ref: 7c1e0be91969ab0d8fca4bd1fd52de32f4a9a0c5
dir: /sys/src/cmd/python/Modules/timemodule.c/
/* Time module */ #include "Python.h" #include "structseq.h" #include "timefuncs.h" #ifdef __APPLE__ #if defined(HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY) && defined(HAVE_FTIME) /* * floattime falls back to ftime when getttimeofday fails because the latter * might fail on some platforms. This fallback is unwanted on MacOSX because * that makes it impossible to use a binary build on OSX 10.4 on earlier * releases of the OS. Therefore claim we don't support ftime. */ # undef HAVE_FTIME #endif #endif #include <ctype.h> #ifdef HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H #include <sys/types.h> #endif /* HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H */ #ifdef QUICKWIN #include <io.h> #endif #ifdef HAVE_FTIME #include <sys/timeb.h> #if !defined(MS_WINDOWS) && !defined(PYOS_OS2) extern int ftime(struct timeb *); #endif /* MS_WINDOWS */ #endif /* HAVE_FTIME */ #if defined(__WATCOMC__) && !defined(__QNX__) #include <i86.h> #else #ifdef MS_WINDOWS #define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN #include <windows.h> #include "pythread.h" /* helper to allow us to interrupt sleep() on Windows*/ static HANDLE hInterruptEvent = NULL; static BOOL WINAPI PyCtrlHandler(DWORD dwCtrlType) { SetEvent(hInterruptEvent); /* allow other default handlers to be called. Default Python handler will setup the KeyboardInterrupt exception. */ return FALSE; } static long main_thread; #if defined(__BORLANDC__) /* These overrides not needed for Win32 */ #define timezone _timezone #define tzname _tzname #define daylight _daylight #endif /* __BORLANDC__ */ #endif /* MS_WINDOWS */ #endif /* !__WATCOMC__ || __QNX__ */ #if defined(MS_WINDOWS) && !defined(__BORLANDC__) /* Win32 has better clock replacement; we have our own version below. */ #undef HAVE_CLOCK #endif /* MS_WINDOWS && !defined(__BORLANDC__) */ #if defined(PYOS_OS2) #define INCL_DOS #define INCL_ERRORS #include <os2.h> #endif #if defined(PYCC_VACPP) #include <sys/time.h> #endif #ifdef __BEOS__ #include <time.h> /* For bigtime_t, snooze(). - [cjh] */ #include <support/SupportDefs.h> #include <kernel/OS.h> #endif #ifdef RISCOS extern int riscos_sleep(double); #endif /* Forward declarations */ static int floatsleep(double); static double floattime(void); /* For Y2K check */ static PyObject *moddict; /* Exposed in timefuncs.h. */ time_t _PyTime_DoubleToTimet(double x) { time_t result; double diff; result = (time_t)x; /* How much info did we lose? time_t may be an integral or * floating type, and we don't know which. If it's integral, * we don't know whether C truncates, rounds, returns the floor, * etc. If we lost a second or more, the C rounding is * unreasonable, or the input just doesn't fit in a time_t; * call it an error regardless. Note that the original cast to * time_t can cause a C error too, but nothing we can do to * worm around that. */ diff = x - (double)result; if (diff <= -1.0 || diff >= 1.0) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "timestamp out of range for platform time_t"); result = (time_t)-1; } return result; } static PyObject * time_time(PyObject *self, PyObject *unused) { double secs; secs = floattime(); if (secs == 0.0) { PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError); return NULL; } return PyFloat_FromDouble(secs); } PyDoc_STRVAR(time_doc, "time() -> floating point number\n\ \n\ Return the current time in seconds since the Epoch.