shithub: riscv

ref: d589632207181a7960607a5938f315422386b9cb
dir: /sys/man/2/tmdate/

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.TH TMDATE 2
.SH NAME
tmnow, tzload, tmtime, tmparse, tmfmt, tmnorm - convert date and time
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B #include <u.h>
.br
.B #include <libc.h>
.PP
.ft L
.nf
.EX
typedef struct Tm Tm;
typedef struct Tmfmt Tmfmt;
typedef struct Tzone Tzone;

struct Tm {
	int     nsec;    /* nanoseconds (range 0..1e9) */
	int     sec;     /* seconds (range 0..59) */
	int     min;     /* minutes (0..59) */
	int     hour;    /* hours (0..23) */
	int     mday;    /* day of the month (1..31) */
	int     mon;     /* month of the year (0..11) */
	int     year;    /* C.E year - 1900 */
	int     wday;    /* day of week (0..6, Sunday = 0) */
	int     yday;    /* day of year (0..365) */
	char    zone[];  /* time zone name */
	int     tzoff;   /* time zone delta from GMT, seconds */
	Tzone  *tz;      /* the time zone (optional) */
};

Tzone *tzload(char *name);
Tm    *tmnow(Tm *tm, Tzone *tz);
Tm    *tmtime(Tm *tm, vlong abs, Tzone *tz);
Tm    *tmtimens(Tm *tm, vlong abs, int ns, Tzone *tz);
Tm    *tmparse(Tm *dst, char *fmt, char *tm, Tzone *zone, char **ep);
vlong  tmnorm(Tm *tm);
Tmfmt  tmfmt(Tm *tm, char *fmt);
void   tmfmtinstall(void);
.EE
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
This family of functions handles simple date and time manipulation.
.PP
Time zones are loaded by name.
They can be specified as the abbreviated timezone name,
the full timezone name, the path to a timezone file,
or an absolute offset in the HHMM form.
.PP
When given as a timezone, any instant-dependent adjustments such as leap
seconds and daylight savings time will be applied to the derived fields of
struct Tm, but will not affect the absolute time.
The time zone name local always refers to the time in /env/timezone.
The nil timezone always refers to GMT.
.PP
Tzload loads a timezone by name. The returned timezone is
cached for the lifetime of the program, and should not be freed.
Loading a timezone repeatedly by name loads from the cache, and
does not leak.
.PP
Tmnow gets the current time of day in the requested time zone.
.PP
Tmtime converts the second resolution timestamp 'abs'
into a Tm struct in the requested timezone.
Tmtimens does the same, but with a nanosecond accuracy.
.PP
Tmtimens is identical to tmtime, but accepts a nanosecond argument.
.PP
Tmparse parses a time from a string according to the format argument.
Leading whitespace is ignored.
The point at which the parsing stopped is returned in
.IR ep .
If
.I ep
is nil, trailing garbage is ignored.
The result is returned in the timezone requested.
If there is a timezone in the date, and a timezone is provided
when parsing, then the zone is shifted to the provided timezone.
Parsing is case-insensitive
.PP
The format argument contains zero or more of the following components:
.TP
.B Y, YY, YYYY
Represents the year.
.I YY
prints the year in 2 digit form.
.TP
.B M, MM, MMM, MMMM
The month of the year, in unpadded numeric, padded numeric, short name, or long name,
respectively.
.TP
.B D, DD
The day of month in unpadded or padded numeric form, respectively.
.TP
.B W, WW, WWW
The day of week in numeric, short or long name form, respectively.
.TP
.B h, hh
The hour in unpadded or padded form, respectively
.TP
.B m, mm
The minute in unpadded or padded form, respectively
.TP
.B s, ss
The second in unpadded or padded form, respectively
.TP
.B t, tt, ttt
The milliseconds in unpadded and padded form, respectively.
.B u, uu, uuu, uuuu
The microseconds in unpadded. padded form modulo milliseconds,
or unpadded, padded forms of the complete value, respectively.
.B n, nn, nnn, nnnn, nnnnn, nnnnnn
The nanoseconds in unpadded and padded form modulo milliseconds,
the unpadded and padded form modulo microseconds,
and the unpadded and padded complete value, respectively.
.TP
.B Z, ZZ, ZZZ
The timezone in [+-]HHMM and [+-]HH:MM, and named form, respectively.
If the named timezone matches the name of the local zone, then the
local timezone will be used.
Otherwise, we will attempt to use the named zones listed in RFC5322.
.TP
.B a, A
Lower and uppercase 'am' and 'pm' specifiers, respectively.
.TP
.B o
Ordinal day of month suffix specifier.
.TP
.B [...]
Quoted text, copied directly to the output.
.TP
.B _
When formatting, this inserts padding into the date format.
The padded width of a field is the sum of format and specifier
characters combined. When
For example,
.I __h
will format to a width of 3. When parsing, this acts as whitespace.
.TP
.B ?
When parsing, all formats of the following argument are tried from most to least specific.
For example, 
.I ?M
will match 
.IR January ,
.IR Jan ,
.IR 01 ,
and 
.IR 1 ,
in that order. When formatting,
.B ?
is ignored.
.TP
.B ~
When parsing a date, this slackens range enforcement, accepting
out of range values such as January
.IR 32 ,
which would get normalized to February 1st.
.PP
Any characters not specified above are copied directly to output,
without modification.

