tvl-depot/absl/time/time.h
Abseil Team ab3552a189 Export of internal Abseil changes
--
f13697e3d33803f9667d124072da4f6dd8bfbf85 by Andy Soffer <asoffer@google.com>:

Addressing https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/issues/314, fixing
CMakeLists.txt to reference ABSL_TEST_COPTS rather than ABSL_DEFAULT_COPTS.

ABSL_TEST_COPTS should be preferred for all tests so that they are configured consistently (moreover, CMake should agree with Bazel).

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274932312

--
c31c24a1fa6bb98136adf51ef37c0818ac366690 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Silence MSAN in the stack consumption test utility

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274912950

--
2412913c05a246cd527cd4c31452f126e9129f3a by CJ Johnson <johnsoncj@google.com>:

Internal change

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274847103

--
75e984a93b5760873501b96ac3229ccfd955daf8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Reformat BUILD file to current standards.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274815392

--
a2780e085f1df1e4ca2c814a58c893d1b78a1d9c by Samuel Benzaquen <sbenza@google.com>:

Fix invalid result regarding leading zeros in the exponent.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274808017

--
dd402e1cb5c4ebacb576372ae24bf289d729d323 by Samuel Benzaquen <sbenza@google.com>:

Make string_view's relational operators constexpr when possible.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274807873

--
b4ef32565653a5da1cb8bb8d0351586d23519658 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Internal rework.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274787159

--
70d81971c5914e6785b8e8a9d4f6eb2655dd62c0 by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:

Internal rework.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274715557

--
14f5b0440e353b899cafaaa15b53e77f98f401af by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:

Make deprecated statements about ParseFLag/UnparseFlag consistent in a file.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274668123

--
2e85adbdbb92612e4d750bc34fbca3333128b42d by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Allow absl::c_equal to be used with arrays.

This is achieved by allowing container size computation for arrays.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274426830

--
219719f107226d328773e6cec99fb473f5d3119c by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:

Release correct extension interfaces to support usage of absl::Time and absl::Duration as ABSL_FLAG

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274273788

--
47a77f93fda23b69b4a6bdbd506fe643c69a5579 by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:

Rework of flags persistence/FlagSaver internals.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274225213

--
7807be3fe757c19e3b0c487298387683d4c9f5b3 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Switch reference to sdkddkver.h to lowercase, matching conventions used in the Windows SDK and other uses. This helps to avoid confusion on case-sensitive filesystems.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274061877

--
561304090087a19f1d10f0475f564fe132ebf06e by Andy Getzendanner <durandal@google.com>:

Fix ABSL_WAITER_MODE detection for mingw

Import of https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/pull/342

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274030071

--
9b3caac2cf202b9d440dfa1b4ffd538ac4bf715b by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:

Support using Abseil with the musl libc implementation.

Only test changes were required:
  * Workaround for a bug in sigaltstack() on musl
  * printf-style pointer formatting (%p) is implementation defined,
    so verify StrFromat produces something compatible
  * Fix detection of feenableexcept()

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274011666

--
73e8a938fc139e1cc8670d4513a445bacc855539 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

nvcc workaround: explicitly specify the definition of node_handle::Base

PiperOrigin-RevId: 274011392

--
ab9cc6d042aca7d48e16c504ab10eab39433f4b2 by Andy Soffer <asoffer@google.com>:

Internal change

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273996318

--
e567c4979ca99c7e71821ec1523b8f5edd2c76ac by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Introduce a type alias to work around an nvcc bug.

On the previous code, nvcc gets confused thinking that T has to be a parameter
pack, as IsDecomposable accepts one.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273980472

--
105b6e6339b77a32f4432de05f44cd3f9c436751 by Eric Fiselier <ericwf@google.com>:

Import of CCTZ from GitHub.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273955589

--
8feb87ff1d7e721fe094855e67c19539d5e582b7 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Avoid dual-exporting scheduling_mode.h

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273825112

--
fbc37854776d295dae98fb9d06a541f296daab95 by Andy Getzendanner <durandal@google.com>:

Fix ABSL_HAVE_ALARM check on mingw

Import of https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/pull/341

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273817839

--
6aedcd63a735b9133e143b043744ba0a25407f6f by Andy Soffer <asoffer@google.com>:

Remove bit_gen_view.h now that all callers have been migrated to bit_gen_ref.h
Tested:
TGP - https://test.corp.google.com/ui#id=OCL:273762409:BASE:273743370:1570639020744:3001bcb5

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273810331

--
6573de24a66ba715c579f7f32b5c48a1d743c7f8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Internal change.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273589963

--
91c8c28b6dca26d98b39e8e06a8ed17c701ff793 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Update macro name for `ABSL_GUARDED_BY()` in the example section.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273286983

--
0ff7d1a93d70f8ecd693f8dbb98b7a4a016ca2a4 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Fix potential integer overflow in the absl time library.

In absl::FromTM, the tm.tm_year is added by 1900 regarding that tm.tm_year represents the years since 1900. This change checks integer overflow before doing the arithmetic operation.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 273092952

--
b41c2a1310086807be09a833099ae6d4009f037c by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:

Correctly Unlock the global mutex in case of concurrent flag initialization.

Fixes #386

PiperOrigin-RevId: 272979749

--
c53103e71b2a6063af3c6d4ff68aa2d8f9ae9e06 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:

Try to become idle only when there is no wakeup.

Immediately after waking up (when futex wait returns), the current thread tries
to become idle doing bunch of memory loads and a branch.  Problem is that there
is a good chance that we woke up due to a wakeup, especially for actively used
threads.  For such wakeups, calling MaybeBecomeIdle() would be a waste of
cycles.

Instead, call MaybeBecomeIdle() only when we are sure there is no wakeup.  For
idle threads the net effect should be the same.  For active, threads this will
be more efficient.

Moreover, since MaybeBecomeIdle() is called before waiting on the futex, the
current thread will try to become idle before sleeping.  This should result
in more accurate idleness and more efficient release of thread resources.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 272940381
GitOrigin-RevId: f13697e3d33803f9667d124072da4f6dd8bfbf85
Change-Id: I36de05aec12595183725652dd362dfa58fb095d0
2019-10-16 10:42:51 -04:00

