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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?

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    MONOTONIC usually employs the rdtsc 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 a struct timespec and spat out by clock_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. Mar 3, 2015 at 4:29

1 Answer 1

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As @IwillnotexistIdonotexist implied, CLOCK_MONOTONIC has no specified starting point and you cannot reliably convert monotonic time to real time.

To quote the clock_gettime manpage, for CLOCK_MONOTONIC:

Clock that cannot be set and represents monotonic time since some unspecified starting point

The only restriction is that the MONOTONIC time must be greater than the system's uptime (required in order to be monotonically increasing).

I expect that most implementations are indeed just clock-ticks since boot but nothing guarantees this.

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