#ifndef DATE_TIME_FILETIME_FUNCTIONS_HPP__ #define DATE_TIME_FILETIME_FUNCTIONS_HPP__ /* Copyright (c) 2004 CrystalClear Software, Inc. * Use, modification and distribution is subject to the * Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying * file LICENSE_1_0.txt or http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) * Author: Jeff Garland, Bart Garst * $Date$ */ /*! @file filetime_functions.hpp * Function(s) for converting between a FILETIME structure and a * time object. This file is only available on systems that have * BOOST_HAS_FTIME defined. */ #include #if defined(BOOST_HAS_FTIME) // skip this file if no FILETIME #include #include #include namespace lslboost { namespace date_time { //! Create a time object from an initialized FILETIME struct. /*! * Create a time object from an initialized FILETIME struct. * A FILETIME struct holds 100-nanosecond units (0.0000001). When * built with microsecond resolution the file_time's sub second value * will be truncated. Nanosecond resolution has no truncation. * * \note The function is templated on the FILETIME type, so that * it can be used with both native FILETIME and the ad-hoc * lslboost::detail::winapi::FILETIME_ type. */ template< typename TimeT, typename FileTimeT > inline TimeT time_from_ftime(const FileTimeT& ft) { typedef typename TimeT::date_type date_type; typedef typename TimeT::date_duration_type date_duration_type; typedef typename TimeT::time_duration_type time_duration_type; // https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/2523 // Since this function can be called with arbitrary times, including ones that // are before 1970-Jan-01, we'll have to cast the time a bit differently, // than it is done in the microsec_clock::file_time_to_microseconds function. This allows to // avoid integer wrapping for dates before 1970-Jan-01. // 100-nanos since 1601-Jan-01 uint64_t ft_as_integer = (static_cast< uint64_t >(ft.dwHighDateTime) << 32) | static_cast< uint64_t >(ft.dwLowDateTime); uint64_t sec = ft_as_integer / 10000000UL; uint32_t sub_sec = static_cast< uint32_t >(ft_as_integer % 10000000UL) // 100-nanoseconds since the last second #if !defined(BOOST_DATE_TIME_POSIX_TIME_STD_CONFIG) / 10U; // microseconds since the last second #else * 100U; // nanoseconds since the last second #endif // split sec into usable chunks: days, hours, minutes, & seconds const uint32_t sec_per_day = 86400; // seconds per day uint32_t days = static_cast< uint32_t >(sec / sec_per_day); uint32_t tmp = static_cast< uint32_t >(sec % sec_per_day); uint32_t hours = tmp / 3600; // sec_per_hour tmp %= 3600; uint32_t minutes = tmp / 60; // sec_per_min tmp %= 60; uint32_t seconds = tmp; // seconds date_duration_type dd(days); date_type d = date_type(1601, Jan, 01) + dd; return TimeT(d, time_duration_type(hours, minutes, seconds, sub_sec)); } }} // lslboost::date_time #endif // BOOST_HAS_FTIME #endif // DATE_TIME_FILETIME_FUNCTIONS_HPP__