/* * timetoa.c -- time_t related string formatting * * Written by Juergen Perlinger (perlinger@ntp.org) for the NTP project. * The contents of 'html/copyright.html' apply. * * Printing a 'time_t' has a lot of portability pitfalls, due to it's * opaque base type. The only requirement imposed by the standard is * that it must be a numeric type. For all practical purposes it's a * signed int, and 32 bits are common. * * Since the UN*X time epoch will cause a signed integer overflow for * 32-bit signed int in the year 2038, implementations slowly move to * 64bit base types for time_t, even in 32-bit environments. * * As the printf() family has no standardised type specifier for time_t, * guessing the right output format specifier is a bit troublesome and * best done with the help of the preprocessor and "config.h". */ #include "config.h" #include #include #include "timetoa.h" #include "ntp_assert.h" #include "lib_strbuf.h" /* * Formatting to string needs at max 40 bytes (even with 64 bit time_t), * so we check LIB_BUFLENGTH is big enough for our purpose. */ #if LIB_BUFLENGTH < 40 # include "GRONK: LIB_BUFLENGTH is not sufficient" #endif /* * general fractional timestamp formatting * * Many pieces of ntpd require a machine with two's complement * representation of signed integers, so we don't go through the whole * rigamarole of creating fully portable code here. But we have to stay * away from signed integer overflow, as this might cause trouble even * with two's complement representation. */ const char * format_time_fraction( time_t secs, long frac, int prec ) { char * cp; u_int prec_u; u_time secs_u; u_int u; long fraclimit; int notneg; /* flag for non-negative value */ ldiv_t qr; DEBUG_REQUIRE(prec != 0); LIB_GETBUF(cp); secs_u = (u_time)secs; /* check if we need signed or unsigned mode */ notneg = (prec < 0); prec_u = abs(prec); /* fraclimit = (long)pow(10, prec_u); */ for (fraclimit = 10, u = 1; u < prec_u; u++) { DEBUG_INSIST(fraclimit < fraclimit * 10); fraclimit *= 10; } /* * Since conversion to string uses lots of divisions anyway, * there's no big extra penalty for normalisation. We do it for * consistency. */ if (frac < 0 || frac >= fraclimit) { qr = ldiv(frac, fraclimit); if (qr.rem < 0) { qr.quot--; qr.rem += fraclimit; } secs_u += (time_t)qr.quot; frac = qr.rem; } /* Get the absolute value of the split representation time. */ notneg = notneg || ((time_t)secs_u >= 0); if (!notneg) { secs_u = ~secs_u; if (0 == frac) secs_u++; else frac = fraclimit - frac; } /* finally format the data and return the result */ snprintf(cp, LIB_BUFLENGTH, "%s%" UTIME_FORMAT ".%0*ld", notneg? "" : "-", secs_u, prec_u, frac); return cp; }