Coverage Report

Created: 2025-07-11 06:38

/src/lldpd/libevent/evutil_time.c
Line
Count
Source (jump to first uncovered line)
1
/*
2
 * Copyright (c) 2007-2012 Niels Provos and Nick Mathewson
3
 *
4
 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5
 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
6
 * are met:
7
 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
8
 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9
 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
10
 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
11
 *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
12
 * 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
13
 *    derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
14
 *
15
 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
16
 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
17
 * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
18
 * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
19
 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
20
 * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
21
 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
22
 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
23
 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
24
 * THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
25
 */
26
27
#include "event2/event-config.h"
28
#include "evconfig-private.h"
29
30
#ifdef _WIN32
31
#include <winsock2.h>
32
#define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
33
#include <windows.h>
34
#undef WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
35
#endif
36
37
#include <sys/types.h>
38
#ifdef EVENT__HAVE_STDLIB_H
39
#include <stdlib.h>
40
#endif
41
#include <errno.h>
42
#include <limits.h>
43
#ifndef EVENT__HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY
44
#include <sys/timeb.h>
45
#endif
46
#if !defined(EVENT__HAVE_NANOSLEEP) && !defined(EVENT__HAVE_USLEEP) && \
47
  !defined(_WIN32)
48
#include <sys/select.h>
49
#endif
50
#include <time.h>
51
#include <sys/stat.h>
52
#include <string.h>
53
54
/** evutil_usleep_() */
55
#if defined(_WIN32)
56
#elif defined(EVENT__HAVE_NANOSLEEP)
57
#elif defined(EVENT__HAVE_USLEEP)
58
#include <unistd.h>
59
#endif
60
61
#include "event2/util.h"
62
#include "util-internal.h"
63
#include "log-internal.h"
64
#include "mm-internal.h"
65
66
#ifndef EVENT__HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY
67
/* No gettimeofday; this must be windows. */
68
69
typedef void (WINAPI *GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime_fn_t) (LPFILETIME);
70
71
int
72
evutil_gettimeofday(struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tz)
73
{
74
#ifdef _MSC_VER
75
#define U64_LITERAL(n) n##ui64
76
#else
77
#define U64_LITERAL(n) n##llu
78
#endif
79
80
  /* Conversion logic taken from Tor, which in turn took it
81
   * from Perl.  GetSystemTimeAsFileTime returns its value as
82
   * an unaligned (!) 64-bit value containing the number of
83
   * 100-nanosecond intervals since 1 January 1601 UTC. */
84
#define EPOCH_BIAS U64_LITERAL(116444736000000000)
85
#define UNITS_PER_SEC U64_LITERAL(10000000)
86
#define USEC_PER_SEC U64_LITERAL(1000000)
87
#define UNITS_PER_USEC U64_LITERAL(10)
88
  union {
89
    FILETIME ft_ft;
90
    ev_uint64_t ft_64;
91
  } ft;
92
93
  if (tv == NULL)
94
    return -1;
95
96
  static GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime_fn_t GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime_fn = NULL;
97
  static int check_precise = 1;
98
99
  if (EVUTIL_UNLIKELY(check_precise)) {
100
    HMODULE h = evutil_load_windows_system_library_(TEXT("kernel32.dll"));
101
    if (h != NULL)
102
      GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime_fn =
103
        (GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime_fn_t)
104
          GetProcAddress(h, "GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime");
105
    check_precise = 0;
106
  }
107
108
  if (GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime_fn != NULL)
109
    GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime_fn(&ft.ft_ft);
110
  else
111
    GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ft.ft_ft);
112
113
  if (EVUTIL_UNLIKELY(ft.ft_64 < EPOCH_BIAS)) {
114
    /* Time before the unix epoch. */
115
    return -1;
116
  }
117
  ft.ft_64 -= EPOCH_BIAS;
118
  tv->tv_sec = (long) (ft.ft_64 / UNITS_PER_SEC);
119
  tv->tv_usec = (long) ((ft.ft_64 / UNITS_PER_USEC) % USEC_PER_SEC);
120
  return 0;
121
}
122
#endif
123
124
#define MAX_SECONDS_IN_MSEC_LONG \
125
0
  (((LONG_MAX) - 999) / 1000)
126
127
long
128
evutil_tv_to_msec_(const struct timeval *tv)
129
0
{
130
0
  if (tv->tv_usec > 1000000 || tv->tv_sec > MAX_SECONDS_IN_MSEC_LONG)
131
0
    return -1;
132
133
0
  return (tv->tv_sec * 1000) + ((tv->tv_usec + 999) / 1000);
134
0
}
135
136
/*
137
  Replacement for usleep on platforms that don't have one.  Not guaranteed to
138
  be any more finegrained than 1 msec.
