/* * Copyright 2000, International Business Machines Corporation and others. * All Rights Reserved. * * This software has been released under the terms of the IBM Public * License. For details, see the LICENSE file in the top-level source * directory or online at http://www.openafs.org/dl/license10.html */ /* * fasttime.c -- Get the time of day quickly by mapping the kernel's * time of day variable. * * 6 January 1986 * * Modification History * 3/21/86: Added FT_ApproxTime which returns the last time * in seconds returned by RT_FastTime. The intent is to give * routines which aren't too concerned about the exact time * fast access to the time, even on kernels without mmap. * 4/2/86: Fixed my previous mod and fixed FT_Init so it doesn't initialize * a second time if explicitly called after being implicitly called. * This saves a (precious) file descriptor. */ #include #include #include int ft_debug; #define TRUE 1 #define FALSE 0 static enum InitState { notTried, tried, done } initState = notTried; struct timeval FT_LastTime; /* last time returned by RT_FastTime. Used to implement * FT_ApproxTime */ /* Call this to get the memory mapped. It will return -1 if anything went wrong. In that case, calls to FT_GetTimeOfDay will call gettimeofday instead. If printErrors is true, errors in initialization will cause error messages to be printed on stderr. If notReally is true, then things are set up so that all calls to FT_GetTimeOfDay call gettimeofday. You might want this if your program won't run too long and the nlist call is too expensive. Yeah, it's pretty horrible. */ int FT_Init(int printErrors, int notReally) { if (initState != notTried && !notReally) return (initState == done ? 0 : -1); /* This is in case explicit initialization * occurs after automatic initialization */ initState = tried; if (notReally) return 0; /* fake success, but leave initState * wrong. */ if (printErrors) fprintf(stderr, "FT_Init: mmap not implemented on this kernel\n"); return (-1); } /* Call this to get the time of day. It will automatically initialize the first time you call it. If you want error messages when you initialize, call FT_Init yourself. If the initialization failed, this will just call gettimeofday. If you ask for the timezone info, this routine will punt to gettimeofday. */ int FT_GetTimeOfDay(struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tz) { int ret; ret = gettimeofday(tv, tz); if (!ret) { /* need to bounds check 'cause Unix can fail these checks, (esp on Suns) * and time package can generate invalid (to select syscall) values * for the time until the next interesting event if it encounters * out of range microsecond fields */ if (tv->tv_usec < 0) tv->tv_usec = 0; if (tv->tv_usec > 999999) tv->tv_usec = 999999; FT_LastTime.tv_sec = tv->tv_sec; FT_LastTime.tv_usec = tv->tv_usec; } return ret; } /* For compatibility. Should go away. */ int TM_GetTimeOfDay(struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tz) { return FT_GetTimeOfDay(tv, tz); } int FT_AGetTimeOfDay(struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tz) { if (FT_LastTime.tv_sec) { tv->tv_sec = FT_LastTime.tv_sec; tv->tv_usec = FT_LastTime.tv_usec; return 0; } return FT_GetTimeOfDay(tv, tz); } #ifdef AFS_PTHREAD_ENV unsigned int FT_ApproxTime(void) { return time(0); } #else unsigned int FT_ApproxTime(void) { if (!FT_LastTime.tv_sec) { FT_GetTimeOfDay(&FT_LastTime, 0); } return FT_LastTime.tv_sec; } #endif