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ryzom-core/code/nel/src/misc/time_nl.cpp

362 lines
10 KiB
C++

15 years ago
// NeL - MMORPG Framework <http://dev.ryzom.com/projects/nel/>
// Copyright (C) 2010 Winch Gate Property Limited
//
// This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as
// published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the
// License, or (at your option) any later version.
//
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
// along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#include "stdmisc.h"
#include <ctime>
#ifdef NL_OS_WINDOWS
# define NOMINMAX
# include <windows.h>
#elif defined (NL_OS_UNIX)
# include <sys/time.h>
# include <unistd.h>
#endif
#ifdef NL_OS_MAC
#include <mach/mach.h>
#include <mach/mach_time.h>
#endif
#include "nel/misc/time_nl.h"
#include "nel/misc/sstring.h"
namespace NLMISC
{
/* Return the number of second since midnight (00:00:00), January 1, 1970,
* coordinated universal time, according to the system clock.
* This values is the same on all computer if computers are synchronized (with NTP for example).
*/
uint32 CTime::getSecondsSince1970 ()
{
return uint32(time(NULL));
}
/** Return the number of second since midnight (00:00:00), January 1, 1970,
* coordinated universal time, according to the system clock.
* The time returned is UTC (aka GMT+0), ie it does not have the local time ajustement
* nor it have the daylight saving ajustement.
* This values is the same on all computer if computers are synchronized (with NTP for example).
*/
//uint32 CTime::getSecondsSince1970UTC ()
//{
// // get the local time
// time_t nowLocal = time(NULL);
// // convert it to GMT time (UTC)
// struct tm * timeinfo;
// timeinfo = gmtime(&nowLocal);
// return nl_mktime(timeinfo);
//}
/* Return the local time in milliseconds.
* Use it only to measure time difference, the absolute value does not mean anything.
* On Unix, getLocalTime() will try to use the Monotonic Clock if available, otherwise
* the value can jump backwards if the system time is changed by a user or a NTP time sync process.
* The value is different on 2 different computers; use the CUniTime class to get a universal
* time that is the same on all computers.
* \warning On Win32, the value is on 32 bits only. It wraps around to 0 every about 49.71 days.
*/
TTime CTime::getLocalTime ()
{
#ifdef NL_OS_WINDOWS
//static bool initdone = false;
//static bool byperfcounter;
// Initialization
//if ( ! initdone )
//{
//byperfcounter = (getPerformanceTime() != 0);
//initdone = true;
//}
/* Retrieve time is ms
* Why do we prefer getPerformanceTime() to timeGetTime() ? Because on one dual-processor Win2k
* PC, we have noticed that timeGetTime() slows down when the client is running !!!
*/
/* Now we have noticed that on all WinNT4 PC the getPerformanceTime can give us value that
* are less than previous
*/
//if ( byperfcounter )
//{
// return (TTime)(ticksToSecond(getPerformanceTime()) * 1000.0f);
//}
//else
//{
// This is not affected by system time changes. But it cycles every 49 days.
return timeGetTime();
//}
#elif defined (NL_OS_UNIX)
static bool initdone = false;
static bool isMonotonicClockSupported = false;
if ( ! initdone )
{
#if defined(_POSIX_TIMERS) && (_POSIX_TIMERS > 0)
#if defined(_POSIX_MONOTONIC_CLOCK) && (_POSIX_MONOTONIC_CLOCK >= 0)
/* Initialize the local time engine.
* On Unix, this method will find out if the Monotonic Clock is supported
* (seems supported by kernel 2.6, not by kernel 2.4). See getLocalTime().
*/
struct timespec tv;
if ( (clock_gettime( CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tv ) == 0) &&
(clock_getres( CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tv ) == 0) )
{
// nldebug( "Monotonic local time supported (resolution %.6f ms)", ((float)tv.tv_sec)*1000.0f + ((float)tv.tv_nsec)/1000000.0f );
isMonotonicClockSupported = true;
}
else
#endif
#endif
{
// nlwarning( "Monotonic local time not supported, caution with time sync" );
}
initdone = true;
}
#if defined(_POSIX_TIMERS) && (_POSIX_TIMERS > 0)
#if defined(_POSIX_MONOTONIC_CLOCK) && (_POSIX_MONOTONIC_CLOCK >= 0)
if ( isMonotonicClockSupported )
{
struct timespec tv;
// This is not affected by system time changes.
if ( clock_gettime( CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &tv ) != 0 )
nlerror ("Can't get clock time again");
return (TTime)tv.tv_sec * (TTime)1000 + (TTime)((tv.tv_nsec/*+500*/) / 1000000);
}
#endif
#endif
// This is affected by system time changes.
struct timeval tv;
if ( gettimeofday( &tv, NULL) != 0 )
nlerror ("Can't get time of day");
return (TTime)tv.tv_sec * (TTime)1000 + (TTime)tv.tv_usec / (TTime)1000;
#endif
}
/* Return the time in processor ticks. Use it for profile purpose.
* If the performance time is not supported on this hardware, it returns 0.
* \warning On a multiprocessor system, the value returned by each processor may
* be different. The only way to workaround this is to set a processor affinity
* to the measured thread.
* \warning The speed of tick increase can vary (especially on laptops or CPUs with
* power management), so profiling several times and computing the average could be
* a wise choice.