139
 */
140
void
141
evutil_usleep_(const struct timeval *tv)
142
0
{
143
0
  if (!tv)
144
0
    return;
145
#if defined(_WIN32)
146
  {
147
    __int64 usec;
148
    LARGE_INTEGER li;
149
    HANDLE timer;
150
151
    usec = tv->tv_sec * 1000000LL + tv->tv_usec;
152
    if (!usec)
153
      return;
154
155
    li.QuadPart = -10LL * usec;
156
    timer = CreateWaitableTimer(NULL, TRUE, NULL);
157
    if (!timer)
158
      return;
159
160
    SetWaitableTimer(timer, &li, 0, NULL, NULL, 0);
161
    WaitForSingleObject(timer, INFINITE);
162
    CloseHandle(timer);
163
  }
164
#elif defined(EVENT__HAVE_NANOSLEEP)
165
0
  {
166
0
    struct timespec ts;
167
0
    ts.tv_sec = tv->tv_sec;
168
0
    ts.tv_nsec = tv->tv_usec*1000;
169
0
    nanosleep(&ts, NULL);
170
0
  }
171
#elif defined(EVENT__HAVE_USLEEP)
172
  /* Some systems don't like to usleep more than 999999 usec */
173
  sleep(tv->tv_sec);
174
  usleep(tv->tv_usec);
175
#else
176
  {
177
    struct timeval tv2 = *tv;
178
    select(0, NULL, NULL, NULL, &tv2);
179
  }
180
#endif
181
0
}
182
183
int
184
evutil_date_rfc1123(char *date, const size_t datelen, const struct tm *tm)
185
0
{
186
0
  static const char *DAYS[] =
187
0
    { "Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat" };
188
0
  static const char *MONTHS[] =
189
0
    { "Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec" };
190
191
0
  time_t t = time(NULL);
192
193
0
#if defined(EVENT__HAVE__GMTIME64_S) || !defined(_WIN32)
194
0
  struct tm sys;
195
0
#endif
196
197
  /* If `tm` is null, set system's current time. */
198
0
  if (tm == NULL) {
199
0
#if !defined(_WIN32)
200
0
    gmtime_r(&t, &sys);
201
0
    tm = &sys;
202
    /** detect _gmtime64()/_gmtime64_s() */
203
#elif defined(EVENT__HAVE__GMTIME64_S)
204
    errno_t err;
205
    err = _gmtime64_s(&sys, &t);
206
    if (err) {
207
      event_errx(1, "Invalid argument to _gmtime64_s");
208
    } else {
209
      tm = &sys;
210
    }
211
#elif defined(EVENT__HAVE__GMTIME64)
212
    tm = _gmtime64(&t);
213
#else
214
    tm = gmtime(&t);
215
#endif
216
0
  }
217
218
0
  return evutil_snprintf(
219
0
    date, datelen, "%s, %02d %s %4d %02d:%02d:%02d GMT",
220
0
    DAYS[tm->tm_wday], tm->tm_mday, MONTHS[tm->tm_mon],
221
0
    1900 + tm->tm_year, tm->tm_hour, tm->tm_min, tm->tm_sec);
222
0
}
223
224
/*
225
   This function assumes it's called repeatedly with a
226
   not-actually-so-monotonic time source whose outputs are in 'tv'. It
227
   implements a trivial ratcheting mechanism so that the values never go
228
   backwards.
