bits in an int. GNU code can |
| assume that INT_BITS is at least 32. |
| |
| ISO C99 says that A >> B is implementation-defined if A < 0. Some |
| implementations (e.g., UNICOS 9.0 on a Cray Y-MP EL) don't shift |
| right in the usual way when A < 0, so SHR falls back on division if |
| ordinary A >> B doesn't seem to be the usual signed shift. */ |
| #define SHR(a, b) \ |
| (-1 >> 1 == -1 \ |
| ? (a) >> (b) \ |
| : (a) / (1 << (b)) - ((a) % (1 << (b)) < 0)) |
| |
| |
| /* True if the arithmetic type T is an integer type. bool counts as |
| an integer. */ |
| #define TYPE_IS_INTEGER(t) ((t)1.5 == 1) |
| |
| /* True if negative values of the signed integer type T use two's |
| complement, ones' complement, or signed magnitude representation, |
| respectively. Much GNU code assumes two's complement, but some |
| people like to be portable to all possible C hosts. */ |
| #define TYPE_TWOS_COMPLEMENT(t) ((t) ~ (t)0 == (t)-1) |
| #define TYPE_ONES_COMPLEMENT(t) ((t) ~ (t)0 == 0) |
| #define TYPE_SIGNED_MAGNITUDE(t) ((t) ~ (t)0 < (t)-1) |
| |
| /* True if the arithmetic type T is signed. */ |
| #define TYPE_SIGNED(t) (! ((t) 0 < (t) -1)) |
| |
| /* The maximum and minimum values for the integer type T. These |
| macros have undefined behavior if T is signed and has padding bits. |
| If this is a problem for you, please let us know how to fix it for |
| your host. */ |
| #define TYPE_MINIMUM(t) \ |
| ((t)(!TYPE_SIGNED(t) ? (t)0 : TYPE_SIGNED_MAGNITUDE(t) ? ~(t)0 : ~(t)0 << (sizeof(t) * CHAR_BIT - 1))) |
| #define TYPE_MAXIMUM(t) \ |
| ((t)(!TYPE_SIGNED(t) ? (t)-1 : ~(~(t)0 << (sizeof(t) * CHAR_BIT - 1)))) |
| |
| #ifndef TIME_T_MIN |
| # define TIME_T_MIN TYPE_MINIMUM(time_t) |
| #endif |
| #ifndef TIME_T_MAX |
| # define TIME_T_MAX TYPE_MAXIMUM(time_t) |
| #endif |
| #define TIME_T_MIDPOINT (SHR(TIME_T_MIN + TIME_T_MAX, 1) + 1) |
| |
| /* Verify a requirement at compile-time (unlike assert, which is runtime). */ |
| #define verify(name, assertion) struct name { char a[(assertion) ? 1 : -1]; } |
| |
| #define EPOCH_YEAR 1970 |
| #define TM_YEAR_BASE 1900 |
| |
| // Accept argument: 0~12 |
| static int month_to_days(unsigned int month) { |
| if(month > 12) return -1; |
| int r = 0; |
| switch(month) { |
| case 12: |
| r += 31; |
| case 11: |
| r += 30; |
| case 10: |
| r += 31; |
| case 9: |
| r += 30; |
| case 8: |
| r += 31; |
| case 7: |
| r += 31; |
| case 6: |
| r += 30; |
| case 5: |
| r += 31; |
| case 4: |
| r += 30; |
| case 3: |
| r += 31; |
| case 2: |
| r += 28; |
| case 1: |
| r += 31; |
| } |
| return r; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return an integer value measuring (YEAR1-YDAY1 HOUR1:MIN1:SEC1) - |
| (YEAR0-YDAY0 HOUR0:MIN0:SEC0) in seconds, assuming that the clocks |
| were not adjusted between the time stamps. |
| |
| The YEAR values uses the same numbering as TP->tm_year. Values |
| need not be in the usual range. However, YEAR1 must not be less |
| than 2 * INT_MIN or greater than 2 * INT_MAX. |
| |
| The result may overflow. It is the caller's responsibility to |
| detect overflow. */ |
| static inline time_t ydhms_diff(long int year1, long int yday1, int hour1, int min1, int sec1, int year0, int yday0, int hour0, int min0, int sec0) { |
| verify (C99_integer_division, -1 / 2 == 0); |
| verify (long_int_year_and_yday_are_wide_enough, |
| INT_MAX <= LONG_MAX / 2 || TIME_T_MAX <= UINT_MAX); |
| |
| /* Compute intervening leap days correctly even if year is negative. |
| Take care to avoid integer overflow here. */ |
| int a4 = SHR(year1, 2) + SHR(TM_YEAR_BASE, 2) - !(year1 & 3); |
| int b4 = SHR(year0, 2) + SHR(TM_YEAR_BASE, 2) - !(year0 & 3); |
| int a100 = a4 / 25 - (a4 % 25 < 0); |
| int b100 = b4 / 25 - (b4 % 25 < 0); |
| int a400 = SHR(a100, 2); |
| int b400 = SHR(b100, 2); |
| int intervening_leap_days = (a4 - b4) - (a100 - b100) + (a400 - b400); |
| |
| /* Compute the desired time in time_t precision. Overflow might |
| occur here. */ |
| time_t tyear1 = year1; |
| time_t years = tyear1 - year0; |
| time_t days = 365 * years + yday1 - yday0 + intervening_leap_days; |
| time_t hours = 24 * days + hour1 - hour0; |
| time_t minutes = 60 * hours + min1 - min0; |
| time_t seconds = 60 * minutes + sec1 - sec0; |
| return seconds; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return a time_t value corresponding to (YEAR-YDAY HOUR:MIN:SEC), |
| assuming that *T corresponds to *TP and that no clock adjustments |
| occurred between *TP and the desired time. |
| If TP is null, return a value not equal to *T; this avoids false matches. |
| If overflow occurs, yield the minimal or maximal value, except do not |
| yield a value equal to *T. */ |
| static time_t guess_time_tm(long int year, long int yday, int hour, int min, int sec, const time_t *t, const struct tm *tp) { |
| if(tp) { |
| time_t d = ydhms_diff (year, yday, hour, min, sec, |
| tp->tm_year, tp->tm_yday, |
| tp->tm_hour, tp->tm_min, tp->tm_sec); |
| time_t t1 = *t + d; |
| if ((t1 < *t) == (TYPE_SIGNED (time_t) ? d < 0 : TIME_T_MAX / 2 < d)) |
| return t1; |
| } |
| |
| /* Overflow occurred one way or another. Return the nearest result |
| that is actually in range, except don't report a zero difference |
| if the actual difference is nonzero, as that would cause a false |
| match; and don't oscillate between two values, as that would |
| confuse the spring-forward gap detector. */ |
| return *t < TIME_T_MIDPOINT ? (*t <= TIME_T_MIN + 1 ? *t + 1 : TIME_T_MIN) : (TIME_T_MAX - 1 <= *t ? *t - 1 : TIME_T_MAX); |
| } |
| |
| /* Use CONVERT to convert *T to a broken down time in *TP. |
| If *T is out of range for conversion, adjust it so that |
| it is the nearest in-range value and then convert that. */ |
| static struct tm * |
| ranged_convert (struct tm *(*convert) (const time_t *, struct tm *), |
| time_t *t, struct tm *tp) |
| { |
| struct tm *r = convert (t, tp); |
| |
| if (!r && *t) |
| { |
| time_t bad = *t; |
| time_t ok = 0; |
| |
| /* BAD is a known unconvertible time_t, and OK is a known good one. |
| Use binary search to narrow the range between BAD and OK until |
| they differ by 1. */ |
| while (bad != ok + (bad < 0 ? -1 : 1)) |
| { |
| time_t mid = *t = (bad < 0 |
| ? bad + ((ok - bad) >> 1) |
| : ok + ((bad - ok) >> 1)); |
| r = convert (t, tp); |
| if (r) |
| ok = mid; |
| else |
| bad = mid; |
| } |
| |
| if (!r && ok) |
| { |
| /* The last conversion attempt failed; |
| revert to the most recent successful attempt. */ |
| *t = ok; |
| r = convert (t, tp); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return r; |
| } |
| |
| /* Convert *TP to a time_t value, inverting |
| the monotonic and mostly-unit-linear conversion function CONVERT. |
| Use *OFFSET to keep track of a guess at the offset of the result, |
| compared to what the result would be for UTC without leap seconds. |
| If *OFFSET's guess is correct, only one CONVERT call is needed. |
| This function is external because it is used also by timegm.c. */ |
| static time_t __mktime_internal (struct tm *tp, struct tm *(*convert) (const time_t *, struct tm *), time_t *offset) { |
| time_t t, gt, t0, t1, t2; |
| struct tm tm; |
| |
| /* The maximum number of probes (calls to CONVERT) should be enough |
| to handle any combinations of time zone rule changes, solar time, |
| leap seconds, and oscillations around a spring-forward gap. |
| POSIX.1 prohibits leap seconds, but some hosts have them anyway. */ |
| int remaining_probes = 6; |
| |
| /* Time requested. Copy it in case CONVERT modifies *TP; this can |
| occur if TP is localtime's returned value and CONVERT is localtime. */ |
| int sec = tp->tm_sec; |
| int min = tp->tm_min; |
| int hour = tp->tm_hour; |
| int mday = tp->tm_mday; |
| int mon = tp->tm_mon; |
| int year_requested = tp->tm_year; |
| /* Normalize the value. */ |
| int isdst = ((tp->tm_isdst >> (8 * sizeof (tp->tm_isdst) - 1)) |
| | (tp->tm_isdst != 0)); |