\n\ Fractions of a second may be present if the system clock provides them."); #ifdef HAVE_CLOCK #ifndef CLOCKS_PER_SEC #ifdef CLK_TCK #define CLOCKS_PER_SEC CLK_TCK #else #define CLOCKS_PER_SEC 1000000 #endif #endif static PyObject * time_clock(PyObject *self, PyObject *unused) { return PyFloat_FromDouble(((double)clock()) / CLOCKS_PER_SEC); } #endif /* HAVE_CLOCK */ #if defined(MS_WINDOWS) && !defined(__BORLANDC__) /* Due to Mark Hammond and Tim Peters */ static PyObject * time_clock(PyObject *self, PyObject *unused) { static LARGE_INTEGER ctrStart; static double divisor = 0.0; LARGE_INTEGER now; double diff; if (divisor == 0.0) { LARGE_INTEGER freq; QueryPerformanceCounter(&ctrStart); if (!QueryPerformanceFrequency(&freq) || freq.QuadPart == 0) { /* Unlikely to happen - this works on all intel machines at least! Revert to clock() */ return PyFloat_FromDouble(((double)clock()) / CLOCKS_PER_SEC); } divisor = (double)freq.QuadPart; } QueryPerformanceCounter(&now); diff = (double)(now.QuadPart - ctrStart.QuadPart); return PyFloat_FromDouble(diff / divisor); } #define HAVE_CLOCK /* So it gets included in the methods */ #endif /* MS_WINDOWS && !defined(__BORLANDC__) */ #ifdef HAVE_CLOCK PyDoc_STRVAR(clock_doc, "clock() -> floating point number\n\ \n\ Return the CPU time or real time since the start of the process or since\n\ the first call to clock(). This has as much precision as the system\n\ records."); #endif static PyObject * time_sleep(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { double secs; if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "d:sleep", &secs)) return NULL; if (floatsleep(secs) != 0) return NULL; Py_INCREF(Py_None); return Py_None; } PyDoc_STRVAR(sleep_doc, "sleep(seconds)\n\ \n\ Delay execution for a given number of seconds. The argument may be\n\ a floating point number for subsecond precision."); static PyStructSequence_Field struct_time_type_fields[] = { {"tm_year", NULL}, {"tm_mon", NULL}, {"tm_mday", NULL}, {"tm_hour", NULL}, {"tm_min", NULL}, {"tm_sec", NULL}, {"tm_wday", NULL}, {"tm_yday", NULL}, {"tm_isdst", NULL}, {0} }; static PyStructSequence_Desc struct_time_type_desc = { "time.struct_time", NULL, struct_time_type_fields, 9, }; static int initialized; static PyTypeObject StructTimeType; static PyObject * tmtotuple(struct tm *p) { PyObject *v = PyStructSequence_New(&StructTimeType); if (v == NULL) return NULL; #define SET(i,val) PyStructSequence_SET_ITEM(v, i, PyInt_FromLong((long) val)) SET(0, p->tm_year + 1900); SET(1, p->tm_mon + 1); /* Want January == 1 */ SET(2, p->tm_mday); SET(3, p->tm_hour); SET(4, p->tm_min); SET(5, p->tm_sec); SET(6, (p->tm_wday + 6) % 7); /* Want Monday == 0 */ SET(7, p->tm_yday + 1); /* Want January, 1 == 1 */ SET(8, p->tm_isdst); #undef SET if (PyErr_Occurred()) { Py_XDECREF(v); return NULL; } return v; } static PyObject * time_convert(double when, struct tm * (*function)(const time_t *)) { struct tm *p; time_t whent = _PyTime_DoubleToTimet(when); if (whent == (time_t)-1 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; errno = 0; p = function(&whent); if (p == NULL) { #ifdef EINVAL if (errno == 0) errno = EINVAL; #endif return PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_ValueError); } return tmtotuple(p); } /* Parse arg tuple that can contain an optional float-or-None value; format needs to be "|O:name". Returns non-zero on success (parallels PyArg_ParseTuple). */ static int parse_time_double_args(PyObject *args, char *format, double *pwhen) { PyObject *ot = NULL; if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, format, &ot)) return 0; if (ot == NULL || ot == Py_None) *pwhen = floattime(); else { double when = PyFloat_AsDouble(ot); if (PyErr_Occurred()) return 0; *pwhen = when; } return 1; } static PyObject * time_gmtime(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { double when; if (!parse_time_double_args(args, "|O:gmtime", &when)) return NULL; return time_convert(when, gmtime); } PyDoc_STRVAR(gmtime_doc, "gmtime([seconds]) -> (tm_year, tm_mon, tm_day, tm_hour, tm_min,\n\ tm_sec, tm_wday, tm_yday, tm_isdst)\n\ \n\ Convert seconds since the Epoch to a time tuple expressing UTC (a.k.a.\n\ GMT). When 'seconds' is not passed in, convert the current time instead."); static PyObject * time_localtime(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { double when; if (!parse_time_double_args(args, "|O:localtime", &when)) return NULL; return time_convert(when, localtime); } PyDoc_STRVAR(localtime_doc, "localtime([seconds]) -> (tm_year,tm_mon,tm_day,tm_hour,tm_min,tm_sec,tm_wday,tm_yday,tm_isdst)\n\ \n\ Convert seconds since the Epoch to a time tuple expressing local time.\n\ When 'seconds' is not passed in, convert the current time instead."); static int gettmarg(PyObject *args, struct tm *p) { int y; memset((void *) p, '\0', sizeof(struct tm)); if (!PyArg_Parse(args, "(iiiiiiiii)", &y, &p->tm_mon, &p->tm_mday, &p->tm_hour, &p->tm_min, &p->tm_sec, &p->tm_wday, &p->tm_yday, &p->tm_isdst)) return 0; if (y < 1900) { PyObject *accept = PyDict_GetItemString(moddict, "accept2dyear"); if (accept == NULL || !PyInt_Check(accept) || PyInt_AsLong(accept) == 0) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "year >= 1900 required"); return 0; } if (69 <= y && y <= 99) y += 1900; else if (0 <= y && y <= 68) y += 2000; else { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "year out of range"); return 0; } } p->tm_year = y - 1900; p->tm_mon--; p->tm_wday = (p->tm_wday + 1) % 7; p->tm_yday--; return 1; } #ifdef HAVE_STRFTIME static PyObject * time_strftime(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *tup = NULL; struct tm buf; const char *fmt; size_t fmtlen, buflen; char *outbuf = 0; size_t i; memset((void *) &buf, '\0', sizeof(buf)); if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "s|O:strftime", &fmt, &tup)) return NULL; if (tup == NULL) { time_t tt = time(NULL); buf = *localtime(&tt); } else if (!gettmarg(tup, &buf)) return NULL; /* Checks added to make sure strftime() does not crash Python by indexing blindly into some array for a textual representation by some bad index (fixes bug #897625). Also support values of zero from Python code for arguments in which that is out of range by forcing that value to the lowest value that is valid (fixed bug #1520914). Valid ranges based on what is allowed in struct tm: - tm_year: [0, max(int)] (1) - tm_mon: [0, 11] (2) - tm_mday: [1, 31] - tm_hour: [0, 23] - tm_min: [0, 59] - tm_sec: [0, 60] - tm_wday: [0, 6] (1) - tm_yday: [0, 365] (2) - tm_isdst: [-max(int), max(int)] (1) gettmarg() handles bounds-checking. (2) Python's acceptable range is one greater than the range in C, thus need to check against automatic decrement by gettmarg(). */ if (buf.tm_mon == -1) buf.tm_mon = 0; else if (buf.tm_mon < 0 || buf.tm_mon > 11) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "month out of range"); return NULL; } if (buf.tm_mday == 0) buf.tm_mday = 1; else if (buf.tm_mday < 0 || buf.tm_mday > 31) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "day of month out of range"); return NULL; } if (buf.tm_hour < 0 || buf.tm_hour > 23) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "hour out of range"); return NULL; } if (buf.tm_min < 0 || buf.tm_min > 59) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "minute out of range"); return NULL; } if (buf.tm_sec < 0 || buf.tm_sec > 61) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "seconds out of range"); return NULL; } /* tm_wday does not need checking of its upper-bound since taking ``% 7`` in gettmarg() automatically restricts the range. */ if (buf.tm_wday < 0) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "day of week out of range"); return NULL; } if (buf.tm_yday == -1) buf.tm_yday = 0; else if (buf.tm_yday < 0 || buf.tm_yday > 365) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "day of year out of range"); return NULL; } if (buf.tm_isdst < -1 || buf.tm_isdst > 1) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "daylight savings flag out of range"); return NULL; } fmtlen = strlen(fmt); /* I hate these functions that presume you know how big the output * will be ahead of time... */ for (i = 1024; ; i += i) { outbuf = (char *)malloc(i); if (outbuf == NULL) { return PyErr_NoMemory(); } buflen = strftime(outbuf, i, fmt, &buf); if (buflen > 0 || i >= 256 * fmtlen) { /* If the buffer is 256 times as long as the format, it's probably not