1578 lines
59 KiB
C++

// Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
//
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// File: time.h
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
//
// This header file defines abstractions for computing with absolute points
// in time, durations of time, and formatting and parsing time within a given
// time zone. The following abstractions are defined:
//
// * `absl::Time` defines an absolute, specific instance in time
// * `absl::Duration` defines a signed, fixed-length span of time
// * `absl::TimeZone` defines geopolitical time zone regions (as collected
// within the IANA Time Zone database (https://www.iana.org/time-zones)).
//
// Note: Absolute times are distinct from civil times, which refer to the
// human-scale time commonly represented by `YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss`. The mapping
// between absolute and civil times can be specified by use of time zones
// (`absl::TimeZone` within this API). That is:
//
// Civil Time = F(Absolute Time, Time Zone)
// Absolute Time = G(Civil Time, Time Zone)
//
// See civil_time.h for abstractions related to constructing and manipulating
// civil time.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::TimeZone nyc;
// // LoadTimeZone() may fail so it's always better to check for success.
// if (!absl::LoadTimeZone("America/New_York", &nyc)) {
// // handle error case
// }
//
// // My flight leaves NYC on Jan 2, 2017 at 03:04:05
// absl::CivilSecond cs(2017, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5);
// absl::Time takeoff = absl::FromCivil(cs, nyc);
//
// absl::Duration flight_duration = absl::Hours(21) + absl::Minutes(35);
// absl::Time landing = takeoff + flight_duration;
//
// absl::TimeZone syd;
// if (!absl::LoadTimeZone("Australia/Sydney", &syd)) {
// // handle error case
// }
// std::string s = absl::FormatTime(
// "My flight will land in Sydney on %Y-%m-%d at %H:%M:%S",
// landing, syd);
#ifndef ABSL_TIME_TIME_H_
#define ABSL_TIME_TIME_H_
#if !defined(_MSC_VER)
#include <sys/time.h>
#else
// We don't include `winsock2.h` because it drags in `windows.h` and friends,
// and they define conflicting macros like OPAQUE, ERROR, and more. This has the
// potential to break Abseil users.
//
// Instead we only forward declare `timeval` and require Windows users include
// `winsock2.h` themselves. This is both inconsistent and troublesome, but so is
// including 'windows.h' so we are picking the lesser of two evils here.
struct timeval;
#endif
#include <chrono> // NOLINT(build/c++11)
#include <cmath>
#include <cstdint>
#include <ctime>
#include <ostream>
#include <string>
#include <type_traits>
#include <utility>
#include "absl/base/macros.h"
#include "absl/strings/string_view.h"
#include "absl/time/civil_time.h"
#include "absl/time/internal/cctz/include/cctz/time_zone.h"
namespace absl {
class Duration; // Defined below
class Time; // Defined below
class TimeZone; // Defined below
namespace time_internal {
int64_t IDivDuration(bool satq, Duration num, Duration den, Duration* rem);
constexpr Time FromUnixDuration(Duration d);
constexpr Duration ToUnixDuration(Time t);
constexpr int64_t GetRepHi(Duration d);
constexpr uint32_t GetRepLo(Duration d);
constexpr Duration MakeDuration(int64_t hi, uint32_t lo);
constexpr Duration MakeDuration(int64_t hi, int64_t lo);
inline Duration MakePosDoubleDuration(double n);
constexpr int64_t kTicksPerNanosecond = 4;
constexpr int64_t kTicksPerSecond = 1000 * 1000 * 1000 * kTicksPerNanosecond;
template <std::intmax_t N>
constexpr Duration FromInt64(int64_t v, std::ratio<1, N>);
constexpr Duration FromInt64(int64_t v, std::ratio<60>);
constexpr Duration FromInt64(int64_t v, std::ratio<3600>);
template <typename T>
using EnableIfIntegral = typename std::enable_if<
std::is_integral<T>::value || std::is_enum<T>::value, int>::type;
template <typename T>
using EnableIfFloat =
typename std::enable_if<std::is_floating_point<T>::value, int>::type;
} // namespace time_internal
// Duration
//
// The `absl::Duration` class represents a signed, fixed-length span of time.
// A `Duration` is generated using a unit-specific factory function, or is
// the result of subtracting one `absl::Time` from another. Durations behave
// like unit-safe integers and they support all the natural integer-like
// arithmetic operations. Arithmetic overflows and saturates at +/- infinity.
// `Duration` should be passed by value rather than const reference.
//
// Factory functions `Nanoseconds()`, `Microseconds()`, `Milliseconds()`,
// `Seconds()`, `Minutes()`, `Hours()` and `InfiniteDuration()` allow for
// creation of constexpr `Duration` values
//
// Examples:
//
// constexpr absl::Duration ten_ns = absl::Nanoseconds(10);
// constexpr absl::Duration min = absl::Minutes(1);
// constexpr absl::Duration hour = absl::Hours(1);
// absl::Duration dur = 60 * min; // dur == hour
// absl::Duration half_sec = absl::Milliseconds(500);
// absl::Duration quarter_sec = 0.25 * absl::Seconds(1);
//
// `Duration` values can be easily converted to an integral number of units
// using the division operator.
//
// Example:
//
// constexpr absl::Duration dur = absl::Milliseconds(1500);
// int64_t ns = dur / absl::Nanoseconds(1); // ns == 1500000000
// int64_t ms = dur / absl::Milliseconds(1); // ms == 1500
// int64_t sec = dur / absl::Seconds(1); // sec == 1 (subseconds truncated)
// int64_t min = dur / absl::Minutes(1); // min == 0
//
// See the `IDivDuration()` and `FDivDuration()` functions below for details on
// how to access the fractional parts of the quotient.
//
// Alternatively, conversions can be performed using helpers such as
// `ToInt64Microseconds()` and `ToDoubleSeconds()`.
class Duration {
public:
// Value semantics.
constexpr Duration() : rep_hi_(0), rep_lo_(0) {} // zero-length duration
// Copyable.
#if !defined(__clang__) && defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER < 1910
// Explicitly defining the constexpr copy constructor avoids an MSVC bug.
constexpr Duration(const Duration& d)
: rep_hi_(d.rep_hi_), rep_lo_(d.rep_lo_) {}
#else
constexpr Duration(const Duration& d) = default;
#endif
Duration& operator=(const Duration& d) = default;
// Compound assignment operators.
Duration& operator+=(Duration d);
Duration& operator-=(Duration d);
Duration& operator*=(int64_t r);
Duration& operator*=(double r);
Duration& operator/=(int64_t r);
Duration& operator/=(double r);
Duration& operator%=(Duration rhs);
// Overloads that forward to either the int64_t or double overloads above.
// Integer operands must be representable as int64_t.
template <typename T>
Duration& operator*=(T r) {
int64_t x = r;
return *this *= x;
}
template <typename T>
Duration& operator/=(T r) {
int64_t x = r;
return *this /= x;
}
Duration& operator*=(float r) { return *this *= static_cast<double>(r); }
Duration& operator/=(float r) { return *this /= static_cast<double>(r); }
template <typename H>
friend H AbslHashValue(H h, Duration d) {
return H::combine(std::move(h), d.rep_hi_, d.rep_lo_);
}
private:
friend constexpr int64_t time_internal::GetRepHi(Duration d);
friend constexpr uint32_t time_internal::GetRepLo(Duration d);
friend constexpr Duration time_internal::MakeDuration(int64_t hi,
uint32_t lo);
constexpr Duration(int64_t hi, uint32_t lo) : rep_hi_(hi), rep_lo_(lo) {}
int64_t rep_hi_;
uint32_t rep_lo_;
};
// Relational Operators
constexpr bool operator<(Duration lhs, Duration rhs);
constexpr bool operator>(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) { return rhs < lhs; }
constexpr bool operator>=(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) { return !(lhs < rhs); }
constexpr bool operator<=(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) { return !(rhs < lhs); }
constexpr bool operator==(Duration lhs, Duration rhs);
constexpr bool operator!=(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) { return !(lhs == rhs); }
// Additive Operators
constexpr Duration operator-(Duration d);
inline Duration operator+(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) { return lhs += rhs; }
inline Duration operator-(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) { return lhs -= rhs; }
// Multiplicative Operators
// Integer operands must be representable as int64_t.
template <typename T>
Duration operator*(Duration lhs, T rhs) {
return lhs *= rhs;
}
template <typename T>
Duration operator*(T lhs, Duration rhs) {
return rhs *= lhs;
}
template <typename T>
Duration operator/(Duration lhs, T rhs) {
return lhs /= rhs;
}
inline int64_t operator/(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) {
return time_internal::IDivDuration(true, lhs, rhs,
&lhs); // trunc towards zero
}
inline Duration operator%(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) { return lhs %= rhs; }
// IDivDuration()
//
// Divides a numerator `Duration` by a denominator `Duration`, returning the
// quotient and remainder. The remainder always has the same sign as the
// numerator. The returned quotient and remainder respect the identity:
//
// numerator = denominator * quotient + remainder
//
// Returned quotients are capped to the range of `int64_t`, with the difference
// spilling into the remainder to uphold the above identity. This means that the
// remainder returned could differ from the remainder returned by
// `Duration::operator%` for huge quotients.
//
// See also the notes on `InfiniteDuration()` below regarding the behavior of
// division involving zero and infinite durations.
//
// Example:
//
// constexpr absl::Duration a =
// absl::Seconds(std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max()); // big
// constexpr absl::Duration b = absl::Nanoseconds(1); // small
//
// absl::Duration rem = a % b;
// // rem == absl::ZeroDuration()
//
// // Here, q would overflow int64_t, so rem accounts for the difference.
// int64_t q = absl::IDivDuration(a, b, &rem);
// // q == std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max(), rem == a - b * q
inline int64_t IDivDuration(Duration num, Duration den, Duration* rem) {
return time_internal::IDivDuration(true, num, den,
rem); // trunc towards zero
}
// FDivDuration()
//
// Divides a `Duration` numerator into a fractional number of units of a
// `Duration` denominator.
//
// See also the notes on `InfiniteDuration()` below regarding the behavior of
// division involving zero and infinite durations.
//
// Example:
//
// double d = absl::FDivDuration(absl::Milliseconds(1500), absl::Seconds(1));
// // d == 1.5
double FDivDuration(Duration num, Duration den);
// ZeroDuration()
//
// Returns a zero-length duration. This function behaves just like the default
// constructor, but the name helps make the semantics clear at call sites.
constexpr Duration ZeroDuration() { return Duration(); }
// AbsDuration()
//
// Returns the absolute value of a duration.
inline Duration AbsDuration(Duration d) {
return (d < ZeroDuration()) ? -d : d;
}
// Trunc()
//
// Truncates a duration (toward zero) to a multiple of a non-zero unit.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Duration d = absl::Nanoseconds(123456789);
// absl::Duration a = absl::Trunc(d, absl::Microseconds(1)); // 123456us
Duration Trunc(Duration d, Duration unit);
// Floor()
//
// Floors a duration using the passed duration unit to its largest value not
// greater than the duration.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Duration d = absl::Nanoseconds(123456789);
// absl::Duration b = absl::Floor(d, absl::Microseconds(1)); // 123456us
Duration Floor(Duration d, Duration unit);
// Ceil()
//
// Returns the ceiling of a duration using the passed duration unit to its
// smallest value not less than the duration.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Duration d = absl::Nanoseconds(123456789);
// absl::Duration c = absl::Ceil(d, absl::Microseconds(1)); // 123457us
Duration Ceil(Duration d, Duration unit);
// InfiniteDuration()
//
// Returns an infinite `Duration`. To get a `Duration` representing negative
// infinity, use `-InfiniteDuration()`.
//
// Duration arithmetic overflows to +/- infinity and saturates. In general,
// arithmetic with `Duration` infinities is similar to IEEE 754 infinities
// except where IEEE 754 NaN would be involved, in which case +/-
// `InfiniteDuration()` is used in place of a "nan" Duration.
//
// Examples:
//
// constexpr absl::Duration inf = absl::InfiniteDuration();
// const absl::Duration d = ... any finite duration ...
//
// inf == inf + inf
// inf == inf + d
// inf == inf - inf
// -inf == d - inf
//
// inf == d * 1e100
// inf == inf / 2
// 0 == d / inf
// INT64_MAX == inf / d
//
// d < inf
// -inf < d
//
// // Division by zero returns infinity, or INT64_MIN/MAX where appropriate.
// inf == d / 0
// INT64_MAX == d / absl::ZeroDuration()
//
// The examples involving the `/` operator above also apply to `IDivDuration()`
// and `FDivDuration()`.
constexpr Duration InfiniteDuration();
// Nanoseconds()
// Microseconds()
// Milliseconds()
// Seconds()
// Minutes()
// Hours()
//
// Factory functions for constructing `Duration` values from an integral number
// of the unit indicated by the factory function's name. The number must be
// representable as int64_t.
//
// NOTE: no "Days()" factory function exists because "a day" is ambiguous.
// Civil days are not always 24 hours long, and a 24-hour duration often does
// not correspond with a civil day. If a 24-hour duration is needed, use
// `absl::Hours(24)`. If you actually want a civil day, use absl::CivilDay
// from civil_time.h.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Duration a = absl::Seconds(60);
// absl::Duration b = absl::Minutes(1); // b == a
constexpr Duration Nanoseconds(int64_t n);
constexpr Duration Microseconds(int64_t n);
constexpr Duration Milliseconds(int64_t n);
constexpr Duration Seconds(int64_t n);
constexpr Duration Minutes(int64_t n);
constexpr Duration Hours(int64_t n);
// Factory overloads for constructing `Duration` values from a floating-point
// number of the unit indicated by the factory function's name. These functions
// exist for convenience, but they are not as efficient as the integral
// factories, which should be preferred.
//
// Example:
//
// auto a = absl::Seconds(1.5); // OK
// auto b = absl::Milliseconds(1500); // BETTER
template <typename T, time_internal::EnableIfFloat<T> = 0>
Duration Nanoseconds(T n) {
return n * Nanoseconds(1);
}
template <typename T, time_internal::EnableIfFloat<T> = 0>
Duration Microseconds(T n) {
return n * Microseconds(1);
}
template <typename T, time_internal::EnableIfFloat<T> = 0>
Duration Milliseconds(T n) {
return n * Milliseconds(1);
}
template <typename T, time_internal::EnableIfFloat<T> = 0>
Duration Seconds(T n) {
if (n >= 0) { // Note: `NaN >= 0` is false.
if (n >= (std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max)()) return InfiniteDuration();
return time_internal::MakePosDoubleDuration(n);
} else {
if (std::isnan(n))
return std::signbit(n) ? -InfiniteDuration() : InfiniteDuration();
if (n <= (std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min)()) return -InfiniteDuration();
return -time_internal::MakePosDoubleDuration(-n);
}
}
template <typename T, time_internal::EnableIfFloat<T> = 0>
Duration Minutes(T n) {
return n * Minutes(1);
}
template <typename T, time_internal::EnableIfFloat<T> = 0>
Duration Hours(T n) {
return n * Hours(1);
}
// ToInt64Nanoseconds()
// ToInt64Microseconds()
// ToInt64Milliseconds()
// ToInt64Seconds()
// ToInt64Minutes()
// ToInt64Hours()
//
// Helper functions that convert a Duration to an integral count of the
// indicated unit. These functions are shorthand for the `IDivDuration()`
// function above; see its documentation for details about overflow, etc.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Duration d = absl::Milliseconds(1500);
// int64_t isec = absl::ToInt64Seconds(d); // isec == 1
int64_t ToInt64Nanoseconds(Duration d);
int64_t ToInt64Microseconds(Duration d);
int64_t ToInt64Milliseconds(Duration d);
int64_t ToInt64Seconds(Duration d);
int64_t ToInt64Minutes(Duration d);
int64_t ToInt64Hours(Duration d);
// ToDoubleNanoSeconds()
// ToDoubleMicroseconds()
// ToDoubleMilliseconds()
// ToDoubleSeconds()
// ToDoubleMinutes()
// ToDoubleHours()
//
// Helper functions that convert a Duration to a floating point count of the
// indicated unit. These functions are shorthand for the `FDivDuration()`
// function above; see its documentation for details about overflow, etc.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Duration d = absl::Milliseconds(1500);
// double dsec = absl::ToDoubleSeconds(d); // dsec == 1.5
double ToDoubleNanoseconds(Duration d);
double ToDoubleMicroseconds(Duration d);
