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authorLennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>2016-02-03 18:28:40 +0100
committerLennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>2016-02-03 23:58:24 +0100
commit021dd87bc055a5bfb2dcef83fc868fe24648b959 (patch)
treedfdeb912fd2f4b8153fecf7a84060395480312ca /src/basic/clock-util.c
parent5f932eb9af7a5e4723855bcd776c2acaa2a31932 (diff)
resolved: apply epoch to system time from PID 1
For use in timesyncd we already defined a compile-time "epoch" value, which is based on the mtime of the NEWS file, and specifies a point in time we know lies in the past at runtime. timesyncd uses this to filter out nonsensical timestamp file data, and bump the system clock to a time that is after the build time of systemd. This patch adds similar bumping code to earliest PID 1 initialization, so that the system never continues operation with a clock that is in the 1970ies or even 1930s.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/basic/clock-util.c')
-rw-r--r--src/basic/clock-util.c14
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/basic/clock-util.c b/src/basic/clock-util.c
index 05788a360e..c64b2e5e8c 100644
--- a/src/basic/clock-util.c
+++ b/src/basic/clock-util.c
@@ -146,3 +146,17 @@ int clock_reset_timewarp(void) {
return 0;
}
+
+#define TIME_EPOCH_USEC ((usec_t) TIME_EPOCH * USEC_PER_SEC)
+
+int clock_apply_epoch(void) {
+ struct timespec ts;
+
+ if (now(CLOCK_REALTIME) >= TIME_EPOCH_USEC)
+ return 0;
+
+ if (clock_settime(CLOCK_REALTIME, timespec_store(&ts, TIME_EPOCH_USEC)) < 0)
+ return -errno;
+
+ return 1;
+}