table of contents
timeradd(3) | Library Functions Manual | timeradd(3) |
NAME¶
timeradd, timersub, timercmp, timerclear, timerisset - timeval operations
LIBRARY¶
Standard C library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/time.h>
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 *tvp); int timerisset(struct timeval *tvp);
int timercmp(struct timeval *a, struct timeval *b, CMP);
All functions shown above:
Since glibc 2.19:
_DEFAULT_SOURCE
glibc 2.19 and earlier:
_BSD_SOURCE
DESCRIPTION¶
The macros are provided to operate on timeval structures, defined in <sys/time.h> as:
struct timeval {
time_t tv_sec; /* seconds */
suseconds_t tv_usec; /* microseconds */ };
timeradd() adds the time values in a and b, and places the sum in the timeval pointed to by res. The result is normalized such that res->tv_usec has a value in the range 0 to 999,999.
timersub() subtracts the time value in b from the time value in a, and places the result in the timeval pointed to by res. The result is normalized such that res->tv_usec has a value in the range 0 to 999,999.
timerclear() zeros out the timeval structure pointed to by tvp, so that it represents the Epoch: 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 (UTC).
timerisset() returns true (nonzero) if either field of the timeval structure pointed to by tvp contains a nonzero value.
timercmp() compares the timer values in a and b using the comparison operator CMP, and returns true (nonzero) or false (0) depending on the result of the comparison. Some systems (but not Linux/glibc), have a broken timercmp() implementation, in which CMP of >=, <=, and == do not work; portable applications can instead use
!timercmp(..., <) !timercmp(..., >) !timercmp(..., !=)
RETURN VALUE¶
timerisset() and timercmp() return true (nonzero) or false (0).
ERRORS¶
No errors are defined.
STANDARDS¶
None.
HISTORY¶
BSD.
SEE ALSO¶
2024-05-02 | Linux man-pages 6.8 |