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timegm cross platform

I'm using Visual Studio c++ Compiler ( 2010 ), but the library has different implementation of ANSI C and POSIX libraries function.

What is the difference between ANSI C function and Windows CRT implementation? For example what is the difference between tzset() and _tzset() or setenv() ans _setenv()? It seems the do the same thing in the same way...

I'm using msvc ( 2010 ), have I to prefer the Windows CRT Implementation?

EDIT 1

Well I want convert in a portable way a struct tm expressed in UTC in a time_t, but there's no portable way to do that. I've to write the function for different platform (Android, Linux, Windows, Windows CE ).

I've seen this stackoverflow post that uses setenv, getenv and tzset

Edit2

Unfortunately after some test I've discovered that getenv("TZ") returns a null pointer on windows. But why is so difficult transform a UTC time struct to a time_t?

Edit 3

From Boost I discovered this fragment of code in boost/chrono/io/time_point_io.hpp. Hope this helps me.

inline int32_t is_leap(int32_t year)
{
  if(year % 400 == 0)
  return 1;
  if(year % 100 == 0)
  return 0;
  if(year % 4 == 0)
  return 1;
  return 0;
}
inline int32_t days_from_0(int32_t year)
{
  year--;
  return 365 * year + (year / 400) - (year/100) + (year / 4);
}
inline int32_t days_from_1970(int32_t year)
{
  static const int days_from_0_to_1970 = days_from_0(1970);
  return days_from_0(year) - days_from_0_to_1970;
}
inline int32_t days_from_1jan(int32_t year,int32_t month,int32_t day)
{
  static const int32_t days[2][12] =
  {
    { 0,31,59,90,120,151,181,212,243,273,304,334},
    { 0,31,60,91,121,152,182,213,244,274,305,335}
  };
  return days[is_leap(year)][month-1] + day - 1;
}

inline time_t internal_timegm(std::tm const *t)
{
  int year = t->tm_year + 1900;
  int month = t->tm_mon;
  if(month > 11)
  {
    year += month/12;
    month %= 12;
  }
  else if(month < 0)
  {
    int years_diff = (-month + 11)/12;
    year -= years_diff;
    month+=12 * years_diff;
  }
  month++;
  int day = t->tm_mday;
  int day_of_year = days_from_1jan(year,month,day);
  int days_since_epoch = days_from_1970(year) + day_of_year;

  time_t seconds_in_day = 3600 * 24;
  time_t result = seconds_in_day * days_since_epoch + 3600 * t->tm_hour + 60 * t->tm_min + t->tm_sec;

  return result;
}
like image 525
Elvis Dukaj Avatar asked May 20 '13 10:05

Elvis Dukaj


2 Answers

I use the following macro on Windows:

#define timegm _mkgmtime

as _mkgmtime does the same.

like image 123
Naszta Avatar answered Oct 01 '22 20:10

Naszta


When David Cutler's team started on the Windows NT design, back in 1989, they didn't yet know which api was going to be dominant. So they created three of them. Win32 was an adaption of the 16-bit version of the Windows api. OS/2 was supported, the operating system that was supposed to supplant DOS but didn't. And Posix was the third, added because the USA government back then specified that they would only consider using operating systems that followed the emerging Posix standard.

The tzset() function you mention is a left-over from the Posix api. You probably misspelled putenv(), same story. The subsystem didn't fare well, Win32 won the api battle in a big way and Posix support was removed from Windows in 2001. Microsoft kept the support for the Posix functions but renamed them with a leading underscore since they are not part of the standard C library. You are supposed to get deprecation warnings when you use the non-prefixed version of the functions. Sounds like you #defined _CRT_NONSTDC_NO_DEPRECATE to suppress them. Best to not do that. Favor the standard C library functions.

like image 40
Hans Passant Avatar answered Oct 01 '22 21:10

Hans Passant