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What's the best way to convert datetimes between local time and UTC in C/C++?

By "datetime", I mean some time representation that contains date and time-of-day. I'll be happy with time_t, struct tm, or any other representation that makes it possible.

My platform is Linux.

Here's the specific problem I'm trying to solve: I get a pair of values containing a julian date and a number of seconds into the day. Those values are in GMT. I need to convert that to a local-timezone "YYYYMMDDHHMMSS" value. I know how to convert the julian date to Y-M-D, and obviously it is easy to convert seconds into HHMMSS. However, the tricky part is the timezone conversion. I'm sure I can figure out a solution, but I'd prefer to find a "standard" or "well-known" way rather than stumbling around.


A possibly related question is Get Daylight Saving Transition Dates For Time Zones in C

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4 Answers

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You're supposed to use combinations of gmtime/localtime and timegm/mktime. That should give you the orthogonal tools to do conversions between struct tm and time_t.

For UTC/GMT:

time_t t;
struct tm tm;
struct tm * tmp;
...
t = timegm(&tm);
...
tmp = gmtime(t);

For localtime:

t = mktime(&tm);
...
tmp = localtime(t);

All tzset() does is set the internal timezone variable from the TZ environment variable. I don't think this is supposed to be called more than once.

If you're trying to convert between timezones, you should modify the struct tm's tm_gmtoff.

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Thanks! I knew something like timegm() had to exist, but didn't know the name. – Kristopher Johnson Apr 17 '09 at 19:22
Glad to help. Time conversion can be a rather tricky area. It's usually a good idea to store everything in UTC whenever possible. Converting between timezones is even trickier! – Rick C. Petty Apr 17 '09 at 19:24
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Yeah, unfortunately the system's designers chose local time as the "standard" timestamp format for the messaging protocol. I hate it when people do that. – Kristopher Johnson Apr 17 '09 at 19:34
There is no timegm in Windows. – stepancheg Dec 21 '09 at 11:42
I'll likely ask this as a separate question (digging through questions that mention tm_gmtoff now, and the list is pretty short), but: Could you perhaps give an example of modifying tm_gmtoff and having that do anything useful? It doesn't seem to change the output of, e.g, strftime(buf, BUFSIZ, "%FT%T%z (%+ %z)", tm);, when I do it. ?? – lindes Feb 23 '11 at 8:23
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If on Windows, you don't have timegm() available to you:

struct tm *tptr;
time_t secs, local_secs, gmt_secs;
time( &secs );  // Current time in GMT
// Remember that localtime/gmtime overwrite same location
tptr = localtime( &secs );
local_secs = mktime( tptr );
tptr = gmtime( &secs );
gmt_secs = mktime( tptr );
long diff_secs = long(local_secs - gmt_secs);

or something similar...

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Shouldn't secs and gmt_secs be identical? I would think you could simplify this quite a bit. – jowo Jan 17 at 7:18
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If you need to worry about converting date/time with timezone rules, you might want to look into ICU.

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How do you know which timezone the data was in at the time it was recorded? Does it indicate EDT vs EST (etc.)?

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It was in "local" time when recorded. However, I don't necessarily know whether DST was in effect at the time, so the timezone offset may not be the same now that it was then. – Kristopher Johnson Apr 17 '09 at 19:15
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