How can I change System Date, Time, Timezone in Python? Is there any module available for this?
- I don't want to execute any system commands
- I want one common solution, which should work on both Unix and Windows.
import sys
import datetime
time_tuple = ( 2012, # Year
9, # Month
6, # Day
0, # Hour
38, # Minute
0, # Second
0, # Millisecond
)
def _win_set_time(time_tuple):
import pywin32
# http://timgolden.me.uk/pywin32-docs/win32api__SetSystemTime_meth.html
# pywin32.SetSystemTime(year, month , dayOfWeek , day , hour , minute , second , millseconds )
dayOfWeek = datetime.datetime(time_tuple).isocalendar()[2]
pywin32.SetSystemTime( time_tuple[:2] + (dayOfWeek,) + time_tuple[2:])
def _linux_set_time(time_tuple):
import ctypes
import ctypes.util
import time
# /usr/include/linux/time.h:
#
# define CLOCK_REALTIME 0
CLOCK_REALTIME = 0
# /usr/include/time.h
#
# struct timespec
# {
# __time_t tv_sec; /* Seconds. */
# long int tv_nsec; /* Nanoseconds. */
# };
class timespec(ctypes.Structure):
_fields_ = [("tv_sec", ctypes.c_long),
("tv_nsec", ctypes.c_long)]
librt = ctypes.CDLL(ctypes.util.find_library("rt"))
ts = timespec()
ts.tv_sec = int( time.mktime( datetime.datetime( *time_tuple[:6]).timetuple() ) )
ts.tv_nsec = time_tuple[6] * 1000000 # Millisecond to nanosecond
# http://linux.die.net/man/3/clock_settime
librt.clock_settime(CLOCK_REALTIME, ctypes.byref(ts))
if sys.platform=='linux2':
_linux_set_time(time_tuple)
elif sys.platform=='win32':
_win_set_time(time_tuple)
I don't have a windows machine so I didn't test it on windows... But you get the idea.
if sys.platform.startswith('linux') to work with Python >= 3.3.
Commented
Jun 20, 2017 at 5:53
win32api, not pywin32. Also, SetSystemTime takes 8 arguments; you could add the *, or you could do remote_time = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(response.tx_time) + datetime.datetime.utcnow() - datetime.datetime.now() and then win32api.SetSystemTime(remote_time.year, remote_time.month, remote_time.isoweekday(), remote_time.day, remote_time.hour, remote_time.minute, remote_time.second, remote_time.microsecond // 1000).
The tMC's answer seems great. However, it was not working for me properly. I figured out it needed some updates, for both Linux and Windows + python 3. Here is my updated module:
import sys
from _datetime import datetime
time_tuple = (2012, # Year
9, # Month
6, # Day
0, # Hour
38, # Minute
0, # Second
0, # Millisecond
)
def _win_set_time(time_tuple):
import win32api
dayOfWeek = datetime(*time_tuple).isocalendar()[2]
t = time_tuple[:2] + (dayOfWeek,) + time_tuple[2:]
win32api.SetSystemTime(*t)
def _linux_set_time(time_tuple):
import subprocess
import shlex
time_string = datetime(*time_tuple).isoformat()
subprocess.call(shlex.split("timedatectl set-ntp false")) # May be necessary
subprocess.call(shlex.split("sudo date -s '%s'" % time_string))
subprocess.call(shlex.split("sudo hwclock -w"))
if sys.platform == 'linux2' or sys.platform == 'linux':
_linux_set_time(time_tuple)
elif sys.platform == 'win32':
_win_set_time(time_tuple)
For Linux read the following answer: Set the hardware clock in Python?
timedatectl command. This command updates both the system time and the hardware clock. The result it is similar to using both the date --set and hwclock --systohc commands.
Commented
Apr 25, 2023 at 14:05
I had to modify win32 version of tMC's answer little bit:
def _win_set_time(time_tuple):
import win32api
dayOfWeek = datetime(*time_tuple).isocalendar()[2]
t = time_tuple[:2] + (dayOfWeek,) + time_tuple[2:]
win32api.SetSystemTime(*t)
Eg. when I use it to set time according to old time server (Time protocol, RFC868) I'm doing it aproximately this way:
data = s.recv(4)
remote_time = (ord(data[0])<<24) + (ord(data[1])<<16) + (ord(data[2])<<8) + ord(data[3])
remote_time -= 2208988800
_win_set_time(time.gmtime(remote_time)[0:6] + (0,))
from datetime import datetime otherwise working after installing pywin32
This works for me
def _win_set_time(datetime_obj: datetime):
import win32api
# http://timgolden.me.uk/pywin32-docs/win32api__SetSystemTime_meth.html
# win32api.SetSystemTime(year, month , dayOfWeek , day , hour , minute , second , millisecond )
utc_datetime = datetime_obj.astimezone().astimezone(timezone.utc).replace(tzinfo=None)
day_of_week = utc_datetime.isocalendar()[2]
win32api.SetSystemTime(utc_datetime.year, utc_datetime.month, day_of_week,
utc_datetime.day, utc_datetime.hour, utc_datetime.minute, utc_datetime.second,
int(utc_datetime.microsecond / 1000))
real_time_str = "2020 12 24 13 11 10 321"
real_time = datetime.strptime(real_time_str, '%Y %m %d %H %M %S %f')
_win_set_time(real_time)
I have a ds1302 RTC which raspberry pi does not recognize as RTC So i needed to start every session by setting the right time to the system
here is my solution
import subprocess # for calling a program on ystem (sudo...)
import shlex
def SetClock():
# our clock ds1032 does not work as RTC in here so we set it to the system every time we start
rtc = pyRPiRTC.DS1302() #https://github.com/sourceperl/rpi.rtc
dt = rtc.read_datetime()
print("RTC Time is:", dt)
st = dt.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')
# mt = time.strptime(st, '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S') # this is how to convert datetime to time
s = "sudo date -s '" + st + "'"
subprocess.call(shlex.split(s))
print("system time:", time.ctime())
well for now i think this is the best solution
import sys,os
def change(s):
if s == 1:os.system('date -s "2 OCT 2006 18:00:00"')#don't forget to change it , i've used date command for linux
elif s == 2:
try:
import pywin32
except ImportError:
print 'pywin32 module is missing'
sys.exit(1)
pywin32.SetSystemTime(year, month , dayOfWeek , day , hour , minute , second , millseconds )# fill all Parameters with int numbers
else:print 'wrong param'
def check_os():
if sys.platform=='linux2':change(1)
elif sys.platform=='win32':change(2)
else:print 'unknown system'
for now it's temporary solution , hopefully it's helpful , aslo take a look
http://timgolden.me.uk/pywin32-docs/win32api__SetSystemTime_meth.html
http://timgolden.me.uk/pywin32-docs/win32api__SetLocalTime_meth.html
date system command if the system is linux. Something the OP doesn't want to do.
datetimemodule can set the system time. Here are some ways to do it in Windows and Linux.