double ToDoubleMilliseconds(Duration d);
double ToDoubleSeconds(Duration d);
double ToDoubleMinutes(Duration d);
double ToDoubleHours(Duration d);
// FromChrono()
//
// Converts any of the pre-defined std::chrono durations to an absl::Duration.
//
// Example:
//
// std::chrono::milliseconds ms(123);
// absl::Duration d = absl::FromChrono(ms);
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::nanoseconds& d);
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::microseconds& d);
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::milliseconds& d);
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::seconds& d);
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::minutes& d);
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::hours& d);
// ToChronoNanoseconds()
// ToChronoMicroseconds()
// ToChronoMilliseconds()
// ToChronoSeconds()
// ToChronoMinutes()
// ToChronoHours()
//
// Converts an absl::Duration to any of the pre-defined std::chrono durations.
// If overflow would occur, the returned value will saturate at the min/max
// chrono duration value instead.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Duration d = absl::Microseconds(123);
// auto x = absl::ToChronoMicroseconds(d);
// auto y = absl::ToChronoNanoseconds(d); // x == y
// auto z = absl::ToChronoSeconds(absl::InfiniteDuration());
// // z == std::chrono::seconds::max()
std::chrono::nanoseconds ToChronoNanoseconds(Duration d);
std::chrono::microseconds ToChronoMicroseconds(Duration d);
std::chrono::milliseconds ToChronoMilliseconds(Duration d);
std::chrono::seconds ToChronoSeconds(Duration d);
std::chrono::minutes ToChronoMinutes(Duration d);
std::chrono::hours ToChronoHours(Duration d);
// FormatDuration()
//
// Returns a string representing the duration in the form "72h3m0.5s".
// Returns "inf" or "-inf" for +/- `InfiniteDuration()`.
std::string FormatDuration(Duration d);
// Output stream operator.
inline std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, Duration d) {
return os << FormatDuration(d);
}
// ParseDuration()
//
// Parses a duration string consisting of a possibly signed sequence of
// decimal numbers, each with an optional fractional part and a unit
// suffix. The valid suffixes are "ns", "us" "ms", "s", "m", and "h".
// Simple examples include "300ms", "-1.5h", and "2h45m". Parses "0" as
// `ZeroDuration()`. Parses "inf" and "-inf" as +/- `InfiniteDuration()`.
bool ParseDuration(const std::string& dur_string, Duration* d);
// Support for flag values of type Duration. Duration flags must be specified
// in a format that is valid input for absl::ParseDuration().
bool AbslParseFlag(absl::string_view text, Duration* dst, std::string* error);
std::string AbslUnparseFlag(Duration d);
ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use AbslParseFlag() instead.")
bool ParseFlag(const std::string& text, Duration* dst, std::string* error);
ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use AbslUnparseFlag() instead.")
std::string UnparseFlag(Duration d);
// Time
//
// An `absl::Time` represents a specific instant in time. Arithmetic operators
// are provided for naturally expressing time calculations. Instances are
// created using `absl::Now()` and the `absl::From*()` factory functions that
// accept the gamut of other time representations. Formatting and parsing
// functions are provided for conversion to and from strings. `absl::Time`
// should be passed by value rather than const reference.
//
// `absl::Time` assumes there are 60 seconds in a minute, which means the
// underlying time scales must be "smeared" to eliminate leap seconds.
// See https://developers.google.com/time/smear.
//
// Even though `absl::Time` supports a wide range of timestamps, exercise
// caution when using values in the distant past. `absl::Time` uses the
// Proleptic Gregorian calendar, which extends the Gregorian calendar backward
// to dates before its introduction in 1582.
// See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proleptic_Gregorian_calendar
// for more information. Use the ICU calendar classes to convert a date in
// some other calendar (http://userguide.icu-project.org/datetime/calendar).
//
// Similarly, standardized time zones are a reasonably recent innovation, with
// the Greenwich prime meridian being established in 1884. The TZ database
// itself does not profess accurate offsets for timestamps prior to 1970. The
// breakdown of future timestamps is subject to the whim of regional
// governments.
//
// The `absl::Time` class represents an instant in time as a count of clock
// ticks of some granularity (resolution) from some starting point (epoch).
//
// `absl::Time` uses a resolution that is high enough to avoid loss in
// precision, and a range that is wide enough to avoid overflow, when
// converting between tick counts in most Google time scales (i.e., resolution
// of at least one nanosecond, and range +/-100 billion years). Conversions
// between the time scales are performed by truncating (towards negative
// infinity) to the nearest representable point.
//
// Examples:
//
// absl::Time t1 = ...;
// absl::Time t2 = t1 + absl::Minutes(2);
// absl::Duration d = t2 - t1; // == absl::Minutes(2)
//
class Time {
public:
// Value semantics.
// Returns the Unix epoch. However, those reading your code may not know
// or expect the Unix epoch as the default value, so make your code more
// readable by explicitly initializing all instances before use.
//
// Example:
// absl::Time t = absl::UnixEpoch();
// absl::Time t = absl::Now();
// absl::Time t = absl::TimeFromTimeval(tv);
// absl::Time t = absl::InfinitePast();
constexpr Time() = default;
// Copyable.
constexpr Time(const Time& t) = default;
Time& operator=(const Time& t) = default;
// Assignment operators.
Time& operator+=(Duration d) {
rep_ += d;
return *this;
}
Time& operator-=(Duration d) {
rep_ -= d;
return *this;
}
// Time::Breakdown
//
// The calendar and wall-clock (aka "civil time") components of an
// `absl::Time` in a certain `absl::TimeZone`. This struct is not
// intended to represent an instant in time. So, rather than passing
// a `Time::Breakdown` to a function, pass an `absl::Time` and an
// `absl::TimeZone`.
//
// Deprecated. Use `absl::TimeZone::CivilInfo`.
struct
Breakdown {
int64_t year; // year (e.g., 2013)
int month; // month of year [1:12]
int day; // day of month [1:31]
int hour; // hour of day [0:23]
int minute; // minute of hour [0:59]
int second; // second of minute [0:59]
Duration subsecond; // [Seconds(0):Seconds(1)) if finite
int weekday; // 1==Mon, ..., 7=Sun
int yearday; // day of year [1:366]
// Note: The following fields exist for backward compatibility
// with older APIs. Accessing these fields directly is a sign of
// imprudent logic in the calling code. Modern time-related code
// should only access this data indirectly by way of FormatTime().
// These fields are undefined for InfiniteFuture() and InfinitePast().
int offset; // seconds east of UTC
bool is_dst; // is offset non-standard?
const char* zone_abbr; // time-zone abbreviation (e.g., "PST")
};
// Time::In()
//
// Returns the breakdown of this instant in the given TimeZone.
//
// Deprecated. Use `absl::TimeZone::At(Time)`.
Breakdown In(TimeZone tz) const;
template <typename H>
friend H AbslHashValue(H h, Time t) {
return H::combine(std::move(h), t.rep_);
}
private:
friend constexpr Time time_internal::FromUnixDuration(Duration d);
friend constexpr Duration time_internal::ToUnixDuration(Time t);
friend constexpr bool operator<(Time lhs, Time rhs);
friend constexpr bool operator==(Time lhs, Time rhs);
friend Duration operator-(Time lhs, Time rhs);
friend constexpr Time UniversalEpoch();
friend constexpr Time InfiniteFuture();
friend constexpr Time InfinitePast();
constexpr explicit Time(Duration rep) : rep_(rep) {}
Duration rep_;
};
// Relational Operators
constexpr bool operator<(Time lhs, Time rhs) { return lhs.rep_ < rhs.rep_; }
constexpr bool operator>(Time lhs, Time rhs) { return rhs < lhs; }
constexpr bool operator>=(Time lhs, Time rhs) { return !(lhs < rhs); }
constexpr bool operator<=(Time lhs, Time rhs) { return !(rhs < lhs); }
constexpr bool operator==(Time lhs, Time rhs) { return lhs.rep_ == rhs.rep_; }
constexpr bool operator!=(Time lhs, Time rhs) { return !(lhs == rhs); }
// Additive Operators
inline Time operator+(Time lhs, Duration rhs) { return lhs += rhs; }
inline Time operator+(Duration lhs, Time rhs) { return rhs += lhs; }
inline Time operator-(Time lhs, Duration rhs) { return lhs -= rhs; }
inline Duration operator-(Time lhs, Time rhs) { return lhs.rep_ - rhs.rep_; }
// UnixEpoch()
//
// Returns the `absl::Time` representing "1970-01-01 00:00:00.0 +0000".
constexpr Time UnixEpoch() { return Time(); }
// UniversalEpoch()
//
// Returns the `absl::Time` representing "0001-01-01 00:00:00.0 +0000", the
// epoch of the ICU Universal Time Scale.
constexpr Time UniversalEpoch() {
// 719162 is the number of days from 0001-01-01 to 1970-01-01,
// assuming the Gregorian calendar.
return Time(time_internal::MakeDuration(-24 * 719162 * int64_t{3600}, 0U));
}
// InfiniteFuture()
//
// Returns an `absl::Time` that is infinitely far in the future.
constexpr Time InfiniteFuture() {
return Time(
time_internal::MakeDuration((std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max)(), ~0U));
}
// InfinitePast()
//
// Returns an `absl::Time` that is infinitely far in the past.
constexpr Time InfinitePast() {
return Time(
time_internal::MakeDuration((std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min)(), ~0U));
}
// FromUnixNanos()
// FromUnixMicros()
// FromUnixMillis()
// FromUnixSeconds()
// FromTimeT()
// FromUDate()
// FromUniversal()
//
// Creates an `absl::Time` from a variety of other representations.
constexpr Time FromUnixNanos(int64_t ns);
constexpr Time FromUnixMicros(int64_t us);
constexpr Time FromUnixMillis(int64_t ms);
constexpr Time FromUnixSeconds(int64_t s);
constexpr Time FromTimeT(time_t t);
Time FromUDate(double udate);
Time FromUniversal(int64_t universal);
// ToUnixNanos()
// ToUnixMicros()
// ToUnixMillis()
// ToUnixSeconds()
// ToTimeT()
// ToUDate()
// ToUniversal()
//
// Converts an `absl::Time` to a variety of other representations. Note that
// these operations round down toward negative infinity where necessary to
// adjust to the resolution of the result type. Beware of possible time_t
// over/underflow in ToTime{T,val,spec}() on 32-bit platforms.
int64_t ToUnixNanos(Time t);
int64_t ToUnixMicros(Time t);
int64_t ToUnixMillis(Time t);
int64_t ToUnixSeconds(Time t);
time_t ToTimeT(Time t);
double ToUDate(Time t);
int64_t ToUniversal(Time t);
// DurationFromTimespec()
// DurationFromTimeval()
// ToTimespec()
// ToTimeval()
// TimeFromTimespec()
// TimeFromTimeval()
// ToTimespec()
// ToTimeval()
//
// Some APIs use a timespec or a timeval as a Duration (e.g., nanosleep(2)
// and select(2)), while others use them as a Time (e.g. clock_gettime(2)
// and gettimeofday(2)), so conversion functions are provided for both cases.
// The "to timespec/val" direction is easily handled via overloading, but
// for "from timespec/val" the desired type is part of the function name.
Duration DurationFromTimespec(timespec ts);
Duration DurationFromTimeval(timeval tv);
timespec ToTimespec(Duration d);
timeval ToTimeval(Duration d);
Time TimeFromTimespec(timespec ts);
Time TimeFromTimeval(timeval tv);
timespec ToTimespec(Time t);
timeval ToTimeval(Time t);
// FromChrono()
//
// Converts a std::chrono::system_clock::time_point to an absl::Time.
//
// Example:
//
// auto tp = std::chrono::system_clock::from_time_t(123);
// absl::Time t = absl::FromChrono(tp);
// // t == absl::FromTimeT(123)
Time FromChrono(const std::chrono::system_clock::time_point& tp);
// ToChronoTime()
//
// Converts an absl::Time to a std::chrono::system_clock::time_point. If
// overflow would occur, the returned value will saturate at the min/max time
// point value instead.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Time t = absl::FromTimeT(123);
// auto tp = absl::ToChronoTime(t);
// // tp == std::chrono::system_clock::from_time_t(123);
std::chrono::system_clock::time_point ToChronoTime(Time);
// Support for flag values of type Time. Time flags must be specified in a
// format that matches absl::RFC3339_full. For example:
//
// --start_time=2016-01-02T03:04:05.678+08:00
//
// Note: A UTC offset (or 'Z' indicating a zero-offset from UTC) is required.
//
// Additionally, if you'd like to specify a time as a count of
// seconds/milliseconds/etc from the Unix epoch, use an absl::Duration flag
// and add that duration to absl::UnixEpoch() to get an absl::Time.
bool AbslParseFlag(absl::string_view text, Time* t, std::string* error);
std::string AbslUnparseFlag(Time t);
ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use AbslParseFlag() instead.")
bool ParseFlag(const std::string& text, Time* t, std::string* error);
ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use AbslUnparseFlag() instead.")
std::string UnparseFlag(Time t);
// TimeZone
//
// The `absl::TimeZone` is an opaque, small, value-type class representing a
// geo-political region within which particular rules are used for converting
// between absolute and civil times (see https://git.io/v59Ly). `absl::TimeZone`
// values are named using the TZ identifiers from the IANA Time Zone Database,
// such as "America/Los_Angeles" or "Australia/Sydney". `absl::TimeZone` values
// are created from factory functions such as `absl::LoadTimeZone()`. Note:
// strings like "PST" and "EDT" are not valid TZ identifiers. Prefer to pass by
// value rather than const reference.
//
// For more on the fundamental concepts of time zones, absolute times, and civil
// times, see https://github.com/google/cctz#fundamental-concepts
//
// Examples:
//
// absl::TimeZone utc = absl::UTCTimeZone();
// absl::TimeZone pst = absl::FixedTimeZone(-8 * 60 * 60);
// absl::TimeZone loc = absl::LocalTimeZone();
// absl::TimeZone lax;
// if (!absl::LoadTimeZone("America/Los_Angeles", &lax)) {
// // handle error case
// }
//
// See also:
// - https://github.com/google/cctz
// - https://www.iana.org/time-zones
// - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoneinfo
class TimeZone {
public:
explicit TimeZone(time_internal::cctz::time_zone tz) : cz_(tz) {}
TimeZone() = default; // UTC, but prefer UTCTimeZone() to be explicit.
// Copyable.
TimeZone(const TimeZone&) = default;
TimeZone& operator=(const TimeZone&) = default;
explicit operator time_internal::cctz::time_zone() const { return cz_; }
std::string name() const { return cz_.name(); }
// TimeZone::CivilInfo
//
// Information about the civil time corresponding to an absolute time.
// This struct is not intended to represent an instant in time. So, rather
// than passing a `TimeZone::CivilInfo` to a function, pass an `absl::Time`
// and an `absl::TimeZone`.
struct CivilInfo {
CivilSecond cs;
Duration subsecond;
// Note: The following fields exist for backward compatibility
// with older APIs. Accessing these fields directly is a sign of
// imprudent logic in the calling code. Modern time-related code
// should only access this data indirectly by way of FormatTime().
// These fields are undefined for InfiniteFuture() and InfinitePast().
int offset; // seconds east of UTC
bool is_dst; // is offset non-standard?
const char* zone_abbr; // time-zone abbreviation (e.g., "PST")
};
// TimeZone::At(Time)
//
// Returns the civil time for this TimeZone at a certain `absl::Time`.
// If the input time is infinite, the output civil second will be set to
// CivilSecond::max() or min(), and the subsecond will be infinite.
//
// Example:
//
// const auto epoch = lax.At(absl::UnixEpoch());
// // epoch.cs == 1969-12-31 16:00:00
// // epoch.subsecond == absl::ZeroDuration()
// // epoch.offset == -28800
// // epoch.is_dst == false
// // epoch.abbr == "PST"
CivilInfo At(Time t) const;
// TimeZone::TimeInfo
//
// Information about the absolute times corresponding to a civil time.
// (Subseconds must be handled separately.)
//
// It is possible for a caller to pass a civil-time value that does
// not represent an actual or unique instant in time (due to a shift
// in UTC offset in the TimeZone, which results in a discontinuity in
// the civil-time components). For example, a daylight-saving-time
// transition skips or repeats civil times---in the United States,
// March 13, 2011 02:15 never occurred, while November 6, 2011 01:15
// occurred twice---so requests for such times are not well-defined.
// To account for these possibilities, `absl::TimeZone::TimeInfo` is
// richer than just a single `absl::Time`.
struct TimeInfo {
enum CivilKind {
UNIQUE, // the civil time was singular (pre == trans == post)
