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I would like to think that some of the software I'm writing today will be used in 30 years. But I am also aware that a lot of it is based upon the UNIX tradition of exposing time as the number of seconds since 1970.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <limits.h>

void print(time_t rt) {
    struct tm * t = gmtime(&rt);
    puts(asctime(t));
}

int main() {
    print(0);
    print(time(0));
    print(LONG_MAX);
    print(LONG_MAX+1);
}

Execution results in:

  • Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970
  • Sat Aug 30 18:37:08 2008
  • Tue Jan 19 03:14:07 2038
  • Fri Dec 13 20:45:52 1901

The functions ctime(), gmtime(), and localtime() all take as an argument a time value representing the time in seconds since the Epoch (00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970; see time(3) ).

I wonder if there is anything proactive to do in this area as a programmer, or are we to trust that all software systems (aka Operating Systems) will some how be magically upgraded in the future?

Update It would seem that indeed 64-bit systems are safe from this:

import java.util.*;

class TimeTest {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        print(0);
        print(System.currentTimeMillis());
        print(Long.MAX_VALUE);
        print(Long.MAX_VALUE + 1);
    }

    static void print(long l) {
        System.out.println(new Date(l));
    }
}
  • Wed Dec 31 16:00:00 PST 1969
  • Sat Aug 30 12:02:40 PDT 2008
  • Sat Aug 16 23:12:55 PST 292278994
  • Sun Dec 02 08:47:04 PST 292269055

But what about the year 292278994?

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1  
You would be happy if you were present to be held responsible for some accident by that year, wouldn't you? – Martinho Fernandes Jan 4 at 11:05
2  
Don't worry about y292278994. Most systems fail at year 2147483647. – Schwern Feb 23 at 6:57

9 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

I have written portable replacement for time.h (currently just localtime(), gmtime(), mktime() and timegm()) which uses 64 bit time even on 32 bit machines. It is intended to be dropped into C projects as a replacement for time.h. It is being used in Perl and I intend to fix Ruby and Python's 2038 problems with it as well. This gives you a safe range of +/- 292 million years.

You can find the code at the y2038 project. Please feel free to post any questions to the user's list.

As to the "this isn't going to be a problem for another 29 years", peruse this list of standard answers to that. In short, stuff happens in the future and sometimes you need to know when. I also have a presentation on the problem, what is not a solution and what is.

Oh, and don't forget that many time systems don't handle dates before 1970. Stuff happened before 1970, sometimes you need to know when.

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vote up 4 vote down

For some thoughts on the issue see this page

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vote up 4 vote down

Visual Studio moved to a 64 bit representation of time_t in Visual Studio 2005 (whilst still leaving _time32_t for backwards compatibility).

As long as you are careful to always write code in terms of time_t and don't assume anything about the size then as sysrqb points out the problem will be solved by your compiler.

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Their localtime() and gmtime() implementations do not work before 1970 and fail in year 3001. See code.google.com/p/y2038/… – Schwern Oct 20 '08 at 2:08
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You can always implement RFC 2550 and be safe forever ;-)

The known universe has a finite past and future. The current age of the universe is estimated in [Zebu] as between 10 ** 10 and 2 * 10 ** 10 years. The death of the universe is estimated in [Nigel] to occur in 10 ** 11 - years and in [Drake] as occurring either in 10 ** 12 years for a closed universe (the big crunch) or 10 ** 14 years for an open universe (the heat death of the universe).

 

Y10K compliant programs MAY choose to limit the range of dates they support to those consistent with the expected life of the universe. Y10K compliant systems MUST accept Y10K dates from 10 ** 12 years in the past to 10 ** 20 years into the future. Y10K compliant systems SHOULD accept dates for at least 10 ** 29 years in the past and future.

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That's the only LONG-LASTING solution I've seen so far. – Martinho Fernandes Jan 4 at 11:04
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I think that we should leave the bug in. Then about 2036 we can start selling consultancy for large sums of money to test everything. After all isn't that how we successfully managed the 1999-2000 rollover.

I'm only joking!

I was sat in a bank in London in 1999 and was quite amazed when I saw a consultant start Y2K testing the coffee machine. I think if we learnt anything from that fiasco, it was that the vast majority of software will just work and most of the rest won't cause a melt down if it fails and can be fixed after the event if needed. As such, I wouldn't take any special precautions until much nearer the time.

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1  
Y2K was not a problem because people prepared for it. The run-up involved a whole lot of work. The vast majority of software didn't just work, it was examined and perhaps fixed. The other stuff didn't cause a meltdown because there wasn't that much of it. – David Thornley Mar 25 at 17:51
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By 2038, time libraries should all be using 64-bit integers, so this won't actually be that big of a deal (on software that isn't completely unmaintained).

COBOL programs might be fun though.

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Consider when a new 30 year mortgage on a house ends. – Schwern Oct 20 '08 at 2:09
First encounter I had was with working with child support payments in 1981. The system took the anticipated birth date of the child, in 1982, added 18, got 0, noticed that 81 > 0, and figured the obligation was over. As you say, banks got into this mess earlier. – David Thornley Mar 25 at 17:53
@Schwern: and you think 30-year mortgage documentation uses time_t values storing # seconds since 1970? – Jason S May 8 at 13:39
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Keep good documentation, and include a description of your time dependencies. I don't think many people have thought about how hard this transition might be, for example HTTP cookies are going to break on that date.

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vote up 0 vote down

What should we do to prepare for 2038?

Hide, because he apocalypse is coming.

But seriously, I hope that compilers (or the people who write them, to be precise) can handle this. They've got almost 30 years. I hope that's enough time.

At what point do we start preparing for Y10K? Have any hardware manufacturers / research labs looked into the easiest way to move to whatever new technology we'll have to have because of it?

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vote up -5 vote down

Operative word being "should".

If you need to ensure futureproofing then you can construct your own date/time class and use that but I'd only do that if you think that what you write will be used on legacy OS'

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Time zones are very, very, very hard to handle on your own. Also, just about every OS and many languages have this problem, even those running on 64 bit hardware. Like that 64 bit CPU in your shiny new Mac which still uses 32 bit time. – Schwern Oct 20 '08 at 2:07
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i like how the accepted answer is a negative voted one :) – Ólafur Waage Oct 21 '08 at 0:06
I seem to always favor the "role your own" solutions, even if no one else does. :-) – Frank Krueger Jan 8 at 18:54
@olafur i love it! – Simon Jan 27 at 5:57
I like the way that I have the accepted answer and 4 downvotes :D – Teifion Jan 29 at 8:49
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