failing for lack of room! More likely, the format yields an empty result, e.g. an empty format, or %Z when the timezone is unknown. */ PyObject *ret; ret = PyString_FromStringAndSize(outbuf, buflen); free(outbuf); return ret; } free(outbuf); #if defined _MSC_VER && _MSC_VER >= 1400 && defined(__STDC_SECURE_LIB__) /* VisualStudio .NET 2005 does this properly */ if (buflen == 0 && errno == EINVAL) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "Invalid format string"); return 0; } #endif } } PyDoc_STRVAR(strftime_doc, "strftime(format[, tuple]) -> string\n\ \n\ Convert a time tuple to a string according to a format specification.\n\ See the library reference manual for formatting codes. When the time tuple\n\ is not present, current time as returned by localtime() is used."); #endif /* HAVE_STRFTIME */ static PyObject * time_strptime(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *strptime_module = PyImport_ImportModule("_strptime"); PyObject *strptime_result; if (!strptime_module) return NULL; strptime_result = PyObject_CallMethod(strptime_module, "strptime", "O", args); Py_DECREF(strptime_module); return strptime_result; } PyDoc_STRVAR(strptime_doc, "strptime(string, format) -> struct_time\n\ \n\ Parse a string to a time tuple according to a format specification.\n\ See the library reference manual for formatting codes (same as strftime())."); static PyObject * time_asctime(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *tup = NULL; struct tm buf; char *p; if (!PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, "asctime", 0, 1, &tup)) return NULL; if (tup == NULL) { time_t tt = time(NULL); buf = *localtime(&tt); } else if (!gettmarg(tup, &buf)) return NULL; p = asctime(&buf); if (p[24] == '\n') p[24] = '\0'; return PyString_FromString(p); } PyDoc_STRVAR(asctime_doc, "asctime([tuple]) -> string\n\ \n\ Convert a time tuple to a string, e.g. 'Sat Jun 06 16:26:11 1998'.\n\ When the time tuple is not present, current time as returned by localtime()\n\ is used."); static PyObject * time_ctime(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) { PyObject *ot = NULL; time_t tt; char *p; if (!PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, "ctime", 0, 1, &ot)) return NULL; if (ot == NULL || ot == Py_None) tt = time(NULL); else { double dt = PyFloat_AsDouble(ot); if (PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; tt = _PyTime_DoubleToTimet(dt); if (tt == (time_t)-1 && PyErr_Occurred()) return NULL; } p = ctime(&tt); if (p == NULL) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "unconvertible time"); return NULL; } if (p[24] == '\n') p[24] = '\0'; return PyString_FromString(p); } PyDoc_STRVAR(ctime_doc, "ctime(seconds) -> string\n\ \n\ Convert a time in seconds since the Epoch to a string in local time.\n\ This is equivalent to asctime(localtime(seconds)). When the time tuple is\n\ not present, current time as returned by localtime() is used."); #ifdef HAVE_MKTIME static PyObject * time_mktime(PyObject *self, PyObject *tup) { struct tm buf; time_t tt; tt = time(&tt); buf = *localtime(&tt); if (!gettmarg(tup, &buf)) return NULL; tt = mktime(&buf); if (tt == (time_t)(-1)) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_OverflowError, "mktime argument out of range"); return NULL; } return PyFloat_FromDouble((double)tt); } PyDoc_STRVAR(mktime_doc, "mktime(tuple) -> floating point number\n\ \n\ Convert a time tuple in local time to seconds since the Epoch."); #endif /* HAVE_MKTIME */ #ifdef HAVE_WORKING_TZSET void inittimezone(PyObject *module); static PyObject * time_tzset(PyObject *self, PyObject *unused) { PyObject* m; m = PyImport_ImportModule("time"); if (m == NULL) { return NULL; } tzset(); /* Reset timezone, altzone, daylight and tzname */ inittimezone(m); Py_DECREF(m); Py_INCREF(Py_None); return Py_None; } PyDoc_STRVAR(tzset_doc, "tzset(zone)\n\ \n\ Initialize, or reinitialize, the local timezone to the value stored in\n\ os.environ['TZ']. The TZ environment variable should be specified in\n\ standard Unix timezone format as documented in the tzset man page\n\ (eg. 