CLOCK_GETTIME(2) BSD System Calls Manual CLOCK_GETTIME(2)NAME
clock_gettime, clock_settime, clock_getres — get/set/calibrate date and
time
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <time.h>
int
clock_gettime(clockid_t clock_id, struct timespec *tp);
int
clock_settime(clockid_t clock_id, const struct timespec *tp);
int
clock_getres(clockid_t clock_id, struct timespec *tp);
DESCRIPTION
The clock_gettime() and clock_settime() system calls allow the calling
process to retrieve or set the value used by a clock which is specified
by clock_id.
The clock_id argument can be one of the following values: CLOCK_REALTIME,
CLOCK_REALTIME_PRECISE, CLOCK_REALTIME_FAST for time that increments as a
wall clock should; CLOCK_MONOTONIC, CLOCK_MONOTONIC_PRECISE,
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_FAST which increments in SI seconds; CLOCK_UPTIME,
CLOCK_UPTIME_PRECISE, CLOCK_UPTIME_FAST which starts at zero when the
kernel boots and increments monotonically in SI seconds while the machine
is running; CLOCK_VIRTUAL for time that increments only when the CPU is
running in user mode on behalf of the calling process; CLOCK_PROF for
time that increments when the CPU is running in user or kernel mode; or
CLOCK_SECOND which returns the current second without performing a full
time counter query, using in-kernel cached value of current second.
The clock IDs CLOCK_REALTIME_FAST, CLOCK_MONOTONIC_FAST,
CLOCK_UPTIME_FAST are analogs of corresponding IDs without _FAST suffix
but do not perform a full time counter query, so their accuracy is one
timer tick. Similarly, CLOCK_REALTIME_PRECISE, CLOCK_MONOTONIC_PRECISE,
CLOCK_UPTIME_PRECISE are used to get the most exact value as possible, at
the expense of execution time.
The structure pointed to by tp is defined in <sys/timespec.h> as:
struct timespec {
time_t tv_sec; /* seconds */
long tv_nsec; /* and nanoseconds */
};
Only the super-user may set the time of day, using only CLOCK_REALTIME.
If the system securelevel is greater than 1 (see init(8)), the time may
only be advanced. This limitation is imposed to prevent a malicious
super-user from setting arbitrary time stamps on files. The system time
can still be adjusted backwards using the adjtime(2) system call even
when the system is secure.
The resolution (granularity) of a clock is returned by the clock_getres()
system call. This value is placed in a (non-NULL) *tp.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the value 0 is returned; otherwise the
value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
ERRORS
The following error codes may be set in errno:
[EINVAL] The clock_id argument was not a valid value.
[EFAULT] The *tp argument address referenced invalid memory.
[EPERM] A user other than the super-user attempted to set the
time.
SEE ALSOdate(1), adjtime(2), ctime(3), timed(8)STANDARDS
The clock_gettime(), clock_settime(), and clock_getres() system calls
conform to IEEE Std 1003.1b-1993 (“POSIX.1”). The clock IDs
CLOCK_REALTIME_FAST, CLOCK_REALTIME_PRECISE, CLOCK_MONOTONIC_FAST,
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_PRECISE, CLOCK_UPTIME, CLOCK_UPTIME_FAST,
CLOCK_UPTIME_PRECISE, CLOCK_SECOND are FreeBSD extensions to the POSIX
interface.
BSD December 29, 2009 BSD