/
hwclock.c
1607 lines (1465 loc) · 50.9 KB
/
hwclock.c
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/*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
*
* Since 7a3000f7ba548cf7d74ac77cc63fe8de228a669e (v2.30) hwclock is linked
* with parse_date.y from gnullib. This gnulib code is distributed with GPLv3.
* Use --disable-hwclock-gplv3 to exclude this code.
*
*
* clock.c was written by Charles Hedrick, hedrick@cs.rutgers.edu, Apr 1992
* Modified for clock adjustments - Rob Hooft <hooft@chem.ruu.nl>, Nov 1992
* Improvements by Harald Koenig <koenig@nova.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de>
* and Alan Modra <alan@spri.levels.unisa.edu.au>.
*
* Major rewrite by Bryan Henderson <bryanh@giraffe-data.com>, 96.09.19.
* The new program is called hwclock. New features:
*
* - You can set the hardware clock without also modifying the system
* clock.
* - You can read and set the clock with finer than 1 second precision.
* - When you set the clock, hwclock automatically refigures the drift
* rate, based on how far off the clock was before you set it.
*
* Reshuffled things, added sparc code, and re-added alpha stuff
* by David Mosberger <davidm@azstarnet.com>
* and Jay Estabrook <jestabro@amt.tay1.dec.com>
* and Martin Ostermann <ost@comnets.rwth-aachen.de>, aeb@cwi.nl, 990212.
*
* Fix for Award 2094 bug, Dave Coffin (dcoffin@shore.net) 11/12/98
* Change of local time handling, Stefan Ring <e9725446@stud3.tuwien.ac.at>
* Change of adjtime handling, James P. Rutledge <ao112@rgfn.epcc.edu>.
*
*
*/
/*
* Explanation of `adjusting' (Rob Hooft):
*
* The problem with my machine is that its CMOS clock is 10 seconds
* per day slow. With this version of clock.c, and my '/etc/rc.local'
* reading '/etc/clock -au' instead of '/etc/clock -u -s', this error
* is automatically corrected at every boot.
*
* To do this job, the program reads and writes the file '/etc/adjtime'
* to determine the correction, and to save its data. In this file are
* three numbers:
*
* 1) the correction in seconds per day. (So if your clock runs 5
* seconds per day fast, the first number should read -5.0)
* 2) the number of seconds since 1/1/1970 the last time the program
* was used
* 3) the remaining part of a second which was leftover after the last
* adjustment
*
* Installation and use of this program:
*
* a) create a file '/etc/adjtime' containing as the first and only
* line: '0.0 0 0.0'
* b) run 'clock -au' or 'clock -a', depending on whether your cmos is
* in universal or local time. This updates the second number.
* c) set your system time using the 'date' command.
* d) update your cmos time using 'clock -wu' or 'clock -w'
* e) replace the first number in /etc/adjtime by your correction.
* f) put the command 'clock -au' or 'clock -a' in your '/etc/rc.local'
*/
#include <errno.h>
#include <getopt.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include "c.h"
#include "closestream.h"
#include "nls.h"
#include "optutils.h"
#include "pathnames.h"
#include "hwclock.h"
#include "timeutils.h"
#include "env.h"
#include "xalloc.h"
#include "path.h"
#include "strutils.h"
#ifdef HAVE_LIBAUDIT
#include <libaudit.h>
static int hwaudit_fd = -1;
#endif
UL_DEBUG_DEFINE_MASK(hwclock);
UL_DEBUG_DEFINE_MASKNAMES(hwclock) = UL_DEBUG_EMPTY_MASKNAMES;
/* The struct that holds our hardware access routines */
static struct clock_ops *ur;
/* Maximal clock adjustment in seconds per day.
(adjtime() glibc call has 2145 seconds limit on i386, so it is good enough for us as well,
43219 is a maximal safe value preventing exact_adjustment overflow.) */
#define MAX_DRIFT 2145.0
struct adjtime {
/*
* This is information we keep in the adjtime file that tells us how
* to do drift corrections. Elements are all straight from the
* adjtime file, so see documentation of that file for details.
* Exception is <dirty>, which is an indication that what's in this
* structure is not what's in the disk file (because it has been
* updated since read from the disk file).
*/
int dirty;
/* line 1 */
double drift_factor;
time_t last_adj_time;
double not_adjusted;
/* line 2 */
time_t last_calib_time;
/*
* The most recent time that we set the clock from an external
* authority (as opposed to just doing a drift adjustment)
*/
/* line 3 */
enum a_local_utc { UTC = 0, LOCAL, UNKNOWN } local_utc;
/*
* To which time zone, local or UTC, we most recently set the
* hardware clock.
*/
};
static void hwclock_init_debug(const char *str)
{
__UL_INIT_DEBUG_FROM_STRING(hwclock, HWCLOCK_DEBUG_, 0, str);
DBG(INIT, ul_debug("hwclock debug mask: 0x%04x", hwclock_debug_mask));
DBG(INIT, ul_debug("hwclock version: %s", PACKAGE_STRING));
}
/* FOR TESTING ONLY: inject random delays of up to 1000ms */
static void up_to_1000ms_sleep(void)
{
int usec = random() % 1000000;
DBG(RANDOM_SLEEP, ul_debug("sleeping ~%d usec", usec));
xusleep(usec);
}
/*
* time_t to timeval conversion.
*/
static struct timeval t2tv(time_t timet)
{
struct timeval rettimeval;
rettimeval.tv_sec = timet;
rettimeval.tv_usec = 0;
return rettimeval;
}
/*
* The difference in seconds between two times in "timeval" format.
*/
double time_diff(struct timeval subtrahend, struct timeval subtractor)
{
return (subtrahend.tv_sec - subtractor.tv_sec)
+ (subtrahend.tv_usec - subtractor.tv_usec) / 1E6;
}
/*
* The time, in "timeval" format, which is <increment> seconds after the
* time <addend>. Of course, <increment> may be negative.
*/
static struct timeval time_inc(struct timeval addend, double increment)
{
struct timeval newtime;
newtime.tv_sec = addend.tv_sec + (time_t)increment;
newtime.tv_usec = addend.tv_usec + (increment - (time_t)increment) * 1E6;
/*
* Now adjust it so that the microsecond value is between 0 and 1
* million.
*/
if (newtime.tv_usec < 0) {
newtime.tv_usec += 1E6;
newtime.tv_sec -= 1;
} else if (newtime.tv_usec >= 1E6) {
newtime.tv_usec -= 1E6;
newtime.tv_sec += 1;
}
return newtime;
}
static int
hw_clock_is_utc(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
const struct adjtime *adjtime)
{
int ret;
if (ctl->utc)
ret = 1; /* --utc explicitly given on command line */
else if (ctl->local_opt)
ret = 0; /* --localtime explicitly given */
else
/* get info from adjtime file - default is UTC */
ret = (adjtime->local_utc != LOCAL);
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Assuming hardware clock is kept in %s time.\n"),
ret ? _("UTC") : _("local"));
return ret;
}
/*
* Read the adjustment parameters out of the /etc/adjtime file.
*
* Return them as the adjtime structure <*adjtime_p>. Its defaults are
* initialized in main().
