forked from cheng/wallet
45 lines
2.6 KiB
C++
45 lines
2.6 KiB
C++
#pragma once
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namespace ro {
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// need to define my own time types:
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typedef time_t time_t; // is always time in seconds past the epoch modulo 2 ^ 64
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// equivalent to regular old time_t
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// except in environments where time_t is seconds past the epoch modulo 2 ^ 32
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ro::time_t time();
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// equivalent to regular old time(nullptr);
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// except in environments where time_t is seconds past the epoch modulo 2 ^ 32
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typedef std::chrono::duration<int64_t, std::ratio<1, 1> > sec;
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typedef std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::system_clock, ro::sec > sec_t;
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ro::sec_t system_time_now();
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// Also equivalent to plain old time_t, except with modern C++14 type distinction
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// between time points and time durations
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std::string iso_utc_time(ro::time_t t);
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std::string iso_utc_time(ro::sec_t t);
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// which is a string expressing the utc time
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std::string iso_local_time(ro::time_t t);
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std::string iso_local_time(ro::sec_t t);
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// which is a string expressing the local time
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typedef std::chrono::duration<uint32_t, std::ratio<1, 1000> > msec;
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// duration past startup time modulo 2^32 Rolls over every forty eight days, making durations longer than twenty four days of unclear sign
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msec msec_since_epoch(void);
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// Obliterates chrono's elegant but pain in the ass distinction between time points and durations.
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// Which type distinction in practice gets in the way off all sorts of things that just need to be done.
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// In truth, it is a distinction that only matters, and is indeed only meaningful, with respect to shared global consensus time, universal coordinated time
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// It is not meaningful for steady time or high precision time, which means that all sorts of stuff gets assigned to the wrong type, a duration when you need it to be a time point, or a time point when you need it to be a duration.
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// A time point is just a duration relative to some globally agreed consensus time point, and if you don't have such a consensus, forget it. And when you are measuring millisecond times, you do not have such a consensus
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// millisecond clocks are not expected to be synchronized between systems, nor to measure milliseconds exactly nor to be exactly the same time unit between systems, but they are expected to advance similarly on both systems for the life of any connection, making the distinction between time points and durations problematic.
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// We expect to compare the change in time on one system, with the change in time on another system, in which case the time point class gets in the way.
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/*
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std::array<char, 12> msec::operator() const {
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std::array<char, 12> x;
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return x;
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}*/
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}
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