'US/Eastern', 'Europe/Amsterdam'). Unknown timezones will silently\n\ fall back to UTC. If the TZ environment variable is not set, the local\n\ timezone is set to the systems best guess of wallclock time.\n\ Changing the TZ environment variable without calling tzset *may* change\n\ the local timezone used by methods such as localtime, but this behaviour\n\ should not be relied on."); #endif /* HAVE_WORKING_TZSET */ void inittimezone(PyObject *m) { /* This code moved from inittime wholesale to allow calling it from time_tzset. In the future, some parts of it can be moved back (for platforms that don't HAVE_WORKING_TZSET, when we know what they are), and the extranious calls to tzset(3) should be removed. I havn't done this yet, as I don't want to change this code as little as possible when introducing the time.tzset and time.tzsetwall methods. This should simply be a method of doing the following once, at the top of this function and removing the call to tzset() from time_tzset(): #ifdef HAVE_TZSET tzset() #endif And I'm lazy and hate C so nyer. */ #if defined(HAVE_TZNAME) && !defined(__GLIBC__) && !defined(__CYGWIN__) tzset(); #ifdef PYOS_OS2 PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "timezone", _timezone); #else /* !PYOS_OS2 */ #ifdef PLAN9APE PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "timezone", timezone); #endif #endif /* PYOS_OS2 */ #ifdef HAVE_ALTZONE PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "altzone", altzone); #else #ifdef PYOS_OS2 PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "altzone", _timezone-3600); #else /* !PYOS_OS2 */ #ifdef PLAN9APE PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "altzone", timezone-3600); #endif #endif /* PYOS_OS2 */ #endif #ifdef PLAN9APE PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "daylight", daylight); PyModule_AddObject(m, "tzname", Py_BuildValue("(zz)", tzname[0], tzname[1])); #endif #else /* !HAVE_TZNAME || __GLIBC__ || __CYGWIN__*/ #ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_TM_TM_ZONE { #define YEAR ((time_t)((365 * 24 + 6) * 3600)) time_t t; struct tm *p; long janzone, julyzone; char janname[10], julyname[10]; t = (time((time_t *)0) / YEAR) * YEAR; p = localtime(&t); janzone = -p->tm_gmtoff; strncpy(janname, p->tm_zone ? p->tm_zone : " ", 9); janname[9] = '\0'; t += YEAR/2; p = localtime(&t); julyzone = -p->tm_gmtoff; strncpy(julyname, p->tm_zone ? p->tm_zone : " ", 9); julyname[9] = '\0'; if( janzone < julyzone ) { /* DST is reversed in the southern hemisphere */ PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "timezone", julyzone); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "altzone", janzone); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "daylight", janzone != julyzone); PyModule_AddObject(m, "tzname", Py_BuildValue("(zz)", julyname, janname)); } else { PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "timezone", janzone); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "altzone", julyzone); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "daylight", janzone != julyzone); PyModule_AddObject(m, "tzname", Py_BuildValue("(zz)", janname, julyname)); } } #else #endif /* HAVE_STRUCT_TM_TM_ZONE */ #ifdef __CYGWIN__ tzset(); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "timezone", _timezone); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "altzone", _timezone-3600); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "daylight", _daylight); PyModule_AddObject(m, "tzname", Py_BuildValue("(zz)", _tzname[0], _tzname[1])); #endif /* __CYGWIN__ */ #endif /* !HAVE_TZNAME || __GLIBC__ || __CYGWIN__*/ } static PyMethodDef time_methods[] = { {"time", time_time, METH_NOARGS, time_doc}, #ifdef HAVE_CLOCK {"clock", time_clock, METH_NOARGS, clock_doc}, #endif {"sleep", time_sleep, METH_VARARGS, sleep_doc}, {"gmtime", time_gmtime, METH_VARARGS, gmtime_doc}, {"localtime", time_localtime, METH_VARARGS, localtime_doc}, {"asctime", time_asctime, METH_VARARGS, asctime_doc}, {"ctime", time_ctime, METH_VARARGS, ctime_doc}, #ifdef HAVE_MKTIME {"mktime", time_mktime, METH_O, mktime_doc}, #endif #ifdef HAVE_STRFTIME {"strftime", time_strftime, METH_VARARGS, strftime_doc}, #endif {"strptime", time_strptime, METH_VARARGS, strptime_doc}, #ifdef HAVE_WORKING_TZSET {"tzset", time_tzset, METH_NOARGS, tzset_doc}, #endif {NULL, NULL} /* sentinel */ }; PyDoc_STRVAR(module_doc, "This module provides various functions to manipulate time values.