/*-*- mode:c;indent-tabs-mode:nil;c-basic-offset:2;tab-width:8;coding:utf-8 -*-│ │ vi: set et ft=c ts=8 sts=2 sw=2 fenc=utf-8 :vi │ ╞══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╡ │ Copyright 2020 Justine Alexandra Roberts Tunney │ │ │ │ Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for │ │ any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the │ │ above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. │ │ │ │ THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL │ │ WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED │ │ WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE │ │ AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL │ │ DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR │ │ PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER │ │ TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR │ │ PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. │ ╚─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/ #include "libc/calls/struct/timespec.h" #include "libc/calls/struct/timespec.internal.h" #include "libc/calls/syscall_support-sysv.internal.h" #include "libc/dce.h" #include "libc/errno.h" #include "libc/intrin/describeflags.h" #include "libc/intrin/strace.h" #include "libc/runtime/syslib.internal.h" #include "libc/sysv/consts/clock.h" #ifdef __aarch64__ #define CGT_VDSO __vdsosym("LINUX_2.6.39", "__kernel_clock_gettime") #else #define CGT_VDSO __vdsosym("LINUX_2.6", "__vdso_clock_gettime") #endif typedef int clock_gettime_f(int, struct timespec *); static clock_gettime_f *__clock_gettime_get(void) { clock_gettime_f *cgt; if (IsLinux() && (cgt = CGT_VDSO)) { return cgt; } else if (__syslib) { return (void *)__syslib->__clock_gettime; #ifdef __x86_64__ } else if (IsWindows()) { return sys_clock_gettime_nt; } else if (IsXnu()) { return sys_clock_gettime_xnu; #endif } else { return sys_clock_gettime; } } static int __clock_gettime_init(int, struct timespec *); static clock_gettime_f *__clock_gettime = __clock_gettime_init; static int __clock_gettime_init(int clockid, struct timespec *ts) { clock_gettime_f *cgt; __clock_gettime = cgt = __clock_gettime_get(); return cgt(clockid, ts); } static int clock_gettime_impl(int clock, struct timespec *ts) { // BSDs and sometimes Linux too will crash when `ts` is NULL // it's also nice to not have to check for null in polyfills struct timespec memory; if (!ts) ts = &memory; return __clock_gettime(clock, ts); } /** * Returns nanosecond time. * * The `clock` parameter may bo set to: * * - `CLOCK_REALTIME` returns a wall clock timestamp represented in * nanoseconds since the UNIX epoch (~1970). It'll count time in the * suspend state. This clock is subject to being smeared by various * adjustments made by NTP. These timestamps can have unpredictable * discontinuous jumps when clock_settime() is used. Therefore this * clock is the default clock for everything, even pthread condition * variables. Cosmopoiltan guarantees this clock will never raise * `EINVAL` and also guarantees `CLOCK_REALTIME == 0` will always be * the case. On Windows this maps to GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime(). * On platforms with vDSOs like Linux, Windows, and MacOS ARM64 this * should take about 20 nanoseconds. * * - `CLOCK_MONOTONIC` returns a timestamp with an unspecified epoch, * that should be when the system was powered on. These timestamps * shouldn't go backwards. Timestamps shouldn't count time spent in * the sleep, suspend, and hibernation states. These timestamps won't * be impacted by clock_settime(). These timestamps may be impacted by * frequency adjustments made by NTP. Cosmopoiltan guarantees this * clock will never raise `EINVAL`. MacOS and BSDs use the word * "uptime" to describe this clock. On Windows this maps to * QueryUnbiasedInterruptTimePrecise(). * * - `CLOCK_BOOTTIME` is a monotonic clock returning a timestamp with an * unspecified epoch, that should be relative to when the host system * was powered on. These timestamps shouldn't go backwards. Timestamps * should also include time spent in a sleep, suspend, or hibernation * state. These timestamps aren't impacted by clock_settime(), but * they may be impacted by frequency adjustments made by NTP. This * clock will raise an `EINVAL` error on extremely old Linux distros * like RHEL5. MacOS and BSDs use the word "monotonic" to describe * this clock. On Windows this maps to QueryInterruptTimePrecise(). * * - `CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW` returns a timestamp from an unspecified * epoch. These timestamps don't count time spent in the sleep, * suspend, and hibernation states. This clock is not impacted by * clock_settime(). Unlike `CLOCK_MONOTONIC` this clock is guaranteed * to not be impacted by frequency adjustments. Providing this level * of assurances may make this clock 10x slower than the monotonic * clock. Furthermore this clock may cause `EINVAL` to be raised if * running on a host system that doesn't provide those guarantees, * e.g. OpenBSD and MacOS on AMD64. * * - `CLOCK_REALTIME_COARSE` is the same as `CLOCK_REALTIME` except * it'll go faster if the host OS provides a cheaper way to read the * wall time. Please be warned that coarse can be really coarse. * Rather than nano precision, you're looking at `CLK_TCK` precision, * which can lag as far as 30 milliseconds behind or possibly more. * Cosmopolitan may fallback to `CLOCK_REALTIME` if a faster less * accurate clock isn't provided by the system. This clock will raise * an `EINVAL` error on extremely old Linux distros like RHEL5. On * platforms with vDSOs like Linux, Windows, and MacOS ARM64 this * should take about 5 nanoseconds. * * - `CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE` is the same as `CLOCK_MONOTONIC` except * it'll go faster if the host OS provides a cheaper way to read the * unbiased time. Please be warned that coarse can be really coarse. * Rather than nano precision, you're looking at `CLK_TCK` precision, * which can lag as far as 30 milliseconds behind or possibly more. * Cosmopolitan may fallback to `CLOCK_REALTIME` if a faster less * accurate clock isn't provided by the system. This clock will raise * an `EINVAL` error on extremely old Linux distros like RHEL5. On * platforms with vDSOs like Linux, Windows, and MacOS ARM64 this * should take about 5 nanoseconds. * * - `CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID` returns the amount of time this process * was actively scheduled. This is similar to getrusage() and clock(). * * - `CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID` returns the amount of time this thread * was actively scheduled. This is similar to getrusage() and clock(). * * @param ts is where the result is stored (or null to do clock check) * @return 0 on success, or -1 w/ errno * @raise EFAULT if `ts` points to invalid memory * @error EINVAL if `clock` isn't supported on this system * @error EPERM if pledge() is in play without stdio promise * @error ESRCH on NetBSD if PID/TID OR'd into `clock` wasn't found * @see strftime(), gettimeofday() * @asyncsignalsafe * @vforksafe */ int clock_gettime(int clock, struct timespec *ts) { int rc = clock_gettime_impl(clock, ts); if (rc) { errno = -rc; rc = -1; } TIMETRACE("clock_gettime(%s, [%s]) → %d% m", DescribeClockName(clock), DescribeTimespec(rc, ts), rc); return rc; }