asctime (3)
Leading comments
Copyright 1993 David Metcalfe (david@prism.demon.co.uk) %%%LICENSE_START(VERBATIM) Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Sin...
NAME
asctime, ctime, gmtime, localtime, mktime, asctime_r, ctime_r, gmtime_r, localtime_r - transform date and time to broken-down time or ASCIISYNOPSIS
#include <time.h> char *asctime(const struct tm *tm);
char *asctime_r(const struct tm *tm, char *buf); char *ctime(const time_t *timep);
char *ctime_r(const time_t *timep, char *buf); struct tm *gmtime(const time_t *timep);
struct tm *gmtime_r(const time_t *timep, struct tm *result); struct tm *localtime(const time_t *timep);
struct tm *localtime_r(const time_t *timep, struct tm *result); time_t mktime(struct tm *tm);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
asctime_r(), ctime_r(), gmtime_r(), localtime_r():
- _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 1 || _XOPEN_SOURCE || _BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE || _POSIX_SOURCE
DESCRIPTION
The ctime(), gmtime() and localtime() functions all take an argument of data type time_t, which represents calendar time. When interpreted as an absolute time value, it represents the number of seconds elapsed since the Epoch, 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 (UTC).The asctime() and mktime() functions both take an argument representing broken-down time, which is a representation separated into year, month, day, and so on.
Broken-down time is stored in the structure tm, which is defined in <time.h> as follows:
struct tm { int tm_sec; /* Seconds (0-60) */ int tm_min; /* Minutes (0-59) */ int tm_hour; /* Hours (0-23) */ int tm_mday; /* Day of the month (1-31) */ int tm_mon; /* Month (0-11) */ int tm_year; /* Year - 1900 */ int tm_wday; /* Day of the week (0-6, Sunday = 0) */ int tm_yday; /* Day in the year (0-365, 1 Jan = 0) */ int tm_isdst; /* Daylight saving time */ };
The members of the tm structure are:
- tm_sec
- The number of seconds after the minute, normally in the range 0 to 59, but can be up to 60 to allow for leap seconds.
- tm_min
- The number of minutes after the hour, in the range 0 to 59.
- tm_hour
- The number of hours past midnight, in the range 0 to 23.
- tm_mday
- The day of the month, in the range 1 to 31.
- tm_mon
- The number of months since January, in the range 0 to 11.
- tm_year
- The number of years since 1900.
- tm_wday
- The number of days since Sunday, in the range 0 to 6.
- tm_yday
- The number of days since January 1, in the range 0 to 365.
- tm_isdst
- A flag that indicates whether daylight saving time is in effect at the time described. The value is positive if daylight saving time is in effect, zero if it is not, and negative if the information is not available.
The call ctime(t) is equivalent to asctime(localtime(t)). It converts the calendar time t into a null-terminated string of the form
- "Wed Jun 30 21:49:08 1993\n"
The abbreviations for the days of the week are "Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", and "Sat". The abbreviations for the months are "Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", and "Dec". The return value points to a statically allocated string which might be overwritten by subsequent calls to any of the date and time functions. The function also sets the external variables tzname, timezone, and daylight (see tzset(3)) with information about the current timezone. The reentrant version ctime_r() does the same, but stores the string in a user-supplied buffer which should have room for at least 26 bytes. It need not set tzname, timezone, and daylight.
The gmtime() function converts the calendar time timep to broken-down time representation, expressed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). It may return NULL when the year does not fit into an integer. The return value points to a statically allocated struct which might be overwritten by subsequent calls to any of the date and time functions. The gmtime_r() function does the same, but stores the data in a user-supplied struct.
The localtime() function converts the calendar time timep to broken-down time representation, expressed relative to the user's specified timezone. The function acts as if it called tzset(3) and sets the external variables tzname with information about the current timezone, timezone with the difference between Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) and local standard time in seconds, and daylight to a nonzero value if daylight savings time rules apply during some part of the year. The return value points to a statically allocated struct which might be overwritten by subsequent calls to any of the date and time functions. The localtime_r() function does the same, but stores the data in a user-supplied struct. It need not set tzname, timezone, and daylight.
The asctime() function converts the broken-down time value tm into a null-terminated string with the same format as ctime(). The return value points to a statically allocated string which might be overwritten by subsequent calls to any of the date and time functions. The asctime_r() function does the same, but stores the string in a user-supplied buffer which should have room for at least 26 bytes.
The
mktime()
function converts a broken-down time structure, expressed
as local time, to calendar time representation.
The function ignores
the values supplied by the caller in the
tm_wday
and
tm_yday
fields.
The value specified in the
tm_isdst
field informs
mktime()
whether or not daylight saving time (DST)
is in effect for the time supplied in the
tm
structure:
a positive value means DST is in effect;
zero means that DST is not in effect;
and a negative value means that
mktime()
should (use timezone information and system databases to)
attempt to determine whether DST is in effect at the specified time.
The
mktime()
function modifies the fields of the
tm
structure as follows:
tm_wday
and
tm_yday
are set to values determined from the contents of the other fields;
if structure members are outside their valid interval, they will be
normalized (so that, for example, 40 October is changed into 9 November);
tm_isdst
is set (regardless of its initial value)
to a positive value or to 0, respectively,
to indicate whether DST is or is not in effect at the specified time.
Calling
mktime()
also sets the external variable tzname with
information about the current timezone.
If the specified broken-down
time cannot be represented as calendar time (seconds since the Epoch),
mktime()
returns
(time_t) -1
and does not alter the
members of the broken-down time structure.
RETURN VALUE
Each of these functions returns the value described, or NULL (-1 in case of mktime()) in case an error was detected.ATTRIBUTES
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).Interface | Attribute | Value |
asctime() | Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:asctime locale |
asctime_r() | Thread safety | MT-Safe locale |
ctime() | Thread safety |
MT-Unsafe race:tmbuf
race:asctime env locale |
ctime_r(), gmtime_r(), localtime_r(), mktime() | Thread safety | MT-Safe env locale |
gmtime(), localtime() | Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:tmbuf env locale |
CONFORMING TO
POSIX.1-2001. C89 and C99 specify asctime(), ctime(), gmtime(), localtime(), and mktime(). POSIX.1-2008 marks asctime(), asctime_r(), ctime(), and ctime_r() as obsolete, recommending the use of strftime(3) instead.NOTES
The four functions asctime(), ctime(), gmtime() and localtime() return a pointer to static data and hence are not thread-safe. The thread-safe versions, asctime_r(), ctime_r(), gmtime_r() and localtime_r(), are specified by SUSv2.POSIX.1-2001 says: "The asctime(), ctime(), gmtime(), and localtime() functions shall return values in one of two static objects: a broken-down time structure and an array of type char. Execution of any of the functions may overwrite the information returned in either of these objects by any of the other functions." This can occur in the glibc implementation.
In many implementations, including glibc, a 0 in tm_mday is interpreted as meaning the last day of the preceding month.
The glibc version of struct tm has additional fields
-
long tm_gmtoff; /* Seconds east of UTC */ const char *tm_zone; /* Timezone abbreviation */
defined when
_BSD_SOURCE
was set before including
<time.h>.
This is a BSD extension, present in 4.3BSD-Reno.
According to POSIX.1-2004,
localtime()
is required to behave as though
tzset(3)
was called, while
localtime_r()
does not have this requirement.
For portable code,
tzset(3)
should be called before
localtime_r().