For some 3rd party library functions, it requires that I pass it a timespec
that uses absolute time and not relative time.
To do this I have:
struct timespec ts;
struct timespec now;
if (clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME, &now) != 0)
{
printf("Error: ");
printf("%s\n", strerror(errno));
}
tspec_add(&ts, &now, 5000); //ts = now + 5000ms.
//I pass ts to the library function.
And the functions work fine.. However, if I use CLOCK_MONOTONIC
or CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW
it does NOT work.
I checked for errors (NONE occur). The function success but the time it outputs is completely different and very very small. It printed 9005 for tv.sec
but when using CLOCK_REALTIME
it printed a huge number (I assume time since epoch).
Why is this? How can I use the monotonic clock to do the same?
MONOTONIC
usually employs therdtsc
instruction on x86 architectures. The timestamp it reads is some number of "ticks" since the processor last reset; The frequency of the counter is usually either the bus frequency or the highest frequency the CPU can achieve. This nanosecond-resolution counter value is then converted into astruct timespec
and spat out byclock_gettime()
. All that 9005 seconds tells us is that you last rebooted about 2.5 hours ago; To convert that to absolute time you will have to add that to the time of last boot.