SKIPPED, // the civil time did not exist (pre >= trans > post)
REPEATED, // the civil time was ambiguous (pre < trans <= post)
} kind;
Time pre; // time calculated using the pre-transition offset
Time trans; // when the civil-time discontinuity occurred
Time post; // time calculated using the post-transition offset
};
// TimeZone::At(CivilSecond)
//
// Returns an `absl::TimeInfo` containing the absolute time(s) for this
// TimeZone at an `absl::CivilSecond`. When the civil time is skipped or
// repeated, returns times calculated using the pre-transition and post-
// transition UTC offsets, plus the transition time itself.
//
// Examples:
//
// // A unique civil time
// const auto jan01 = lax.At(absl::CivilSecond(2011, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0));
// // jan01.kind == TimeZone::TimeInfo::UNIQUE
// // jan01.pre is 2011-01-01 00:00:00 -0800
// // jan01.trans is 2011-01-01 00:00:00 -0800
// // jan01.post is 2011-01-01 00:00:00 -0800
//
// // A Spring DST transition, when there is a gap in civil time
// const auto mar13 = lax.At(absl::CivilSecond(2011, 3, 13, 2, 15, 0));
// // mar13.kind == TimeZone::TimeInfo::SKIPPED
// // mar13.pre is 2011-03-13 03:15:00 -0700
// // mar13.trans is 2011-03-13 03:00:00 -0700
// // mar13.post is 2011-03-13 01:15:00 -0800
//
// // A Fall DST transition, when civil times are repeated
// const auto nov06 = lax.At(absl::CivilSecond(2011, 11, 6, 1, 15, 0));
// // nov06.kind == TimeZone::TimeInfo::REPEATED
// // nov06.pre is 2011-11-06 01:15:00 -0700
// // nov06.trans is 2011-11-06 01:00:00 -0800
// // nov06.post is 2011-11-06 01:15:00 -0800
TimeInfo At(CivilSecond ct) const;
// TimeZone::NextTransition()
// TimeZone::PrevTransition()
//
// Finds the time of the next/previous offset change in this time zone.
//
// By definition, `NextTransition(t, &trans)` returns false when `t` is
// `InfiniteFuture()`, and `PrevTransition(t, &trans)` returns false
// when `t` is `InfinitePast()`. If the zone has no transitions, the
// result will also be false no matter what the argument.
//
// Otherwise, when `t` is `InfinitePast()`, `NextTransition(t, &trans)`
// returns true and sets `trans` to the first recorded transition. Chains
// of calls to `NextTransition()/PrevTransition()` will eventually return
// false, but it is unspecified exactly when `NextTransition(t, &trans)`
// jumps to false, or what time is set by `PrevTransition(t, &trans)` for
// a very distant `t`.
//
// Note: Enumeration of time-zone transitions is for informational purposes
// only. Modern time-related code should not care about when offset changes
// occur.
//
// Example:
// absl::TimeZone nyc;
// if (!absl::LoadTimeZone("America/New_York", &nyc)) { ... }
// const auto now = absl::Now();
// auto t = absl::InfinitePast();
// absl::TimeZone::CivilTransition trans;
// while (t <= now && nyc.NextTransition(t, &trans)) {
// // transition: trans.from -> trans.to
// t = nyc.At(trans.to).trans;
// }
struct CivilTransition {
CivilSecond from; // the civil time we jump from
CivilSecond to; // the civil time we jump to
};
bool NextTransition(Time t, CivilTransition* trans) const;
bool PrevTransition(Time t, CivilTransition* trans) const;
template <typename H>
friend H AbslHashValue(H h, TimeZone tz) {
return H::combine(std::move(h), tz.cz_);
}
private:
friend bool operator==(TimeZone a, TimeZone b) { return a.cz_ == b.cz_; }
friend bool operator!=(TimeZone a, TimeZone b) { return a.cz_ != b.cz_; }
friend std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, TimeZone tz) {
return os << tz.name();
}
time_internal::cctz::time_zone cz_;
};
// LoadTimeZone()
//
// Loads the named zone. May perform I/O on the initial load of the named
// zone. If the name is invalid, or some other kind of error occurs, returns
// `false` and `*tz` is set to the UTC time zone.
inline bool LoadTimeZone(const std::string& name, TimeZone* tz) {
if (name == "localtime") {
*tz = TimeZone(time_internal::cctz::local_time_zone());
return true;
}
time_internal::cctz::time_zone cz;
const bool b = time_internal::cctz::load_time_zone(name, &cz);
*tz = TimeZone(cz);
return b;
}
// FixedTimeZone()
//
// Returns a TimeZone that is a fixed offset (seconds east) from UTC.
// Note: If the absolute value of the offset is greater than 24 hours
// you'll get UTC (i.e., no offset) instead.
inline TimeZone FixedTimeZone(int seconds) {
return TimeZone(
time_internal::cctz::fixed_time_zone(std::chrono::seconds(seconds)));
}
// UTCTimeZone()
//
// Convenience method returning the UTC time zone.
inline TimeZone UTCTimeZone() {
return TimeZone(time_internal::cctz::utc_time_zone());
}
// LocalTimeZone()
//
// Convenience method returning the local time zone, or UTC if there is
// no configured local zone. Warning: Be wary of using LocalTimeZone(),
// and particularly so in a server process, as the zone configured for the
// local machine should be irrelevant. Prefer an explicit zone name.
inline TimeZone LocalTimeZone() {
return TimeZone(time_internal::cctz::local_time_zone());
}
// ToCivilSecond()
// ToCivilMinute()
// ToCivilHour()
// ToCivilDay()
// ToCivilMonth()
// ToCivilYear()
//
// Helpers for TimeZone::At(Time) to return particularly aligned civil times.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Time t = ...;
// absl::TimeZone tz = ...;
// const auto cd = absl::ToCivilDay(t, tz);
inline CivilSecond ToCivilSecond(Time t, TimeZone tz) {
return tz.At(t).cs; // already a CivilSecond
}
inline CivilMinute ToCivilMinute(Time t, TimeZone tz) {
return CivilMinute(tz.At(t).cs);
}
inline CivilHour ToCivilHour(Time t, TimeZone tz) {
return CivilHour(tz.At(t).cs);
}
inline CivilDay ToCivilDay(Time t, TimeZone tz) {
return CivilDay(tz.At(t).cs);
}
inline CivilMonth ToCivilMonth(Time t, TimeZone tz) {
return CivilMonth(tz.At(t).cs);
}
inline CivilYear ToCivilYear(Time t, TimeZone tz) {
return CivilYear(tz.At(t).cs);
}
// FromCivil()
//
// Helper for TimeZone::At(CivilSecond) that provides "order-preserving
// semantics." If the civil time maps to a unique time, that time is
// returned. If the civil time is repeated in the given time zone, the
// time using the pre-transition offset is returned. Otherwise, the
// civil time is skipped in the given time zone, and the transition time
// is returned. This means that for any two civil times, ct1 and ct2,
// (ct1 < ct2) => (FromCivil(ct1) <= FromCivil(ct2)), the equal case
// being when two non-existent civil times map to the same transition time.
//
// Note: Accepts civil times of any alignment.
inline Time FromCivil(CivilSecond ct, TimeZone tz) {
const auto ti = tz.At(ct);
if (ti.kind == TimeZone::TimeInfo::SKIPPED) return ti.trans;
return ti.pre;
}
// TimeConversion
//
// An `absl::TimeConversion` represents the conversion of year, month, day,
// hour, minute, and second values (i.e., a civil time), in a particular
// `absl::TimeZone`, to a time instant (an absolute time), as returned by
// `absl::ConvertDateTime()`. Legacy version of `absl::TimeZone::TimeInfo`.
//
// Deprecated. Use `absl::TimeZone::TimeInfo`.
struct
TimeConversion {
Time pre; // time calculated using the pre-transition offset
Time trans; // when the civil-time discontinuity occurred
Time post; // time calculated using the post-transition offset
enum Kind {
UNIQUE, // the civil time was singular (pre == trans == post)
SKIPPED, // the civil time did not exist
REPEATED, // the civil time was ambiguous
};
Kind kind;
bool normalized; // input values were outside their valid ranges
};
// ConvertDateTime()
//
// Legacy version of `absl::TimeZone::At(absl::CivilSecond)` that takes
// the civil time as six, separate values (YMDHMS).
//
// The input month, day, hour, minute, and second values can be outside
// of their valid ranges, in which case they will be "normalized" during
// the conversion.
//
// Example:
//
// // "October 32" normalizes to "November 1".
// absl::TimeConversion tc =
// absl::ConvertDateTime(2013, 10, 32, 8, 30, 0, lax);
// // tc.kind == TimeConversion::UNIQUE && tc.normalized == true
// // absl::ToCivilDay(tc.pre, tz).month() == 11
// // absl::ToCivilDay(tc.pre, tz).day() == 1
//
// Deprecated. Use `absl::TimeZone::At(CivilSecond)`.
TimeConversion ConvertDateTime(int64_t year, int mon, int day, int hour,
int min, int sec, TimeZone tz);
// FromDateTime()
//
// A convenience wrapper for `absl::ConvertDateTime()` that simply returns
