vote up 1 vote down star
1

I discovered a strange result in Boost C++ date time library. There is inconsistency between microsec_clock and second_clock, and I don't understand why is that. I am using Windows XP 32-bits

My snip of code:

using namespace boost::posix_time;
...
ptime now = second_clock::universal_time();
std::cout << "Current Time is: "<< to_iso_extended_string(now)<< std::endl;
ptime now_2 = microsec_clock::universal_time();
std::cout << "Current Time is: "<< to_iso_extended_string(now_2)<< std::endl;
...

The print-out I expected are current time without miliseconds and with milliseonds. However, what I have in my pc is:

2009-10-14T16:07:38  
1970-06-24T20:36:09.375890

I don't understand why there is a weired date (year 1970???) in my microsec_clock time. Related documentation for Boost: link to boost date time

Newbie in Boost, any suggestion will help.

Lily

flag

3 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Not sure what could be wrong for you; the exact same code works for me.

$ cat > test.cc
#include <boost/date_time/gregorian/gregorian.hpp>
#include <boost/date_time/posix_time/posix_time.hpp>
using namespace boost::posix_time;
int main() {
    ptime now = second_clock::universal_time();
    std::cout << "Current Time is: "<< to_iso_extended_string(now)<< std::endl;
    ptime now_2 = microsec_clock::universal_time();
    std::cout << "Current Time is: "<< to_iso_extended_string(now_2)<< std::endl;
    return 0;
}
^D
$ c++ -lboost_date_time test.cc
$ ./a.out
Current Time is: 2009-10-14T16:26:55
Current Time is: 2009-10-14T16:26:55.586295

Implementation-wise, second_clock uses time and microsec_clock uses gettimeofday or GetSystemTimeAsFileTime underneath, depending on the platform. Something appears wrong with your platform -- what is your OS and version?


What is your Boost version? If it is 1.38 or lower, upgrade to 1.39 or apply the fix to #2809 manually.

--- boost/date_time/filetime_functions.hpp  (revision 53621)
+++ boost/date_time/filetime_functions.hpp  (revision 53622)
@@ -96,9 +96,7 @@
     {
         /* shift is difference between 1970-Jan-01 & 1601-Jan-01
         * in 100-nanosecond intervals */
-        const uint64_t c1 = 27111902UL;
-        const uint64_t c2 = 3577643008UL; // issues warning without 'UL'
-        const uint64_t shift = (c1 << 32) + c2;
+        const uint64_t shift = 116444736000000000ULL; // (27111902 << 32) + 3577643008

         union {
             FileTimeT as_file_time;

Windows FileTime has a different offset from UNIX time, and the code that was in Boost before would not generate the correct offset difference in certain optimizing compilers.

link|flag
I am using Win32 system, Windows XP SP2 32 bits to be exact. – Lily Oct 14 at 16:48
I am using 1.39 already with Eclipse 3.4.1 and MingW 3.4. Also, I am having the warning: Description Resource Path Location Type C:/boost/boost_1_39/boost/date_time/filetime_functions.hpp left shift count >= width of type CommercialDetection line 101 C/C++ Problem as well – Lily Oct 14 at 19:15
Hmm, I thought this fix was in 1.39 but I can double-check. – ephemient Oct 14 at 19:19
vote up 0 vote down

The 1970 date most likely comes from the way unix time is represented, as seconds from January 1 1970. I would guess that maybe it is somehow getting the system uptime in milliseconds and interpreting it as seconds since 1/1/1970. An uptime of a little over 4 hours would come up with this date.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Unlike second_clock, the microsec_clock::universal_time documentation mentions: Returns the UTC time based on computer settings.
You should check your hardware clock settings (or where-ever microsec gets its values from).

edit:
If its not related to your computers settings it would have to be an misbehaviour in boost, which i highly doubt.

link|flag
Very good point, and I also found this: Get the UTC time using a sub second resolution clock. On Unix systems this is implemented using GetTimeOfDay. On most Win32 platforms it is implemented using ftime. Win32 systems often do not achieve microsecond resolution via this API. If higher resolution is critical to your application test your platform to see the achieved resolution. ===> I am using Win32 system, so maybe there is no such resolution at all in my pc. That might be the reason. However, the print-out did give me a date, then where do those numbers come from?... – Lily Oct 14 at 16:46
Implementation-wise it generates a time_type from the current date and ftime() in create_time() if i see that right. – gf Oct 14 at 16:59
And if ftime() doesn't support sub second resolution i'd expect to lose the high resolution and a fallback to the next-best resolution. – gf Oct 14 at 17:07
svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/2809 Misbehavior in Boost may be more likely than you think. – ephemient Oct 14 at 18:00
Ok, but in general less likely then user mistakes or invalid settings. This seems to be limited to MingW - for me it works fine on WinXP/VC8/boost 1.38. – gf Oct 14 at 18:27

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.