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authorAlbert ARIBAUD (3ADEV) <albert.aribaud@3adev.fr>2018-11-20 23:57:23 +0100
committerAlbert ARIBAUD (3ADEV) <albert.aribaud@3adev.fr>2018-12-17 22:56:15 +0100
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Y2038: add function __localtime64
Tested with 'make check' on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux.gnu. * include/time.h (__localtime64): Add. * manual/maint.texi: Document Y2038 symbol handling. * time/localtime.c (__localtime64): Add. [__TIMERSIZE != 64] (__localtime): Turn into a wrapper.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual')
-rw-r--r--manual/maint.texi125
1 files changed, 125 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/manual/maint.texi b/manual/maint.texi
index fce06bf..d516a90 100644
--- a/manual/maint.texi
+++ b/manual/maint.texi
@@ -5,6 +5,7 @@
@menu
* Source Layout:: How to add new functions or header files
to the GNU C Library.
+* Symbol handling:: How to handle symbols in the GNU C Library.
* Porting:: How to port the GNU C Library to
a new machine or operating system.
@end menu
@@ -183,6 +184,130 @@ header file in the machine-specific directory, e.g.,
@file{sysdeps/powerpc/sys/platform/ppc.h}.
+@node Symbol handling
+@appendixsec Symbol handling in the GNU C Library
+
+@menu
+* 64-bit time symbol handling :: How to handle 64-bit time related
+ symbols in the GNU C Library.
+@end menu
+
+@node 64-bit time symbol handling
+@appendixsubsec 64-bit time symbol handling in the GNU C Library
+
+With respect to time handling, @theglibcadj{} configurations fall in two
+classes depending on the value of @code{__TIMESIZE}:
+
+@table @code
+
+@item @code{__TIMESIZE == 32}
+
+These @dfn{dual-time} configurations have both 32-bit and 64-bit time
+support. 32-bit time support provides type @code{time_t} and cannot
+handle dates beyond @dfn{Y2038}. 64-bit time support provides type
+@code{__time64_t} and can handle dates beyond @dfn{Y2038}.
+
+In these configurations, time-related types have two declarations,
+a 64-bit one, and a 32-bit one; and time-related functions generally
+have two definitions: a 64-bit one, and a 32-bit one which is a wrapper
+around the former. Therefore, for every @code{time_t}-related symbol,
+there is a corresponding @code{__time64_t}-related symbol, the name of
+which is usually the 32-bit symbol's name with @code{__} (a double
+underscore) prepended and @code{64} appended. For instance, the
+64-bit-time counterpart of @code{clock_gettime} is
+@code{__clock_gettime64}.
+
+@item @code{__TIMESIZE == 64}
+
+These @dfn{single-time} configurations only have a 64-bit @code{time_t}
+and related functions, which can handle dates beyond 2038-01-19
+03:14:07 (aka @dfn{Y2038}).
+
+In these configurations, time-related types only have a 64-bit
+declaration; and time-related functions only have one 64-bit definition.
+However, for every @code{time_t}-related symbol, there is a
+corresponding @code{__time64_t}-related macro, the name of which is
+derived as in the dual-time configuration case, and which expands to
+the symbol's name. For instance, the macro @code{__clock_gettime64}
+expands to @code{clock_gettime}.
+
+These macros are purely internal to @theglibc{} and exist only so that
+a single definition of the 64-bit time functions can be used on both
+single-time and dual-time configurations, and so that glibc code can
+freely call the 64-bit functions internally in all configurations.
+
+@end table
+
+@c The following paragraph should be removed once external interfaces
+@c get support for both time sizes.
+
+Note: at this point, 64-bit time support in dual-time configurations is
+work-in-progress, so for these configurations, the public API only makes
+the 32-bit time support available. In a later change, the public API
+will allow user code to choose the time size for a given compilation
+unit.
+
+64-bit variants of time-related types or functions are defined for all
+configurations and use 64-bit-time symbol names (for dual-time
+configurations) or macros (for single-time configurations).
+
+32-bit variants of time-related types or functions are defined only for
+dual-time configurations.
+
+Here is an example with @code{localtime}:
+
+Function @code{localtime} is declared in @file{time/time.h} as
+@smallexample
+extern struct tm *localtime (const time_t *__timer) __THROW;
+libc_hidden_proto (localtime)
+@end smallexample
+
+For single-time configurations, @code{__localtime64} is a macro which
+evaluates to @code{localtime}; for dual-time configurations,
+@code{__localtime64} is a function similar to @code{localtime} except
+it uses Y2038-proof types:
+@smallexample
+#if __TIMESIZE == 64
+# define __localtime64 localtime
+#else
+extern struct tm *__localtime64 (const __time64_t *__timer) __THROW;
+libc_hidden_proto (__localtime64)
+#endif
+@end smallexample
+
+(note: type @code{time_t} is replaced with @code{__time64_t} because
+@code{time_t} is not Y2038-proof, but @code{struct tm} is not
+replaced because it is already Y2038-proof.)
+
+The 64-bit-time implementation of @code{localtime} is written as follows
+and is compiled for both dual-time and single-time configuration classes.
+
+@smallexample
+struct tm *
+__localtime64 (const __time64_t *t)
+@lbracechar{}
+ return __tz_convert (*t, 1, &_tmbuf);
+@rbracechar{}
+libc_hidden_def (__localtime64)
+@end smallexample
+
+The 32-bit-time implementation is a wrapper and is only compiled for
+dual-time configurations:
+
+@smallexample
+#if __TIMESIZE != 64
+
+struct tm *
+localtime (const time_t *t)
+@lbracechar{}
+ __time64_t t64 = *t;
+ return __localtime64 (&t64);
+@rbracechar{}
+libc_hidden_def (localtime)
+
+#endif
+@end smallexample
+
@node Porting
@appendixsec Porting @theglibc{}