// the "pre" `absl::Time`. That is, the unique result, or the instant that
// is correct using the pre-transition offset (as if the transition never
// happened).
//
// Example:
//
// absl::Time t = absl::FromDateTime(2017, 9, 26, 9, 30, 0, lax);
// // t = 2017-09-26 09:30:00 -0700
//
// Deprecated. Use `absl::FromCivil(CivilSecond, TimeZone)`. Note that the
// behavior of `FromCivil()` differs from `FromDateTime()` for skipped civil
// times. If you care about that see `absl::TimeZone::At(absl::CivilSecond)`.
inline Time FromDateTime(int64_t year, int mon, int day, int hour,
int min, int sec, TimeZone tz) {
return ConvertDateTime(year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, tz).pre;
}
// FromTM()
//
// Converts the `tm_year`, `tm_mon`, `tm_mday`, `tm_hour`, `tm_min`, and
// `tm_sec` fields to an `absl::Time` using the given time zone. See ctime(3)
// for a description of the expected values of the tm fields. If the indicated
// time instant is not unique (see `absl::TimeZone::At(absl::CivilSecond)`
// above), the `tm_isdst` field is consulted to select the desired instant
// (`tm_isdst` > 0 means DST, `tm_isdst` == 0 means no DST, `tm_isdst` < 0
// means use the post-transition offset).
Time FromTM(const struct tm& tm, TimeZone tz);
// ToTM()
//
// Converts the given `absl::Time` to a struct tm using the given time zone.
// See ctime(3) for a description of the values of the tm fields.
struct tm ToTM(Time t, TimeZone tz);
// RFC3339_full
// RFC3339_sec
//
// FormatTime()/ParseTime() format specifiers for RFC3339 date/time strings,
// with trailing zeros trimmed or with fractional seconds omitted altogether.
//
// Note that RFC3339_sec[] matches an ISO 8601 extended format for date and
// time with UTC offset. Also note the use of "%Y": RFC3339 mandates that
// years have exactly four digits, but we allow them to take their natural
// width.
extern const char RFC3339_full[]; // %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%E*S%Ez
extern const char RFC3339_sec[]; // %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%Ez
// RFC1123_full
// RFC1123_no_wday
//
// FormatTime()/ParseTime() format specifiers for RFC1123 date/time strings.
extern const char RFC1123_full[]; // %a, %d %b %E4Y %H:%M:%S %z
extern const char RFC1123_no_wday[]; // %d %b %E4Y %H:%M:%S %z
// FormatTime()
//
// Formats the given `absl::Time` in the `absl::TimeZone` according to the
// provided format string. Uses strftime()-like formatting options, with
// the following extensions:
//
// - %Ez - RFC3339-compatible numeric UTC offset (+hh:mm or -hh:mm)
// - %E*z - Full-resolution numeric UTC offset (+hh:mm:ss or -hh:mm:ss)
// - %E#S - Seconds with # digits of fractional precision
// - %E*S - Seconds with full fractional precision (a literal '*')
// - %E#f - Fractional seconds with # digits of precision
// - %E*f - Fractional seconds with full precision (a literal '*')
// - %E4Y - Four-character years (-999 ... -001, 0000, 0001 ... 9999)
//
// Note that %E0S behaves like %S, and %E0f produces no characters. In
// contrast %E*f always produces at least one digit, which may be '0'.
//
// Note that %Y produces as many characters as it takes to fully render the
// year. A year outside of [-999:9999] when formatted with %E4Y will produce
// more than four characters, just like %Y.
//
// We recommend that format strings include the UTC offset (%z, %Ez, or %E*z)
// so that the result uniquely identifies a time instant.
//
// Example:
//
// absl::CivilSecond cs(2013, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5);
// absl::Time t = absl::FromCivil(cs, lax);
// std::string f = absl::FormatTime("%H:%M:%S", t, lax); // "03:04:05"
// f = absl::FormatTime("%H:%M:%E3S", t, lax); // "03:04:05.000"
//
// Note: If the given `absl::Time` is `absl::InfiniteFuture()`, the returned
// string will be exactly "infinite-future". If the given `absl::Time` is
// `absl::InfinitePast()`, the returned string will be exactly "infinite-past".
// In both cases the given format string and `absl::TimeZone` are ignored.
//
std::string FormatTime(const std::string& format, Time t, TimeZone tz);
// Convenience functions that format the given time using the RFC3339_full
// format. The first overload uses the provided TimeZone, while the second
// uses LocalTimeZone().
std::string FormatTime(Time t, TimeZone tz);
std::string FormatTime(Time t);
// Output stream operator.
inline std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, Time t) {
return os << FormatTime(t);
}
// ParseTime()
//
// Parses an input string according to the provided format string and
// returns the corresponding `absl::Time`. Uses strftime()-like formatting
// options, with the same extensions as FormatTime(), but with the
// exceptions that %E#S is interpreted as %E*S, and %E#f as %E*f. %Ez
// and %E*z also accept the same inputs.
//
// %Y consumes as many numeric characters as it can, so the matching data
// should always be terminated with a non-numeric. %E4Y always consumes
// exactly four characters, including any sign.
//
// Unspecified fields are taken from the default date and time of ...
//
// "1970-01-01 00:00:00.0 +0000"
//
// For example, parsing a string of "15:45" (%H:%M) will return an absl::Time
// that represents "1970-01-01 15:45:00.0 +0000".
//
// Note that since ParseTime() returns time instants, it makes the most sense
// to parse fully-specified date/time strings that include a UTC offset (%z,
// %Ez, or %E*z).
//
// Note also that `absl::ParseTime()` only heeds the fields year, month, day,
// hour, minute, (fractional) second, and UTC offset. Other fields, like
// weekday (%a or %A), while parsed for syntactic validity, are ignored
// in the conversion.
//
// Date and time fields that are out-of-range will be treated as errors
// rather than normalizing them like `absl::CivilSecond` does. For example,
// it is an error to parse the date "Oct 32, 2013" because 32 is out of range.
//
// A leap second of ":60" is normalized to ":00" of the following minute
// with fractional seconds discarded. The following table shows how the
// given seconds and subseconds will be parsed:
//
// "59.x" -> 59.x // exact
// "60.x" -> 00.0 // normalized
// "00.x" -> 00.x // exact
//
// Errors are indicated by returning false and assigning an error message
// to the "err" out param if it is non-null.
//
// Note: If the input string is exactly "infinite-future", the returned
// `absl::Time` will be `absl::InfiniteFuture()` and `true` will be returned.
// If the input string is "infinite-past", the returned `absl::Time` will be
// `absl::InfinitePast()` and `true` will be returned.
//
bool ParseTime(const std::string& format, const std::string& input, Time* time,
std::string* err);
// Like ParseTime() above, but if the format string does not contain a UTC
// offset specification (%z/%Ez/%E*z) then the input is interpreted in the
// given TimeZone. This means that the input, by itself, does not identify a
// unique instant. Being time-zone dependent, it also admits the possibility
// of ambiguity or non-existence, in which case the "pre" time (as defined
// by TimeZone::TimeInfo) is returned. For these reasons we recommend that
// all date/time strings include a UTC offset so they're context independent.
bool ParseTime(const std::string& format, const std::string& input, TimeZone tz,
Time* time, std::string* err);
// ============================================================================
// Implementation Details Follow
// ============================================================================
namespace time_internal {
// Creates a Duration with a given representation.
// REQUIRES: hi,lo is a valid representation of a Duration as specified
// in time/duration.cc.
constexpr Duration MakeDuration(int64_t hi, uint32_t lo = 0) {
return Duration(hi, lo);
}
constexpr Duration MakeDuration(int64_t hi, int64_t lo) {
return MakeDuration(hi, static_cast<uint32_t>(lo));
}
// Make a Duration value from a floating-point number, as long as that number
// is in the range [ 0 .. numeric_limits<int64_t>::max ), that is, as long as
// it's positive and can be converted to int64_t without risk of UB.
inline Duration MakePosDoubleDuration(double n) {
const int64_t int_secs = static_cast<int64_t>(n);
const uint32_t ticks =
static_cast<uint32_t>((n - int_secs) * kTicksPerSecond + 0.5);
