TIMERADD(3bsd) | 3bsd | TIMERADD(3bsd) |
NAME¶
timeradd
, timersub
,
timerclear
, timerisset
,
timercmp
, timespecadd
,
timespecsub
, timespecclear
,
timespecisset
, timespeccmp
—
LIBRARY¶
library “libbsd”SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/time.h>
(See
libbsd(7) for include usage.)
void
timeradd
(struct
timeval *a, struct timeval
*b, struct timeval
*res);
void
timersub
(struct
timeval *a, struct
timeval *b, struct
timeval *res);
void
timerclear
(struct
timeval *tv);
int
timerisset
(struct
timeval *tv);
int
timercmp
(struct
timeval *a, struct
timeval *b,
CMP);
void
timespecadd
(struct
timespec *a, struct
timespec *b, struct
timespec *res);
void
timespecsub
(struct
timespec *a, struct
timespec *b, struct
timespec *res);
void
timespecclear
(struct
timespec *ts);
int
timespecisset
(struct
timespec *ts);
int
timespeccmp
(struct
timespec *a, struct
timespec b,
CMP);
DESCRIPTION¶
These macros are provided for manipulating the timeval and timespec structures described in timeval(3bsd).The timeradd
() and
timespecadd
() macros add the time information stored
in a to b, storing the result in
res. With timeradd
() the
results are simplified such that the value of
res->tv_usec is always less than 1,000,000 (1
second). With timespecadd
() the
res->tv_nsec member of struct
timespec is always less than 1,000,000,000.
The timersub
() and
timespecsub
() macros subtract the time information
stored in b from a and store the
resulting structure in res.
The timerclear
() and
timespecclear
() macros initialize the structures to
midnight (0 hour) January 1st, 1970 (the Epoch). In other words, they set
the members of the structure to zero.
The timerisset
() and
timespecisset
() macros return true if the input
structure is set to any time value other than the Epoch.
The timercmp
() and
timespeccmp
() macros compare a
to b using the comparison operator given in
CMP. The result of the comparison is returned.
SEE ALSO¶
timeval(3bsd)HISTORY¶
Thetimeradd
() family of macros first appeared in
NetBSD 1.1. These were later ported to
FreeBSD 2.2.6. The timespec
()
family of macros first appeared in NetBSD 1.2.
June 7, 2010 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |