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author | Zack Weinberg <zackw@panix.com> | 2019-08-16 20:38:22 -0400 |
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committer | Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> | 2019-10-30 17:04:10 -0300 |
commit | 4a39c34c4f85de57fb4e648cfa1e774437d69680 (patch) | |
tree | af9be9f57a59e81e6aa3e09ea13a0c1ec8fe660f /support | |
parent | 04da832e16a7ba9999ff320869b3d8e623cd8a61 (diff) | |
download | glibc-4a39c34c4f85de57fb4e648cfa1e774437d69680.tar.gz glibc-4a39c34c4f85de57fb4e648cfa1e774437d69680.tar.xz glibc-4a39c34c4f85de57fb4e648cfa1e774437d69680.zip |
Change most internal uses of __gettimeofday to __clock_gettime.
Since gettimeofday will shortly be implemented in terms of clock_gettime on all platforms, internal code should use clock_gettime directly; in addition to removing a layer of indirection, this will allow us to remove the PLT-bypass gunk for gettimeofday. (We can't quite do that yet, but it'll be coming later in this patch series.) In many cases, the changed code does fewer conversions. The changed code always assumes __clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME) cannot fail. Most of the call sites were assuming gettimeofday could not fail, but a few places were checking for errors. POSIX says clock_gettime can only fail if the clock constant is invalid or unsupported, and CLOCK_REALTIME is the one and only clock constant that's required to be supported. For consistency I grepped the entire source tree for any other places that checked for errors from __clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME), found one, and changed it too. (For the record, POSIX also says gettimeofday can never fail.) (It would be nice if we could declare that GNU systems will always support CLOCK_MONOTONIC as well as CLOCK_REALTIME; there are several places where we are using CLOCK_REALTIME where _MONOTONIC would be more appropriate, and/or trying to use _MONOTONIC and then falling back to _REALTIME. But the Hurd doesn't support CLOCK_MONOTONIC yet, and it looks like adding it would involve substantial changes to gnumach's internals and API. Oh well.) A few Hurd-specific files were changed to use __host_get_time instead of __clock_gettime, as this seemed tidier. We also assume this cannot fail. Skimming the code in gnumach leads me to believe the only way it could fail is if __mach_host_self also failed, and our Hurd-specific code consistently assumes that can't happen, so I'm going with that. With the exception of support/support_test_main.c, test cases are not modified, mainly because I didn't want to have to figure out which test cases were testing gettimeofday specifically. The definition of GETTIME in sysdeps/generic/memusage.h had a typo and was not reading tv_sec at all. I fixed this. It appears nobody has been generating malloc traces on a machine that doesn't have a superseding definition. There are a whole bunch of places where the code could be simplified by factoring out timespec subtraction and/or comparison logic, but I want to keep this patch as mechanical as possible. Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, powerpc64le-linux-gnu, powerpc64-linux-gnu, powerpc-linux-gnu, and aarch64-linux-gnu. Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'support')
-rw-r--r-- | support/support_test_main.c | 23 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/support/support_test_main.c b/support/support_test_main.c index 0be1bd3d78..1df6e4f976 100644 --- a/support/support_test_main.c +++ b/support/support_test_main.c @@ -91,16 +91,18 @@ static pid_t test_pid; static void (*cleanup_function) (void); static void -print_timestamp (const char *what, struct timeval tv) +print_timestamp (const char *what, struct timespec tv) { struct tm tm; + /* Casts of tv.tv_nsec below are necessary because the type of + tv_nsec is not literally long int on all supported platforms. */ if (gmtime_r (&tv.tv_sec, &tm) == NULL) - printf ("%s: %lld.%06d\n", - what, (long long int) tv.tv_sec, (int) tv.tv_usec); + printf ("%s: %lld.%09ld\n", + what, (long long int) tv.tv_sec, (long int) tv.tv_nsec); else - printf ("%s: %04d-%02d-%02dT%02d:%02d:%02d.%06d\n", + printf ("%s: %04d-%02d-%02dT%02d:%02d:%02d.%09ld\n", what, 1900 + tm.tm_year, tm.tm_mon + 1, tm.tm_mday, - tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec, (int) tv.tv_usec); + tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec, (long int) tv.tv_nsec); } /* Timeout handler. We kill the child and exit with an error. */ @@ -113,8 +115,8 @@ signal_handler (int sig) /* Do this first to avoid further interference from the subprocess. */ - struct timeval now; - bool now_available = gettimeofday (&now, NULL) == 0; + struct timespec now; + clock_gettime (CLOCK_REALTIME, &now); struct stat64 st; bool st_available = fstat64 (STDOUT_FILENO, &st) == 0 && st.st_mtime != 0; @@ -168,12 +170,9 @@ signal_handler (int sig) printf ("Timed out: killed the child process but it exited %d\n", WEXITSTATUS (status)); - if (now_available) - print_timestamp ("Termination time", now); + print_timestamp ("Termination time", now); if (st_available) - print_timestamp ("Last write to standard output", - (struct timeval) { st.st_mtim.tv_sec, - st.st_mtim.tv_nsec / 1000 }); + print_timestamp ("Last write to standard output", st.st_mtim); /* Exit with an error. */ exit (1); |