On Wednesday 17 February 2016, J William Piggott wrote: > On 02/16/2016 05:29 AM, Karel Zak wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 11, 2016 at 07:48:40PM -0500, J William Piggott wrote: > >> - lt = localtime(&hwctime.tv_sec); > >> - strftime(ctime_now, sizeof(ctime_now), format, lt); > >> - printf(_("%s and %06d microseconds\n"), ctime_now, > >> (int)hwctime.tv_usec); + struct tm lt; > >> + int zhour, zmin; > >> + > >> + lt = *localtime(&hwctime.tv_sec); > >> + zhour = - timezone / 60 / 60; > >> + zmin = abs(timezone / 60 % 60); > >> + printf(_("%4d-%.2d-%.2d %02d:%02d:%02d.%06d%+02d:%02d\n"), > >> + lt.tm_year + 1900, lt.tm_mon + 1, lt.tm_mday, > >> lt.tm_hour, + lt.tm_min, lt.tm_sec, (int)hwctime.tv_usec, > >> zhour, zmin); > > > > Some notes: > > > > * what's wrong with strftime? > > Why use resources on strftime when 8601 prints directly? > > While it can do other formatting, I see strftime's main purpose as > converting tm numbers into strings like: January, Monday, etc. > > > * We already use ISO time in util-linux and we use time designator > > 'T' (separator between date and time). > > I chose to use the optional space as a compromise between machine > friendly and human friendly, this is commonly done I think. > > > * tv_usec is "long" > > Fixed: I followed the example from the recent commit c211401 (for > code consistency, which is why I originally used the int cast), and > cast it to long; although I do not understand why as it is already > long. All that needed to be done was to change the conversion length > modifier and drop the cast. It's not long on all systems, e.g.__darwin_suseconds_t is int. Casting to long seems to be the way to avoid warnings everywhere. > PULL: > > git@xxxxxxxxxx:jwpi/util-linux.git 020716 > > for you to fetch changes up to e05ac5aae00913e7a999c96a7bb731dc1d09cc5c: > > * fraction separator is decimal mark, either a comma or a dot, but > > with a preference for a comma according to ISO 8601:2004 > > (wikipedia). > > > > -- we already use comma in util-linux, exception is logger where > > I see dot :-( > > I actually modeled the format after: > > date --rfc-3339=ns > 2016-02-16 20:13:25.601508440-05:00 > > 3339 is a subset of 8601 that requires using a period for the radix > point. As I said previously, I chose this as a compromise between > machine and human readability. As it is output to tty by default, I > thought doing so might mitigate any push back against the format > change. > > I am not strongly opposed to using 'T' as the date-time delimiter or > comma as the radix point. I just think 'space' and 'period' are a > commonly used compromise. > > > Anyway, it would be really nice to have a function for this purpose > > in lib/timeutils.c to avoid duplication and creativity :-) > > Something like: > > > > > > strtime_iso_8601(char buf, size_t bufsz, struct tm tm, struct > > timeval frac, int flags); > > > > where flags are > > > > enum { > > ISO_8601_TIMEZONE = (1 << 1) > > ISO_8601_USEC = (1 << 2) > > ... > > }; > > > > then we can use this function in lslogins, dmesg, hwclock, last, > > logger, ... etc. I can also imagine: > > > > strtime_short_ctime() > > strtime_ctime() (ctime without \n) > > > > Comments? > > Also, perhaps all the above only using something similar to > coreutil's fprintftime, so it prints directly using less resources. > > > Karel > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe util-linux" > in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe util-linux" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html