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author | Zack Weinberg <zackw@panix.com> | 2019-08-19 10:31:07 -0400 |
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committer | Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> | 2019-10-30 17:11:10 -0300 |
commit | 62193c4a3af9c1e15c039b323f45ccd2fddc119f (patch) | |
tree | 67963901b6a5563103951a0306b2354bc21f09d7 /manual/llio.texi | |
parent | 2f2c76e1c8d8c4431c6395afeee420b71a4d772a (diff) | |
download | glibc-62193c4a3af9c1e15c039b323f45ccd2fddc119f.zip glibc-62193c4a3af9c1e15c039b323f45ccd2fddc119f.tar.gz glibc-62193c4a3af9c1e15c039b323f45ccd2fddc119f.tar.bz2 |
Revise the documentation of simple calendar time.
This is a thorough revision of all the material relating to the
functions time, stime, gettimeofday, settimeofday, clock_gettime,
clock_getres, clock_settime, and difftime, spilling over into the
discussion of time-related data types (which now get their own
section) and touching the adjtime family as well (which deserves its
own thorough revision, but I'd have to do a bunch of research first).
Substantive changes are:
* Document clock_gettime, clock_getres, and clock_settime. (Only
CLOCK_REALTIME and CLOCK_MONOTONIC are documented; the others are
either a bit too Linux-specific, or have more to do with measuring
CPU/processor time. That section _also_ deserves its own thorough
revision but again I'd have to do a bunch of research first.)
* Present gettimeofday, settimeofday, and struct timeval as obsolete
relative to clock_*.
* Remove the documentation of struct timezone. Matching POSIX,
say that the type of the second argument to gettimeofday and
settimeofday is [const] void *.
* Clarify ISO C and POSIX's requirements on time_t. Clarify the
circumstances under which difftime is equivalent to simple
subtraction.
* Consolidate documentation of most of the time-related data types
into a new section "Time Types," right after "Time Basics." (The
exceptions are struct tm, which stays in "Broken-down Time," and
struct times, which stays in "Processor And CPU Time."
* The "Elapsed Time" section is now called "Calculating Elapsed Time"
and includes only difftime and the discussion of how to compute
timeval differences by hand.
* Fold the "Simple Calendar Time," "High Resolution Calendar," and
"High Accuracy Clock" sections together into two new sections titled
"Getting the Time" and "Setting and Adjusting the Time."
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/llio.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/llio.texi | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/manual/llio.texi b/manual/llio.texi index 447126b..fe59002 100644 --- a/manual/llio.texi +++ b/manual/llio.texi @@ -2094,11 +2094,11 @@ descriptors. The usual thing is to pass @code{FD_SETSIZE} as the value of this argument. The @var{timeout} specifies the maximum time to wait. If you pass a -null pointer for this argument, it means to block indefinitely until one -of the file descriptors is ready. Otherwise, you should provide the -time in @code{struct timeval} format; see @ref{High-Resolution -Calendar}. Specify zero as the time (a @code{struct timeval} containing -all zeros) if you want to find out which descriptors are ready without +null pointer for this argument, it means to block indefinitely until +one of the file descriptors is ready. Otherwise, you should provide +the time in @code{struct timeval} format; see @ref{Time Types}. +Specify zero as the time (a @code{struct timeval} containing all +zeros) if you want to find out which descriptors are ready without waiting if none are ready. The normal return value from @code{select} is the total number of ready file |