| |
| /* 1 if the previous probe was DST. */ |
| int dst2; |
| |
| /* Ensure that mon is in range, and set year accordingly. */ |
| int mon_remainder = mon % 12; |
| int negative_mon_remainder = mon_remainder < 0; |
| int mon_years = mon / 12 - negative_mon_remainder; |
| long int lyear_requested = year_requested; |
| long int year = lyear_requested + mon_years; |
| |
| /* The other values need not be in range: |
| the remaining code handles minor overflows correctly, |
| assuming int and time_t arithmetic wraps around. |
| Major overflows are caught at the end. */ |
| |
| /* Calculate day of year from year, month, and day of month. |
| The result need not be in range. */ |
| //int mon_yday = ((__mon_yday[leapyear (year)][mon_remainder + 12 * negative_mon_remainder]) - 1); |
| int mon_yday = (month_to_days(mon_remainder + 12 * negative_mon_remainder) - __isleap(year + TM_YEAR_BASE) ? 0 : 1); |
| long int lmday = mday; |
| long int yday = mon_yday + lmday; |
| |
| time_t guessed_offset = *offset; |
| |
| int sec_requested = sec; |
| |
| /* Handle out-of-range seconds specially, |
| since ydhms_tm_diff assumes every minute has 60 seconds. */ |
| if(sec < 0) sec = 0; |
| else if(59 < sec) sec = 59; |
| |
| /* Invert CONVERT by probing. First assume the same offset as last |
| time. */ |
| |
| t0 = ydhms_diff(year, yday, hour, min, sec, EPOCH_YEAR - TM_YEAR_BASE, 0, 0, 0, - guessed_offset); |
| |
| if (TIME_T_MAX / INT_MAX / 366 / 24 / 60 / 60 < 3) |
| { |
| /* time_t isn't large enough to rule out overflows, so check |
| for major overflows. A gross check suffices, since if t0 |
| has overflowed, it is off by a multiple of TIME_T_MAX - |
| TIME_T_MIN + 1. So ignore any component of the difference |
| that is bounded by a small value. */ |
| |
| /* Approximate log base 2 of the number of time units per |
| biennium. A biennium is 2 years; use this unit instead of |
| years to avoid integer overflow. For example, 2 average |
| Gregorian years are 2 * 365.2425 * 24 * 60 * 60 seconds, |
| which is 63113904 seconds, and rint (log2 (63113904)) is |
| 26. */ |
| int ALOG2_SECONDS_PER_BIENNIUM = 26; |
| int ALOG2_MINUTES_PER_BIENNIUM = 20; |
| int ALOG2_HOURS_PER_BIENNIUM = 14; |
| int ALOG2_DAYS_PER_BIENNIUM = 10; |
| int LOG2_YEARS_PER_BIENNIUM = 1; |
| |
| int approx_requested_biennia = |
| (SHR(year_requested, LOG2_YEARS_PER_BIENNIUM) |
| - SHR(EPOCH_YEAR - TM_YEAR_BASE, LOG2_YEARS_PER_BIENNIUM) |
| + SHR(mday, ALOG2_DAYS_PER_BIENNIUM) |
| + SHR(hour, ALOG2_HOURS_PER_BIENNIUM) |
| + SHR(min, ALOG2_MINUTES_PER_BIENNIUM)); |
| |
| int approx_biennia = SHR(t0, ALOG2_SECONDS_PER_BIENNIUM); |
| int diff = approx_biennia - approx_requested_biennia; |
| int abs_diff = diff < 0 ? - diff : diff; |
| |
| /* IRIX 4.0.5 cc miscalculates TIME_T_MIN / 3: it erroneously |
| gives a positive value of 715827882. Setting a variable |
| first then doing math on it seems to work. |
| (ghazi@caip.rutgers.edu) */ |
| time_t time_t_max = TIME_T_MAX; |
| time_t time_t_min = TIME_T_MIN; |
| time_t overflow_threshold = |
| (time_t_max / 3 - time_t_min / 3) >> ALOG2_SECONDS_PER_BIENNIUM; |
| |
| if (overflow_threshold < abs_diff) |
| { |
| /* Overflow occurred. Try repairing it; this might work if |
| the time zone offset is enough to undo the overflow. */ |
| time_t repaired_t0 = -1 - t0; |
| approx_biennia = SHR(repaired_t0, ALOG2_SECONDS_PER_BIENNIUM); |
| diff = approx_biennia - approx_requested_biennia; |
| abs_diff = diff < 0 ? - diff : diff; |
| if (overflow_threshold < abs_diff) |
| return -1; |
| guessed_offset += repaired_t0 - t0; |
| t0 = repaired_t0; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Repeatedly use the error to improve the guess. */ |
| |
| for (t = t1 = t2 = t0, dst2 = 0; |
| (gt = guess_time_tm (year, yday, hour, min, sec, &t, |
| ranged_convert (convert, &t, &tm)), |
| t != gt); |
| t1 = t2, t2 = t, t = gt, dst2 = tm.tm_isdst != 0) |
| if (t == t1 && t != t2 |
