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gettimeofday(2)               System Calls Manual               gettimeofday(2)

NAME
       gettimeofday, settimeofday - get / set time

LIBRARY
       Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/time.h>

       int gettimeofday(struct timeval *restrict tv,
                        struct timezone *_Nullable restrict tz);
       int settimeofday(const struct timeval *tv,
                        const struct timezone *_Nullable tz);

   Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):

       settimeofday():
           Since glibc 2.19:
               _DEFAULT_SOURCE
           glibc 2.19 and earlier:
               _BSD_SOURCE

DESCRIPTION
       The functions gettimeofday() and settimeofday() can get and set the time
       as well as a timezone.

       The tv argument is a struct timeval (as specified in <sys/time.h>):

           struct timeval {
               time_t      tv_sec;     /* seconds */
               suseconds_t tv_usec;    /* microseconds */
           };

       and  gives  the  number of seconds and microseconds since the Epoch (see
       time(2)).

       The tz argument is a struct timezone:

           struct timezone {
               int tz_minuteswest;     /* minutes west of Greenwich */
               int tz_dsttime;         /* type of DST correction */
           };

       If either tv or tz is NULL, the corresponding structure is  not  set  or
       returned.  (However, compilation warnings will result if tv is NULL.)

       The  use  of  the timezone structure is obsolete; the tz argument should
       normally be specified as NULL.  (See NOTES below.)

       Under Linux, there are some peculiar "warp clock"  semantics  associated
       with  the  settimeofday()  system  call if on the very first call (after
       booting) that has a non-NULL tz argument, the tv argument  is  NULL  and
       the  tz_minuteswest  field  is nonzero.  (The tz_dsttime field should be
       zero for this case.)  In such a case it is assumed that the  CMOS  clock
       is  on  local  time, and that it has to be incremented by this amount to
       get UTC system time.  No doubt it is a bad idea to use this feature.

RETURN VALUE
       gettimeofday() and settimeofday() return 0 for success.  On error, -1 is
       returned and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS
       EFAULT One of tv or tz pointed outside the accessible address space.

       EINVAL (settimeofday()): timezone is invalid.

       EINVAL (settimeofday()): tv.tv_sec is negative or tv.tv_usec is  outside
              the range [0, 999,999].

       EINVAL (since Linux 4.3)
              (settimeofday()):  An attempt was made to set the time to a value
              less than the current value of  the  CLOCK_MONOTONIC  clock  (see
              clock_gettime(2)).

       EPERM  The calling process has insufficient privilege to call settimeof-
              day(); under Linux the CAP_SYS_TIME capability is required.

VERSIONS
   C library/kernel differences
       On  some  architectures, an implementation of gettimeofday() is provided
       in the vdso(7).

       The kernel accepts NULL for both tv and tz.  The  timezone  argument  is
       ignored by glibc and musl, and not passed to/from the kernel.  Android's
       bionic passes the timezone argument to/from the kernel, but Android does
       not update the kernel timezone based on the device timezone in Settings,
       so the kernel's timezone is typically UTC.

STANDARDS
       gettimeofday()
              POSIX.1-2008 (obsolete).

       settimeofday()
              None.

HISTORY
       SVr4,  4.3BSD.  POSIX.1-2001 describes gettimeofday() but not settimeof-
       day().  POSIX.1-2008 marks gettimeofday() as obsolete, recommending  the
       use of clock_gettime(2) instead.

       Traditionally, the fields of struct timeval were of type long.

   The tz_dsttime field
       On  a non-Linux kernel, with glibc, the tz_dsttime field of struct time-
       zone will be set to a nonzero value by  gettimeofday()  if  the  current
       timezone  has  ever had or will have a daylight saving rule applied.  In
       this sense it exactly mirrors the meaning of daylight(3) for the current
       zone.  On Linux, with glibc, the setting  of  the  tz_dsttime  field  of
       struct timezone has never been used by settimeofday() or gettimeofday().
       Thus, the following is purely of historical interest.

       On  old systems, the field tz_dsttime contains a symbolic constant (val-
       ues are given below) that indicates in which part of the  year  Daylight
       Saving  Time  is in force.  (Note: this value is constant throughout the
       year: it does not indicate that DST is in force, it just selects an  al-
       gorithm.)  The daylight saving time algorithms defined are as follows:

           DST_NONE     /* not on DST */
           DST_USA      /* USA style DST */
           DST_AUST     /* Australian style DST */
           DST_WET      /* Western European DST */
           DST_MET      /* Middle European DST */
           DST_EET      /* Eastern European DST */
           DST_CAN      /* Canada */
           DST_GB       /* Great Britain and Eire */
           DST_RUM      /* Romania */
           DST_TUR      /* Turkey */
           DST_AUSTALT  /* Australian style with shift in 1986 */

       Of course it turned out that the period in which Daylight Saving Time is
       in force cannot be given by a simple algorithm, one per country; indeed,
       this period is determined by unpredictable political decisions.  So this
       method of representing timezones has been abandoned.

NOTES
       The  time  returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps
       in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator  manually  changes
       the  system  time).   If  you need a monotonically increasing clock, see
       clock_gettime(2).

       Macros for operating on timeval structures are described in timeradd(3).

SEE ALSO
       date(1), adjtimex(2),  clock_gettime(2),  time(2),  ctime(3),  ftime(3),
       timeradd(3), capabilities(7), time(7), vdso(7), hwclock(8)

Linux man-pages 6.9.1              2024-05-02                   gettimeofday(2)

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