.PP
Tmfmt produces a format description structure suitable for passing
to
.IR fmtprint (2) .
If fmt is nil, we default to the format used in
.IR ctime (2).
The format of the format string is identical to
.IR tmparse.

.PP
When parsing, any amount of whitespace is treated as a single token.
All string matches are case insensitive, and zero padding is optional.

.PP
Tmnorm takes a manually adjusted Tm structure, and normalizes it,
returning the absolute timestamp that the date represents.
Normalizing recomputes the
.I year, mon, mday, hr, min, sec
and
.I tzoff
fields.
If
.I tz
is non-nil, then
.I tzoff
will be recomputed, taking into account daylight savings
for the absolute time.
The values not used in the computation are recomputed for
the resulting absolute time.
All out of range values are wrapped.
For example, December 32 will roll over to Jan 1 of the
following year.
.PP
Tmfmtinstall installs a time format specifier %τ. The time
format behaves as in tmfmt

.SH EXAMPLES
.PP
All examples assume tmfmtinstall has been called.
.PP
Get the current date in the local timezone, UTC, and
US_Pacific time. Print it using the default format.

.IP
.EX
Tm t;
Tzone *zl, *zp;
if((zl = tzload("local") == nil)
	sysfatal("load zone: %r");
if((zp = tzload("US_Pacific") == nil)
	sysfatal("load zone: %r");
print("local: %τ\\n", tmfmt(tmnow(&t, zl), nil));
print("gmt: %τ\\n", tmfmt(tmnow(&t, nil), nil));
print("eastern: %τ\\n", tmfmt(tmnow(&t, zp), nil));
.EE
.PP
Compare if two times are the same, regardless of timezone.
Done with full, strict error checking.

.IP
.EX
#define Fmt "?WWW, ?MM ?DD hh:mm:ss ?Z YYYY"
Tm a, b;
char *e, *est, *pst;

pst = "Tue Dec 10 12:36:00 PST 2019";
est = "Tue Dec 10 15:36:00 EST 2019";
f(tmparse(&a, Fmt, pst, nil, &e) == nil)
	sysfatal("failed to parse: %r");
if(*e != '\\0')
	sysfatal("trailing junk %s", e);
if(tmparse(&b, Fmt, est, nil, &e) == nil)
	sysfatal("failed to parse: %r");
if(*e != '\\0')
	sysfatal("trailing junk %s", e);
if(tmnorm(a) == tmnorm(b) && a.nsec == b.nsec)
	print("same\\n");
else
	print("different\\n");
.EE

.PP
Convert from one timezone to another.

.IP
.EX
Tm here, there;
Tzone *zl, *zp;
if((zl = tzload("local")) == nil)
	sysfatal("load zone: %r");
if((zp = tzload("US_Pacific")) == nil)
	sysfatal("load zone: %r");
if(tmnow(&here, zl) == nil)
	sysfatal("get time: %r");
if(tmtime(&there, tmnorm(&here), zp) == nil)
	sysfatal("shift time: %r");
.EE

.PP
Add a day. Because cross daylight savings, only 23 hours are added.

.IP
.EX
Tm t;
char *date = "Sun Nov 2 13:11:11 PST 2019";
if(tmparse(&t, "W MMM D hh:mm:ss z YYYY, date, nil) == nil)
	print("failed to parse");
t.day++;
tmnorm(&t);
print("%τ", tmfmt(&t, nil)); /*  Mon Nov 3 13:11:11 PST 2019 */
.EE

.SH BUGS
.PP
Checking the timezone name against the local timezone is a
dirty hack. The same date string may parse differently for
people in different timezones.
.PP
Tmparse and ctime don't mix.
Tmparse preserves timezone names, including names like '+0200'.
Ctime expects timezone names to be exactly three characters.
Use the
.I %τ
format character instead of ctime.
.PP
The timezone information that we ship is out of date.
.PP
The Plan 9 timezone format has no way to express leap seconds.
.PP
We provide no way to manipulate timezones.