| && (tm.tm_isdst < 0 |
| || (isdst < 0 |
| ? dst2 <= (tm.tm_isdst != 0) |
| : (isdst != 0) != (tm.tm_isdst != 0)))) |
| /* We can't possibly find a match, as we are oscillating |
| between two values. The requested time probably falls |
| within a spring-forward gap of size GT - T. Follow the common |
| practice in this case, which is to return a time that is GT - T |
| away from the requested time, preferring a time whose |
| tm_isdst differs from the requested value. (If no tm_isdst |
| was requested and only one of the two values has a nonzero |
| tm_isdst, prefer that value.) In practice, this is more |
| useful than returning -1. */ |
| goto offset_found; |
| else if (--remaining_probes == 0) |
| return -1; |
| |
| /* We have a match. Check whether tm.tm_isdst has the requested |
| value, if any. */ |
| if (isdst != tm.tm_isdst && 0 <= isdst && 0 <= tm.tm_isdst) |
| { |
| /* tm.tm_isdst has the wrong value. Look for a neighboring |
| time with the right value, and use its UTC offset. |
| |
| Heuristic: probe the adjacent timestamps in both directions, |
| looking for the desired isdst. This should work for all real |
| time zone histories in the tz database. */ |
| |
| /* Distance between probes when looking for a DST boundary. In |
| tzdata2003a, the shortest period of DST is 601200 seconds |
| (e.g., America/Recife starting 2000-10-08 01:00), and the |
| shortest period of non-DST surrounded by DST is 694800 |
| seconds (Africa/Tunis starting 1943-04-17 01:00). Use the |
| minimum of these two values, so we don't miss these short |
| periods when probing. */ |
| int stride = 601200; |
| |
| /* The longest period of DST in tzdata2003a is 536454000 seconds |
| (e.g., America/Jujuy starting 1946-10-01 01:00). The longest |
| period of non-DST is much longer, but it makes no real sense |
| to search for more than a year of non-DST, so use the DST |
| max. */ |
| int duration_max = 536454000; |
| |
| /* Search in both directions, so the maximum distance is half |
| the duration; add the stride to avoid off-by-1 problems. */ |
| int delta_bound = duration_max / 2 + stride; |
| |
| int delta, direction; |
| |
| for (delta = stride; delta < delta_bound; delta += stride) |
| for (direction = -1; direction <= 1; direction += 2) |
| { |
| time_t ot = t + delta * direction; |
| if ((ot < t) == (direction < 0)) |
| { |
| struct tm otm; |
| ranged_convert (convert, &ot, &otm); |
| if (otm.tm_isdst == isdst) |
| { |
| /* We found the desired tm_isdst. |
| Extrapolate back to the desired time. */ |
| t = guess_time_tm (year, yday, hour, min, sec, &ot, &otm); |
| ranged_convert (convert, &t, &tm); |
| goto offset_found; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| offset_found: |
| *offset = guessed_offset + t - t0; |
| |
| if (sec_requested != tm.tm_sec) { |
| /* Adjust time to reflect the tm_sec requested, not the normalized value. |
| Also, repair any damage from a false match due to a leap second. */ |
| int sec_adjustment = (sec == 0 && tm.tm_sec == 60) - sec; |
| t1 = t + sec_requested; |
| t2 = t1 + sec_adjustment; |
| if (((t1 < t) != (sec_requested < 0)) |
| | ((t2 < t1) != (sec_adjustment < 0)) |
| | ! convert (&t2, &tm)) |
| return -1; |
| t = t2; |
| } |
| |
| *tp = tm; |
| return t; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* FIXME: This should use a signed type wide enough to hold any UTC |
| offset in seconds. 'int' should be good enough for GNU code. We |
| can't fix this unilaterally though, as other modules invoke |
| __mktime_internal. */ |
| static time_t localtime_offset; |
| |
| /* Convert *TP to a time_t value. */ |
| time_t mktime(struct tm *tp) { |
| /* POSIX.1 8.1.1 requires that whenever mktime() is called, the |
| time zone names contained in the external variable `tzname' shall |
| be set as if the tzset() function had been called. */ |
| tzset(); |
| |
| return __mktime_internal(tp, localtime_r, &localtime_offset); |
| } |