229
 */
230
static void
231
adjust_monotonic_time(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
232
    struct timeval *tv)
233
0
{
234
0
  evutil_timeradd(tv, &base->adjust_monotonic_clock, tv);
235
236
0
  if (evutil_timercmp(tv, &base->last_time, <)) {
237
    /* Guess it wasn't monotonic after all. */
238
0
    struct timeval adjust;
239
0
    evutil_timersub(&base->last_time, tv, &adjust);
240
0
    evutil_timeradd(&adjust, &base->adjust_monotonic_clock,
241
0
        &base->adjust_monotonic_clock);
242
0
    *tv = base->last_time;
243
0
  }
244
0
  base->last_time = *tv;
245
0
}
246
247
/*
248
   Allocate a new struct evutil_monotonic_timer
249
 */
250
struct evutil_monotonic_timer *
251
evutil_monotonic_timer_new(void)
252
0
{
253
0
  struct evutil_monotonic_timer *p = NULL;
254
255
0
  p = mm_malloc(sizeof(*p));
256
0
  if (!p) goto done;
257
258
0
  memset(p, 0, sizeof(*p));
259
260
0
 done:
261
0
  return p;
262
0
}
263
264
/*
265
   Free a struct evutil_monotonic_timer
266
 */
267
void
268
evutil_monotonic_timer_free(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *timer)
269
0
{
270
0
  if (timer) {
271
0
    mm_free(timer);
272
0
  }
273
0
}
274
275
/*
276
   Set up a struct evutil_monotonic_timer for initial use
277
 */
278
int
279
evutil_configure_monotonic_time(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *timer,
280
                                int flags)
281
0
{
282
0
  return evutil_configure_monotonic_time_(timer, flags);
283
0
}
284
285
/*
286
   Query the current monotonic time
287
 */
288
int
289
evutil_gettime_monotonic(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *timer,
290
                         struct timeval *tp)
291
0
{
292
0
  return evutil_gettime_monotonic_(timer, tp);
293
0
}
294
295
296
#if defined(HAVE_POSIX_MONOTONIC)
297
/* =====
298
   The POSIX clock_gettime() interface provides a few ways to get at a
299
   monotonic clock.  CLOCK_MONOTONIC is most widely supported.  Linux also
300
   provides a CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE with accuracy of about 1-4 msec.
301
302
   On all platforms I'm aware of, CLOCK_MONOTONIC really is monotonic.
303
   Platforms don't agree about whether it should jump on a sleep/resume.
304
 */
305
306
int
307
evutil_configure_monotonic_time_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
308
    int flags)
309
0
{
310
  /* CLOCK_MONOTONIC exists on FreeBSD, Linux, and Solaris.  You need to
311
   * check for it at runtime, because some older kernel versions won't
312
   * have it working. */
313
0
#ifdef CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE
314
0
  const int precise = flags & EV_MONOT_PRECISE;
315
0
#endif
316
0
  const int fallback = flags & EV_MONOT_FALLBACK;
317
0
  struct timespec ts;
318
319
0
#ifdef CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE
320
0
  if (CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE < 0) {
321
    /* Technically speaking, nothing keeps CLOCK_* from being
322
     * negative (as far as I know). This check and the one below
323
     * make sure that it's safe for us to use -1 as an "unset"
324
     * value. */
325
0
    event_errx(1,"I didn't expect CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE to be < 0");
326
0
  }
327
0
  if (! precise && ! fallback) {
328
0
    if (clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE, &ts) == 0) {
329
0
      base->monotonic_clock = CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE;
330
0
      return 0;
331
0
    }
332
0
  }
333
0
#endif
334
0
  if (!fallback && clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &ts) == 0) {
335
0
    base->monotonic_clock = CLOCK_MONOTONIC;
336
0
    return 0;
337
0
  }
338
339
0
  if (CLOCK_MONOTONIC < 0) {
340
0
    event_errx(1,"I didn't expect CLOCK_MONOTONIC to be < 0");
341
0
  }
342
343
0
  base->monotonic_clock = -1;
344
0
  return 0;
345
0
}
346
347
int
348
evutil_gettime_monotonic_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
349
    struct timeval *tp)
350
0
{
351
0
  struct timespec ts;
352
353
0
  if (base->monotonic_clock < 0) {
354
0
    if (evutil_gettimeofday(tp, NULL) < 0)
355
0
      return -1;
356
0
    adjust_monotonic_time(base, tp);
357
0
    return 0;
358
0
  }
359
360
0
  if (clock_gettime(base->monotonic_clock, &ts) == -1)
361
0
    return -1;
362
0
  tp->tv_sec = ts.tv_sec;
363
0
  tp->tv_usec = ts.tv_nsec / 1000;
364
365
0
  return 0;
366
0
}
367
#endif
368
369
#if defined(HAVE_MACH_MONOTONIC)
370
/* ======
371
   Apple is a little late to the POSIX party.  And why not?  Instead of
372
   clock_gettime(), they provide mach_absolute_time().  Its units are not
373
   fixed; we need to use mach_timebase_info() to get the right functions to
374
   convert its units into nanoseconds.
375
376
   To all appearances, mach_absolute_time() seems to be honest-to-goodness
377
   monotonic.  Whether it stops during sleep or not is unspecified in
378
   principle, and dependent on CPU architecture in practice.