*/
static int read_adjtime(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
struct adjtime *adjtime_p)
{
FILE *adjfile;
char line1[81]; /* String: first line of adjtime file */
char line2[81]; /* String: second line of adjtime file */
char line3[81]; /* String: third line of adjtime file */
int64_t last_adj_time;
int64_t last_calib_time;
if (access(ctl->adj_file_name, R_OK) != 0)
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
adjfile = fopen(ctl->adj_file_name, "r"); /* open file for reading */
if (adjfile == NULL) {
warn(_("cannot open %s"), ctl->adj_file_name);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
if (!fgets(line1, sizeof(line1), adjfile))
line1[0] = '\0'; /* In case fgets fails */
if (!fgets(line2, sizeof(line2), adjfile))
line2[0] = '\0'; /* In case fgets fails */
if (!fgets(line3, sizeof(line3), adjfile))
line3[0] = '\0'; /* In case fgets fails */
fclose(adjfile);
sscanf(line1, "%lf %"SCNd64" %lf",
&adjtime_p->drift_factor,
&last_adj_time,
&adjtime_p->not_adjusted);
sscanf(line2, "%"SCNd64, &last_calib_time);
adjtime_p->last_adj_time = (time_t)last_adj_time;
adjtime_p->last_calib_time = (time_t)last_calib_time;
if (!strcmp(line3, "UTC\n")) {
adjtime_p->local_utc = UTC;
} else if (!strcmp(line3, "LOCAL\n")) {
adjtime_p->local_utc = LOCAL;
} else {
adjtime_p->local_utc = UNKNOWN;
if (line3[0]) {
warnx(_("Warning: unrecognized third line in adjtime file\n"
"(Expected: `UTC' or `LOCAL' or nothing.)"));
}
}
if (ctl->verbose) {
printf(_("Last drift adjustment done at %"PRId64" seconds after 1969\n"),
(int64_t)adjtime_p->last_adj_time);
printf(_("Last calibration done at %"PRId64" seconds after 1969\n"),
(int64_t)adjtime_p->last_calib_time);
printf(_("Hardware clock is on %s time\n"),
(adjtime_p->local_utc ==
LOCAL) ? _("local") : (adjtime_p->local_utc ==
UTC) ? _("UTC") : _("unknown"));
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
/*
* Wait until the falling edge of the Hardware Clock's update flag so that
* any time that is read from the clock immediately after we return will be
* exact.
*
* The clock only has 1 second precision, so it gives the exact time only
* once per second, right on the falling edge of the update flag.
*
* We wait (up to one second) either blocked waiting for an rtc device or in
* a CPU spin loop. The former is probably not very accurate.
*
* Return 0 if it worked, nonzero if it didn't.
*/
static int synchronize_to_clock_tick(const struct hwclock_control *ctl)
{
int rc;
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Waiting for clock tick...\n"));
rc = ur->synchronize_to_clock_tick(ctl);
if (ctl->verbose) {
if (rc)
printf(_("...synchronization failed\n"));
else
printf(_("...got clock tick\n"));
}
return rc;
}
/*
* Convert a time in broken down format (hours, minutes, etc.) into standard
* unix time (seconds into epoch). Return it as *systime_p.
*
* The broken down time is argument <tm>. This broken down time is either
* in local time zone or UTC, depending on value of logical argument
* "universal". True means it is in UTC.
*
* If the argument contains values that do not constitute a valid time, and
* mktime() recognizes this, return *valid_p == false and *systime_p
* undefined. However, mktime() sometimes goes ahead and computes a
* fictional time "as if" the input values were valid, e.g. if they indicate
* the 31st day of April, mktime() may compute the time of May 1. In such a
* case, we return the same fictional value mktime() does as *systime_p and
* return *valid_p == true.
*/
static int
mktime_tz(const struct hwclock_control *ctl, struct tm tm,
time_t *systime_p)
{
int valid;
if (ctl->universal)
*systime_p = timegm(&tm);
else
*systime_p = mktime(&tm);
if (*systime_p == -1) {
/*
* This apparently (not specified in mktime() documentation)
* means the 'tm' structure does not contain valid values
* (however, not containing valid values does _not_ imply
* mktime() returns -1).
*/
valid = 0;
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Invalid values in hardware clock: "
"%4d/%.2d/%.2d %.2d:%.2d:%.2d\n"),
tm.tm_year + 1900, tm.tm_mon + 1, tm.tm_mday,
tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec);
} else {
valid = 1;
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Hw clock time : %4d/%.2d/%.2d %.2d:%.2d:%.2d = "
"%"PRId64" seconds since 1969\n"), tm.tm_year + 1900,
tm.tm_mon + 1, tm.tm_mday, tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min,
tm.tm_sec, (int64_t)*systime_p);
}
return valid;
}
/*
* Read the hardware clock and return the current time via <tm> argument.