\n\ \n\ There are two standard representations of time. One is the number\n\ of seconds since the Epoch, in UTC (a.k.a. GMT). It may be an integer\n\ or a floating point number (to represent fractions of seconds).\n\ The Epoch is system-defined; on Unix, it is generally January 1st, 1970.\n\ The actual value can be retrieved by calling gmtime(0).\n\ \n\ The other representation is a tuple of 9 integers giving local time.\n\ The tuple items are:\n\ year (four digits, e.g. 1998)\n\ month (1-12)\n\ day (1-31)\n\ hours (0-23)\n\ minutes (0-59)\n\ seconds (0-59)\n\ weekday (0-6, Monday is 0)\n\ Julian day (day in the year, 1-366)\n\ DST (Daylight Savings Time) flag (-1, 0 or 1)\n\ If the DST flag is 0, the time is given in the regular time zone;\n\ if it is 1, the time is given in the DST time zone;\n\ if it is -1, mktime() should guess based on the date and time.\n\ \n\ Variables:\n\ \n\ timezone -- difference in seconds between UTC and local standard time\n\ altzone -- difference in seconds between UTC and local DST time\n\ daylight -- whether local time should reflect DST\n\ tzname -- tuple of (standard time zone name, DST time zone name)\n\ \n\ Functions:\n\ \n\ time() -- return current time in seconds since the Epoch as a float\n\ clock() -- return CPU time since process start as a float\n\ sleep() -- delay for a number of seconds given as a float\n\ gmtime() -- convert seconds since Epoch to UTC tuple\n\ localtime() -- convert seconds since Epoch to local time tuple\n\ asctime() -- convert time tuple to string\n\ ctime() -- convert time in seconds to string\n\ mktime() -- convert local time tuple to seconds since Epoch\n\ strftime() -- convert time tuple to string according to format specification\n\ strptime() -- parse string to time tuple according to format specification\n\ tzset() -- change the local timezone"); PyMODINIT_FUNC inittime(void) { PyObject *m; char *p; m = Py_InitModule3("time", time_methods, module_doc); if (m == NULL) return; /* Accept 2-digit dates unless PYTHONY2K is set and non-empty */ p = Py_GETENV("PYTHONY2K"); PyModule_AddIntConstant(m, "accept2dyear", (long) (!p || !*p)); /* Squirrel away the module's dictionary for the y2k check */ moddict = PyModule_GetDict(m); Py_INCREF(moddict); /* Set, or reset, module variables like time.timezone */ inittimezone(m); #ifdef MS_WINDOWS /* Helper to allow interrupts for Windows. If Ctrl+C event delivered while not sleeping it will be ignored. */ main_thread = PyThread_get_thread_ident(); hInterruptEvent = CreateEvent(NULL, TRUE, FALSE, NULL); SetConsoleCtrlHandler( PyCtrlHandler, TRUE); #endif /* MS_WINDOWS */ if (!initialized) { PyStructSequence_InitType(&StructTimeType, &struct_time_type_desc); } Py_INCREF(&StructTimeType); PyModule_AddObject(m, "struct_time", (PyObject*) &StructTimeType); initialized = 1; } /* Implement floattime() for various platforms */ static double floattime(void) { /* There are three ways to get the time: (1) gettimeofday() -- resolution in microseconds (2) ftime() -- resolution in milliseconds (3) time() -- resolution in seconds In all cases the return value is a float in seconds. Since on some systems (e.g. SCO ODT 3.0) gettimeofday() may fail, so we fall back on ftime() or time(). Note: clock resolution does not imply clock accuracy! */ #ifdef HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY { struct timeval t; #ifdef GETTIMEOFDAY_NO_TZ if (gettimeofday(&t) == 0) return (double)t.tv_sec + t.tv_usec*0.000001; #else /* !GETTIMEOFDAY_NO_TZ */ if (gettimeofday(&t, (struct timezone *)NULL) == 0) return (double)t.tv_sec + t.tv_usec*0.000001; #endif /* !GETTIMEOFDAY_NO_TZ */ } #endif /* !HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY */ { #if defined(HAVE_FTIME) struct timeb t; ftime(&t); return (double)t.time + (double)t.millitm * (double)0.001; #else /* !HAVE_FTIME */ time_t secs; time(&secs); return (double)secs; #endif /* !HAVE_FTIME */ } } /* Implement floatsleep() for various platforms. When interrupted (or when another error occurs), return -1 and set an exception; else return 0. */ static int floatsleep(double secs) { /* XXX Should test for MS_WINDOWS first! */ #if defined(HAVE_SELECT) && !defined(__BEOS__) && !defined(__EMX__) struct timeval t; double frac; frac = fmod(secs, 1.0); secs = floor(secs); t.tv_sec = (long)secs; t.tv_usec = (long)(frac*1000000.0); Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS if (select(0, (fd_set *)0, (fd_set *)0, (fd_set *)0, &t) != 0) { #ifdef EINTR if (errno != EINTR) { #else if (1) { #endif Py_BLOCK_THREADS PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError); return -1; } } Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS #elif defined(__WATCOMC__) && !defined(__QNX__) /* XXX Can't interrupt this sleep */ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS delay((int)(secs * 1000 + 0.5)); /* delay() uses milliseconds */ Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS #elif defined(MS_WINDOWS) { double millisecs = secs * 1000.0; unsigned long ul_millis; if (millisecs > (double)ULONG_MAX) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_OverflowError, "sleep length is too large"); return -1; } Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS /* Allow sleep(0) to maintain win32 semantics, and as decreed * by Guido, only the main thread can be interrupted. */ ul_millis = (unsigned long)millisecs; if (ul_millis == 0 || main_thread != PyThread_get_thread_ident()) Sleep(ul_millis); else { DWORD rc; ResetEvent(hInterruptEvent); rc = WaitForSingleObject(hInterruptEvent, ul_millis); if (rc == WAIT_OBJECT_0) { /* Yield to make sure real Python signal * handler called. */ Sleep(1); Py_BLOCK_THREADS errno = EINTR; PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError); return -1; } } Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS } #elif defined(PYOS_OS2) /* This Sleep *IS* Interruptable by Exceptions */ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS if (DosSleep(secs * 1000) != NO_ERROR) { Py_BLOCK_THREADS PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError); return -1; } Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS #elif defined(__BEOS__) /* This sleep *CAN BE* interrupted. */ { if( secs <= 0.0 ) { return; } Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS /* BeOS snooze() is in microseconds... */ if( snooze( (bigtime_t)( secs * 1000.0 * 1000.0 ) ) == B_INTERRUPTED ) { Py_BLOCK_THREADS PyErr_SetFromErrno( PyExc_IOError ); return -1; } Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS } #elif defined(RISCOS) if (secs <= 0.0) return 0; Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS /* This sleep *CAN BE* interrupted. */ if ( riscos_sleep(secs) ) return -1; Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS #elif defined(PLAN9) { double millisecs = secs * 1000.0; if (millisecs > (double)LONG_MAX) { PyErr_SetString(PyExc_OverflowError, "sleep length is too large"); return -1; } /* This sleep *CAN BE* interrupted. */ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS if(sleep((long)millisecs) < 0){ Py_BLOCK_THREADS PyErr_SetFromErrno(PyExc_IOError); return -1; } Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS } #else /* XXX Can't interrupt this sleep */ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS sleep((int)secs); Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS #endif return 0; }