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author | Zack Weinberg <zackw@panix.com> | 2019-09-04 16:51:23 +0000 |
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committer | Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> | 2019-10-30 17:11:10 -0300 |
commit | 2b5fea833bcd0f651579afd16ed7842770ecbae1 (patch) | |
tree | 1da4cec5abfb962a083d4c1b520a222f7ba5e30d /iconv | |
parent | f9a7554009cf38f390e74fcabc5b49f974f72382 (diff) | |
download | glibc-2b5fea833bcd0f651579afd16ed7842770ecbae1.zip glibc-2b5fea833bcd0f651579afd16ed7842770ecbae1.tar.gz glibc-2b5fea833bcd0f651579afd16ed7842770ecbae1.tar.bz2 |
Consolidate and deprecate ftime
ftime is an obsolete variation on gettimeofday, offering only
millisecond time resolution; it was probably a system call in ooold
versions of BSD Unix. For historic reasons, we had three
implementations of it. These are all consolidated into time/ftime.c,
and then the function is deprecated.
For some reason, the implementation of ftime in terms of gettimeofday
was rounding rather than truncating microseconds to milliseconds. In
all the other places where we use a higher-resolution time function to
implement a lower-resolution one, we truncate. ftime is changed to
match, just for tidiness' sake.
Like gettimeofday, ftime tries to report the time zone, and using that
information is always a bug. This patch dummies out the reported
timezone information; the timezone and dstflag fields of the
returned "struct timeb" will always be zero.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, powerpc64le-linux-gnu,
powerpc64-linux-gnu, and powerpc-linux-gnu.
Co-authored-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'iconv')
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