return ticks < kTicksPerSecond
? MakeDuration(int_secs, ticks)
: MakeDuration(int_secs + 1, ticks - kTicksPerSecond);
}
// Creates a normalized Duration from an almost-normalized (sec,ticks)
// pair. sec may be positive or negative. ticks must be in the range
// -kTicksPerSecond < *ticks < kTicksPerSecond. If ticks is negative it
// will be normalized to a positive value in the resulting Duration.
constexpr Duration MakeNormalizedDuration(int64_t sec, int64_t ticks) {
return (ticks < 0) ? MakeDuration(sec - 1, ticks + kTicksPerSecond)
: MakeDuration(sec, ticks);
}
// Provide access to the Duration representation.
constexpr int64_t GetRepHi(Duration d) { return d.rep_hi_; }
constexpr uint32_t GetRepLo(Duration d) { return d.rep_lo_; }
// Returns true iff d is positive or negative infinity.
constexpr bool IsInfiniteDuration(Duration d) { return GetRepLo(d) == ~0U; }
// Returns an infinite Duration with the opposite sign.
// REQUIRES: IsInfiniteDuration(d)
constexpr Duration OppositeInfinity(Duration d) {
return GetRepHi(d) < 0
? MakeDuration((std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max)(), ~0U)
: MakeDuration((std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min)(), ~0U);
}
// Returns (-n)-1 (equivalently -(n+1)) without avoidable overflow.
constexpr int64_t NegateAndSubtractOne(int64_t n) {
// Note: Good compilers will optimize this expression to ~n when using
// a two's-complement representation (which is required for int64_t).
return (n < 0) ? -(n + 1) : (-n) - 1;
}
// Map between a Time and a Duration since the Unix epoch. Note that these
// functions depend on the above mentioned choice of the Unix epoch for the
// Time representation (and both need to be Time friends). Without this
// knowledge, we would need to add-in/subtract-out UnixEpoch() respectively.
constexpr Time FromUnixDuration(Duration d) { return Time(d); }
constexpr Duration ToUnixDuration(Time t) { return t.rep_; }
template <std::intmax_t N>
constexpr Duration FromInt64(int64_t v, std::ratio<1, N>) {
static_assert(0 < N && N <= 1000 * 1000 * 1000, "Unsupported ratio");
// Subsecond ratios cannot overflow.
return MakeNormalizedDuration(
v / N, v % N * kTicksPerNanosecond * 1000 * 1000 * 1000 / N);
}
constexpr Duration FromInt64(int64_t v, std::ratio<60>) {
return (v <= (std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max)() / 60 &&
v >= (std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min)() / 60)
? MakeDuration(v * 60)
: v > 0 ? InfiniteDuration() : -InfiniteDuration();
}
constexpr Duration FromInt64(int64_t v, std::ratio<3600>) {
return (v <= (std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max)() / 3600 &&
v >= (std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min)() / 3600)
? MakeDuration(v * 3600)
: v > 0 ? InfiniteDuration() : -InfiniteDuration();
}
// IsValidRep64<T>(0) is true if the expression `int64_t{std::declval<T>()}` is
// valid. That is, if a T can be assigned to an int64_t without narrowing.
template <typename T>
constexpr auto IsValidRep64(int)
-> decltype(int64_t{std::declval<T>()}, bool()) {
return true;
}
template <typename T>
constexpr auto IsValidRep64(char) -> bool {
return false;
}
// Converts a std::chrono::duration to an absl::Duration.
template <typename Rep, typename Period>
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::duration<Rep, Period>& d) {
static_assert(IsValidRep64<Rep>(0), "duration::rep is invalid");
return FromInt64(int64_t{d.count()}, Period{});
}
template <typename Ratio>
int64_t ToInt64(Duration d, Ratio) {
// Note: This may be used on MSVC, which may have a system_clock period of
// std::ratio<1, 10 * 1000 * 1000>
return ToInt64Seconds(d * Ratio::den / Ratio::num);
}
// Fastpath implementations for the 6 common duration units.
inline int64_t ToInt64(Duration d, std::nano) {
return ToInt64Nanoseconds(d);
}
inline int64_t ToInt64(Duration d, std::micro) {
return ToInt64Microseconds(d);
}
inline int64_t ToInt64(Duration d, std::milli) {
return ToInt64Milliseconds(d);
}
inline int64_t ToInt64(Duration d, std::ratio<1>) {
return ToInt64Seconds(d);
}
inline int64_t ToInt64(Duration d, std::ratio<60>) {
return ToInt64Minutes(d);
}
inline int64_t ToInt64(Duration d, std::ratio<3600>) {
return ToInt64Hours(d);
}
// Converts an absl::Duration to a chrono duration of type T.
template <typename T>
T ToChronoDuration(Duration d) {
using Rep = typename T::rep;
using Period = typename T::period;
static_assert(IsValidRep64<Rep>(0), "duration::rep is invalid");
if (time_internal::IsInfiniteDuration(d))
return d < ZeroDuration() ? (T::min)() : (T::max)();
const auto v = ToInt64(d, Period{});
if (v > (std::numeric_limits<Rep>::max)()) return (T::max)();
if (v < (std::numeric_limits<Rep>::min)()) return (T::min)();
return T{v};
}
} // namespace time_internal
constexpr Duration Nanoseconds(int64_t n) {
return time_internal::FromInt64(n, std::nano{});
}
constexpr Duration Microseconds(int64_t n) {
return time_internal::FromInt64(n, std::micro{});
}
constexpr Duration Milliseconds(int64_t n) {
return time_internal::FromInt64(n, std::milli{});
}
constexpr Duration Seconds(int64_t n) {
return time_internal::FromInt64(n, std::ratio<1>{});
}
constexpr Duration Minutes(int64_t n) {
return time_internal::FromInt64(n, std::ratio<60>{});
}
constexpr Duration Hours(int64_t n) {
return time_internal::FromInt64(n, std::ratio<3600>{});
}
constexpr bool operator<(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) {
return time_internal::GetRepHi(lhs) != time_internal::GetRepHi(rhs)
? time_internal::GetRepHi(lhs) < time_internal::GetRepHi(rhs)
: time_internal::GetRepHi(lhs) ==
(std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min)()
? time_internal::GetRepLo(lhs) + 1 <
time_internal::GetRepLo(rhs) + 1
: time_internal::GetRepLo(lhs) <
time_internal::GetRepLo(rhs);
}
constexpr bool operator==(Duration lhs, Duration rhs) {
return time_internal::GetRepHi(lhs) == time_internal::GetRepHi(rhs) &&
time_internal::GetRepLo(lhs) == time_internal::GetRepLo(rhs);
}
constexpr Duration operator-(Duration d) {
// This is a little interesting because of the special cases.
//
// If rep_lo_ is zero, we have it easy; it's safe to negate rep_hi_, we're
// dealing with an integral number of seconds, and the only special case is
// the maximum negative finite duration, which can't be negated.
//
// Infinities stay infinite, and just change direction.
//
// Finally we're in the case where rep_lo_ is non-zero, and we can borrow
// a second's worth of ticks and avoid overflow (as negating int64_t-min + 1
// is safe).
return time_internal::GetRepLo(d) == 0
? time_internal::GetRepHi(d) ==
(std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min)()
? InfiniteDuration()
: time_internal::MakeDuration(-time_internal::GetRepHi(d))
: time_internal::IsInfiniteDuration(d)
? time_internal::OppositeInfinity(d)
: time_internal::MakeDuration(
time_internal::NegateAndSubtractOne(
time_internal::GetRepHi(d)),
time_internal::kTicksPerSecond -
time_internal::GetRepLo(d));
}
constexpr Duration InfiniteDuration() {
return time_internal::MakeDuration((std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::max)(),
~0U);
}
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::nanoseconds& d) {
return time_internal::FromChrono(d);
}
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::microseconds& d) {
return time_internal::FromChrono(d);
}
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::milliseconds& d) {
return time_internal::FromChrono(d);
}
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::seconds& d) {
return time_internal::FromChrono(d);
}
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::minutes& d) {
return time_internal::FromChrono(d);
}
constexpr Duration FromChrono(const std::chrono::hours& d) {
return time_internal::FromChrono(d);
}
constexpr Time FromUnixNanos(int64_t ns) {
return time_internal::FromUnixDuration(Nanoseconds(ns));
}
constexpr Time FromUnixMicros(int64_t us) {
return time_internal::FromUnixDuration(Microseconds(us));
}
constexpr Time FromUnixMillis(int64_t ms) {
return time_internal::FromUnixDuration(Milliseconds(ms));
}
constexpr Time FromUnixSeconds(int64_t s) {
return time_internal::FromUnixDuration(Seconds(s));
}
constexpr Time FromTimeT(time_t t) {
return time_internal::FromUnixDuration(Seconds(t));
}
} // namespace absl
#endif // ABSL_TIME_TIME_H_