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TIME(9)

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NAME    [Toc]    [Back]

     boottime, mono_time, runtime, time - system time variables

SYNOPSIS    [Toc]    [Back]

     extern struct timeval boottime;
     extern volatile struct timeval mono_time;
     extern struct timeval runtime;
     extern volatile struct timeval time;

DESCRIPTION    [Toc]    [Back]

     The time variable is the system's ``wall time''  clock.   It
is set at boot
     by inittodr(9), and is updated by the settimeofday(2) system
call and by
     periodic clock interrupts.

     The boottime variable holds the system boot time.  It is set
from time at
     system boot, and is updated when the system time is adjusted
with
     settimeofday(2).

     The runtime variable holds the time that the system switched
to the current
  process.   It is set after each context switch, and is
updated when
     the system time is adjusted with  settimeofday(2).   Because
runtime is
     used  for system accounting, it is set with the high-resolution
     microtime(9) function, rather than being copied from time.

     The mono_time variable is a monotonically increasing  system
clock.  It is
     set  from time at boot, and is updated by the periodic timer
interrupt.
     (It is not updated by settimeofday(2).)

     All of these variables contain times  expressed  in  seconds
and microseconds
 since midnight (0 hour), January 1, 1970.

     Clock  interrupts  should be blocked when reading or writing
time or
     mono_time, because those  variables  are  updated  by  hardclock(9).  Boottime
     and  runtime may be read and written without special precautions.

SEE ALSO    [Toc]    [Back]

      
      
     settimeofday(2), hardclock(9),  hz(9),  inittodr(9),  microtime(9)

BUGS    [Toc]    [Back]

     Runtime  should  not  be  updated  when  the  system time is
changed with
     settimeofday(2), because it is used for resource accounting.

     The  notion  of  having  a single runtime variable obviously
won't be appropriate
 in multiprocessor systems.

OpenBSD     3.6                        November     13,      1995
[ Back ]
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