*/
TTicks CTime::getPerformanceTime ()
{
#ifdef NL_OS_WINDOWS
LARGE_INTEGER ret;
if (QueryPerformanceCounter (&ret))
return ret.QuadPart;
else
return 0;
#elif defined(NL_OS_MAC)
return mach_absolute_time();
#else
#if defined(HAVE_X86_64)
unsigned long long int hi, lo;
__asm__ volatile (".byte 0x0f, 0x31" : "=a" (lo), "=d" (hi));
return (hi << 32) | (lo & 0xffffffff);
#elif defined(HAVE_X86) and !defined(NL_OS_MAC)
unsigned long long int x;
__asm__ volatile (".byte 0x0f, 0x31" : "=A" (x));
return x;
#else // HAVE_X86
static bool firstWarn = true;
if (firstWarn)
{
nlwarning ("TTicks CTime::getPerformanceTime () is not implemented for your processor, returning 0");
firstWarn = false;
}
return 0;
#endif // HAVE_X86
#endif // NL_OS_WINDOWS
}
/*
#define GETTICKS(t) asm volatile ("push %%esi\n\t" "mov %0, %%esi" : : "r" (t)); \
asm volatile ("push %eax\n\t" "push %edx"); \
asm volatile ("rdtsc"); \
asm volatile ("movl %eax, (%esi)\n\t" "movl %edx, 4(%esi)"); \
asm volatile ("pop %edx\n\t" "pop %eax\n\t" "pop %esi");
*/
/* Convert a ticks count into second. If the performance time is not supported on this
* hardware, it returns 0.0.
*/
double CTime::ticksToSecond (TTicks ticks)
{
#ifdef NL_OS_WINDOWS
LARGE_INTEGER ret;
if (QueryPerformanceFrequency(&ret))
{
return (double)(sint64)ticks/(double)ret.QuadPart;
}
else
#elif defined(NL_OS_MAC)
{
static double factor = 0.0;
if (factor == 0.0)
{
mach_timebase_info_data_t tbInfo;
factor = 1000000000.0 * (double)tbInfo.numer / (double)tbInfo.denom;
}
return double(ticks * factor);
15 years ago
}
#endif // NL_OS_WINDOWS
{
static bool benchFrequency = true;
static sint64 freq = 0;
if (benchFrequency)
{
// try to have an estimation of the cpu frequency
TTicks tickBefore = getPerformanceTime ();
TTicks tickAfter = tickBefore;
TTime timeBefore = getLocalTime ();
TTime timeAfter = timeBefore;
for(;;)
{
if (timeAfter - timeBefore > 1000)
break;
timeAfter = getLocalTime ();
tickAfter = getPerformanceTime ();
}
TTime timeDelta = timeAfter - timeBefore;
TTicks tickDelta = tickAfter - tickBefore;
freq = 1000 * tickDelta / timeDelta;
benchFrequency = false;
}
return (double)(sint64)ticks/(double)freq;
}
}
std::string CTime::getHumanRelativeTime(sint32 nbSeconds)
{
sint32 delta = nbSeconds;
if (delta < 0)
delta = -delta;
// some constants of time duration in seconds
const sint32 oneMinute = 60;
const sint32 oneHour = oneMinute * 60;
const sint32 oneDay = oneHour * 24;
const sint32 oneWeek = oneDay * 7;
const sint32 oneMonth = oneDay * 30; // aprox, a more precise value is 30.416666... but no matter
const sint32 oneYear = oneDay * 365; // aprox, a more precise value is 365.26.. who care?
sint32 year, month, week, day, hour, minute;
year = month = week = day = hour = minute = 0;
/// compute the different parts
year = delta / oneYear;
delta %= oneYear;
month = delta / oneMonth;
delta %= oneMonth;
week = delta / oneWeek;
delta %= oneWeek;
day = delta / oneDay;
delta %= oneDay;
hour = delta / oneHour;
delta %= oneHour;
minute = delta / oneMinute;
delta %= oneMinute;
// compute the string
CSString ret;
if (year)
ret << year << " years ";
if (month)
ret << month << " months ";
if (week)
ret << week << " weeks ";
if (day)
ret << day << " days ";
if (hour)
ret << hour << " hours ";
if (minute)
ret << minute << " minutes ";
if (delta || ret.empty())
ret << delta << " seconds ";
return ret;
}
#ifdef NL_OS_WINDOWS
/** Return the offset in 10th of micro sec between the windows base time (
* 01-01-1601 0:0:0 UTC) and the unix base time (01-01-1970 0:0:0 UTC).
* This value is used to convert windows system and file time back and
* forth to unix time (aka epoch)
*/
uint64 CTime::getWindowsToUnixBaseTimeOffset()
{
static bool init = false;
static uint64 offset = 0;
if (! init)
{
// compute the offset to convert windows base time into unix time (aka epoch)
// build a WIN32 system time for jan 1, 1970
SYSTEMTIME baseTime;
baseTime.wYear = 1970;
baseTime.wMonth = 1;
baseTime.wDayOfWeek = 0;
baseTime.wDay = 1;
baseTime.wHour = 0;
baseTime.wMinute = 0;
baseTime.wSecond = 0;
baseTime.wMilliseconds = 0;
FILETIME baseFileTime = {0,0};
// convert it into a FILETIME value
SystemTimeToFileTime(&baseTime, &baseFileTime);
offset = baseFileTime.dwLowDateTime | (uint64(baseFileTime.dwHighDateTime)<<32);
init = true;
}
return offset;
}
#endif
} // NLMISC