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2016-12-17./tools/notsd-moveLuke Shumaker
2016-08-03util-lib: make timestamp generation and parsing reversible (#3869)Lennart Poettering
This patch improves parsing and generation of timestamps and calendar specifications in two ways: - The week day is now always printed in the abbreviated English form, instead of the locale's setting. This makes sure we can always parse the week day again, even if the locale is changed. Given that we don't follow locale settings for printing timestamps in any other way either (for example, we always use 24h syntax in order to make uniform parsing possible), it only makes sense to also stick to a generic, non-localized form for the timestamp, too. - When parsing a timestamp, the local timezone (in its DST or non-DST name) may be specified, in addition to "UTC". Other timezones are still not supported however (not because we wouldn't want to, but mostly because libc offers no nice API for that). In itself this brings no new features, however it ensures that any locally formatted timestamp's timezone is also parsable again. These two changes ensure that the output of format_timestamp() may always be passed to parse_timestamp() and results in the original input. The related flavours for usec/UTC also work accordingly. Calendar specifications are extended in a similar way. The man page is updated accordingly, in particular this removes the claim that timestamps systemd prints wouldn't be parsable by systemd. They are now. The man page previously showed invalid timestamps as examples. This has been removed, as the man page shouldn't be a unit test, where such negative examples would be useful. The man page also no longer mentions the names of internal functions, such as format_timestamp_us() or UNIX error codes such as EINVAL.
2016-02-22tree-wide: make ++/-- usage consistent WRT spacingVito Caputo
Throughout the tree there's spurious use of spaces separating ++ and -- operators from their respective operands. Make ++ and -- operator consistent with the majority of existing uses; discard the spaces.
2016-02-10Merge pull request #2569 from zonque/removalsMartin Pitt
Remove some old cruft
2016-02-10tree-wide: remove Emacs lines from all filesDaniel Mack
This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that stuff in every file.
2016-02-10util-lib: make sure usec_sub() doesn't degrade USEC_INFINITYLennart Poettering
As suggested in: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/2542#issuecomment-181877820
2016-02-03util: add check that makes sure time_t and TIME_T_MAX work the way we assume ↵Lennart Poettering
they do
2016-02-01util: add usec_add() which adds two usec_t values with overflow handlingLennart Poettering
2015-11-16tree-wide: sort includesThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
Sort the includes accoding to the new coding style.
2015-11-10time-util: add parse_time(), which is like parse_sec() but allows ↵Lennart Poettering
specification of default time unit if none is specified This is useful if we want to parse RLIMIT_RTTIME values where the common UNIX syntax is without any units but refers to a non-second unit (µs in this case), but where we want to allow specification of units.
2015-02-24test-time: test "infinity" parsing in nanosecondsDaniel Mack
2014-09-29Do not format USEC_INFINITY as NULLZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
systemctl would print 'CPUQuotaPerSecUSec=(null)' for no limit. This does not look right. Since USEC_INFINITY is one of the valid values, format_timespan() could return NULL, and we should wrap every use of it in strna() or similar. But most callers didn't do that, and it seems more robust to return a string ("infinity") that makes sense most of the time, even if in some places the result will not be grammatically correct.
2014-08-18tests: add tests for time-util.cRonny Chevalier
add tests for: - timezone_is_valid - get_timezones
2014-05-15Remove unnecessary casts in printfsZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
No functional change expected :)
2013-04-04util: make time formatting a bit smarterLennart Poettering
Instead of outputting "5h 55s 50ms 3us" we'll now output "5h 55.050003s". Also, while outputting the accuracy is configurable. Basically we now try use "dot notation" for all time values > 1min. For >= 1s we use 's' as unit, otherwise for >= 1ms we use 'ms' as unit, and finally 'us'. This should give reasonably values in most cases.
2013-04-03time: add suppot for fractional time specificationsLennart Poettering
We can now parse "0.5s" as the same as "500ms". In fact, we can parse "3.45years" correctly, too, and any other unit and fraction length.