379
 */
380
381
int
382
evutil_configure_monotonic_time_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
383
    int flags)
384
{
385
  const int fallback = flags & EV_MONOT_FALLBACK;
386
  struct mach_timebase_info mi;
387
  memset(base, 0, sizeof(*base));
388
  /* OSX has mach_absolute_time() */
389
  if (!fallback &&
390
      mach_timebase_info(&mi) == 0 &&
391
      mach_absolute_time() != 0) {
392
    /* mach_timebase_info tells us how to convert
393
     * mach_absolute_time() into nanoseconds, but we
394
     * want to use microseconds instead. */
395
    mi.denom *= 1000;
396
    memcpy(&base->mach_timebase_units, &mi, sizeof(mi));
397
  } else {
398
    base->mach_timebase_units.numer = 0;
399
  }
400
  return 0;
401
}
402
403
int
404
evutil_gettime_monotonic_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
405
    struct timeval *tp)
406
{
407
  ev_uint64_t abstime, usec;
408
  if (base->mach_timebase_units.numer == 0) {
409
    if (evutil_gettimeofday(tp, NULL) < 0)
410
      return -1;
411
    adjust_monotonic_time(base, tp);
412
    return 0;
413
  }
414
415
  abstime = mach_absolute_time();
416
  usec = (abstime * base->mach_timebase_units.numer)
417
      / (base->mach_timebase_units.denom);
418
  tp->tv_sec = usec / 1000000;
419
  tp->tv_usec = usec % 1000000;
420
421
  return 0;
422
}
423
#endif
424
425
#if defined(HAVE_WIN32_MONOTONIC)
426
/* =====
427
   Turn we now to Windows.  Want monontonic time on Windows?
428
429
   Windows has QueryPerformanceCounter(), which gives time most high-
430
   resolution time.  It's a pity it's not so monotonic in practice; it's
431
   also got some fun bugs, especially: with older Windowses, under
432
   virtualizations, with funny hardware, on multiprocessor systems, and so
433
   on.  PEP418 [1] has a nice roundup of the issues here.
434
435
   There's GetTickCount64() on Vista and later, which gives a number of 1-msec
436
   ticks since startup.  The accuracy here might be as bad as 10-20 msec, I
437
   hear.  There's an undocumented function (NtSetTimerResolution) that
438
   allegedly increases the accuracy. Good luck!
439
440
   There's also GetTickCount(), which is only 32 bits, but seems to be
441
   supported on pre-Vista versions of Windows.  Apparently, you can coax
442
   another 14 bits out of it, giving you 2231 years before rollover.
443
444
   The less said about timeGetTime() the better.
445
446
   "We don't care.  We don't have to.  We're the Phone Company."
447
            -- Lily Tomlin, SNL
448
449
   Our strategy, if precise timers are turned off, is to just use the best
450
   GetTickCount equivalent available.  If we've been asked for precise timing,
451
   then we mostly[2] assume that GetTickCount is monotonic, and correct
452
   GetPerformanceCounter to approximate it.
453
454
   [1] http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0418
455
   [2] Of course, we feed the Windows stuff into adjust_monotonic_time()
456
       anyway, just in case it isn't.
457
458
 */
459
/*
460
    Parts of our logic in the win32 timer code here are closely based on
461
    BitTorrent's libUTP library.  That code is subject to the following
462
    license:
463
464
      Copyright (c) 2010 BitTorrent, Inc.
465
466
      Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
467
      copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
468
      "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
469
      without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
470
      distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
471
      permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
472
      the following conditions:
473
474
      The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
475
      in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
476
477
      THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
478
      OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
479
      MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
480
      NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
481
      LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
482
      OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
483
      WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
484
*/
485
486
static ev_uint64_t
487
evutil_GetTickCount_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base)
488
{
489
  if (base->GetTickCount64_fn) {
490
    /* Let's just use GetTickCount64 if we can. */
491
    return base->GetTickCount64_fn();
492
  } else if (base->GetTickCount_fn) {
493
    /* Greg Hazel assures me that this works, that BitTorrent has
494
     * done it for years, and this it won't turn around and
495
     * bite us.  He says they found it on some game programmers'
496
     * forum some time around 2007.
497
     */
498
    ev_uint64_t v = base->GetTickCount_fn();
499
    return (DWORD)v | ((v >> 18) & 0xFFFFFFFF00000000);
500
  } else {
501
    /* Here's the fallback implementation. We have to use
502
     * GetTickCount() with its given signature, so we only get
503
     * 32 bits worth of milliseconds, which will roll ove every
504
     * 49 days or so.  */
505
    DWORD ticks = GetTickCount();
506
    if (ticks < base->last_tick_count) {
507
      base->adjust_tick_count += ((ev_uint64_t)1) << 32;
508
    }
509
    base->last_tick_count = ticks;
510
    return ticks + base->adjust_tick_count;
511
  }
512
}
513
514
int
515
evutil_configure_monotonic_time_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
516
    int flags)
517
{
518
  const int precise = flags & EV_MONOT_PRECISE;
519
  const int fallback = flags & EV_MONOT_FALLBACK;
520
  HANDLE h;
521
  memset(base, 0, sizeof(*base));
522
523
  h = evutil_load_windows_system_library_(TEXT("kernel32.dll"));
524
  if (h != NULL && !fallback) {
525
    base->GetTickCount64_fn = (ev_GetTickCount_func)GetProcAddress(h, "GetTickCount64");
526
    base->GetTickCount_fn = (ev_GetTickCount_func)GetProcAddress(h, "GetTickCount");
527
  }
528
529
  base->first_tick = base->last_tick_count = evutil_GetTickCount_(base);
530
  if (precise && !fallback) {
531
    LARGE_INTEGER freq;
532
    if (QueryPerformanceFrequency(&freq)) {
533
      LARGE_INTEGER counter;
534
      QueryPerformanceCounter(&counter);
535
      base->first_counter = counter.QuadPart;
536
      base->usec_per_count = 1.0e6 / freq.QuadPart;
537
      base->use_performance_counter = 1;
538
    }
539
  }
540
541
  return 0;
542
}
543
544
static inline ev_int64_t
545
abs64(ev_int64_t i)
546
{
547
  return i < 0 ? -i : i;
548
}
549
550
551
int
552
evutil_gettime_monotonic_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
553
    struct timeval *tp)
554
{
555
  ev_uint64_t ticks = evutil_GetTickCount_(base);
556
  if (base->use_performance_counter) {
557
    /* Here's a trick we took from BitTorrent's libutp, at Greg
558
     * Hazel's recommendation.  We use QueryPerformanceCounter for
559
     * our high-resolution timer, but use GetTickCount*() to keep
560
     * it sane, and adjust_monotonic_time() to keep it monotonic.
561
     */
562
    LARGE_INTEGER counter;
563
    ev_int64_t counter_elapsed, counter_usec_elapsed, ticks_elapsed;
564
    QueryPerformanceCounter(&counter);
565
    counter_elapsed = (ev_int64_t)
566
        (counter.QuadPart - base->first_counter);
567
    ticks_elapsed = ticks - base->first_tick;
568
    /* TODO: This may upset VC6. If you need this to work with
569
     * VC6, please supply an appropriate patch. */
570
    counter_usec_elapsed = (ev_int64_t)
571
        (counter_elapsed * base->usec_per_count);
572
573
    if (abs64(ticks_elapsed*1000 - counter_usec_elapsed) > 1000000) {
574
      /* It appears that the QueryPerformanceCounter()
575
       * result is more than 1 second away from
576
       * GetTickCount() result. Let's adjust it to be as
577
       * accurate as we can; adjust_monotnonic_time() below
578
       * will keep it monotonic. */
579
      counter_usec_elapsed = ticks_elapsed * 1000;
580
      base->first_counter = (ev_uint64_t) (counter.QuadPart - counter_usec_elapsed / base->usec_per_count);
581
    }
582
    tp->tv_sec = (time_t) (counter_usec_elapsed / 1000000);
583
    tp->tv_usec = counter_usec_elapsed % 1000000;
584
585
  } else {
586
    /* We're just using GetTickCount(). */
587
    tp->tv_sec = (time_t) (ticks / 1000);
588
    tp->tv_usec = (ticks % 1000) * 1000;
589
  }
590
  adjust_monotonic_time(base, tp);
591
592
  return 0;
593
}
594
#endif
595
596
#if defined(HAVE_FALLBACK_MONOTONIC)
597
/* =====
598
   And if none of the other options work, let's just use gettimeofday(), and
599
   ratchet it forward so that it acts like a monotonic timer, whether it
600
   wants to or not.
601
 */
602
603
int
604
evutil_configure_monotonic_time_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
605
    int precise)
606
{
607
  memset(base, 0, sizeof(*base));
608
  return 0;
609
}
610
611
int
612
evutil_gettime_monotonic_(struct evutil_monotonic_timer *base,
613
    struct timeval *tp)
614
{
615
  if (evutil_gettimeofday(tp, NULL) < 0)
616
    return -1;
617
  adjust_monotonic_time(base, tp);
618
  return 0;
619
620
}
621
#endif