*
* Use the method indicated by <method> argument to access the hardware
* clock.
*/
static int
read_hardware_clock(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
int *valid_p, time_t *systime_p)
{
struct tm tm;
int err;
err = ur->read_hardware_clock(ctl, &tm);
if (err)
return err;
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Time read from Hardware Clock: %4d/%.2d/%.2d %02d:%02d:%02d\n"),
tm.tm_year + 1900, tm.tm_mon + 1, tm.tm_mday, tm.tm_hour,
tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec);
*valid_p = mktime_tz(ctl, tm, systime_p);
return 0;
}
/*
* Set the Hardware Clock to the time <newtime>, in local time zone or UTC,
* according to <universal>.
*/
static void
set_hardware_clock(const struct hwclock_control *ctl, const time_t newtime)
{
struct tm new_broken_time;
/*
* Time to which we will set Hardware Clock, in broken down format,
* in the time zone of caller's choice
*/
if (ctl->universal)
gmtime_r(&newtime, &new_broken_time);
else
localtime_r(&newtime, &new_broken_time);
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Setting Hardware Clock to %.2d:%.2d:%.2d "
"= %"PRId64" seconds since 1969\n"),
new_broken_time.tm_hour, new_broken_time.tm_min,
new_broken_time.tm_sec, (int64_t)newtime);
if (!ctl->testing)
ur->set_hardware_clock(ctl, &new_broken_time);
}
static double
get_hardware_delay(const struct hwclock_control *ctl)
{
const char *devpath, *rtcname;
char name[128 + 1];
struct path_cxt *pc;
int rc;
devpath = ur->get_device_path();
if (!devpath)
goto unknown;
rtcname = strrchr(devpath, '/');
if (!rtcname || !*(rtcname + 1))
goto unknown;
rtcname++;
pc = ul_new_path("/sys/class/rtc/%s", rtcname);
if (!pc)
goto unknown;
rc = ul_path_scanf(pc, "name", "%128[^\n ]", &name);
ul_unref_path(pc);
if (rc != 1 || !*name)
goto unknown;
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("RTC type: '%s'\n"), name);
/* MC146818A-compatible (x86) */
if (strcmp(name, "rtc_cmos") == 0)
return 0.5;
/* Another HW */
return 0;
unknown:
/* Let's be backwardly compatible */
return 0.5;
}
/*
* Set the Hardware Clock to the time "sethwtime", in local time zone or
* UTC, according to "universal".
*
* Wait for a fraction of a second so that "sethwtime" is the value of the
* Hardware Clock as of system time "refsystime", which is in the past. For
* example, if "sethwtime" is 14:03:05 and "refsystime" is 12:10:04.5 and
* the current system time is 12:10:06.0: Wait .5 seconds (to make exactly 2
* seconds since "refsystime") and then set the Hardware Clock to 14:03:07,
* thus getting a precise and retroactive setting of the clock. The .5 delay is
* default on x86, see --delay and get_hardware_delay().
*
* (Don't be confused by the fact that the system clock and the Hardware
* Clock differ by two hours in the above example. That's just to remind you
* that there are two independent time scales here).
*
* This function ought to be able to accept set times as fractional times.
* Idea for future enhancement.
*/
static void
set_hardware_clock_exact(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
const time_t sethwtime,
const struct timeval refsystime)
{
/*
* The Hardware Clock can only be set to any integer time plus one
* half second. The integer time is required because there is no
* interface to set or get a fractional second. The additional half
* second is because the Hardware Clock updates to the following
* second precisely 500 ms (not 1 second!) after you release the
* divider reset (after setting the new time) - see description of
* DV2, DV1, DV0 in Register A in the MC146818A data sheet (and note
* that although that document doesn't say so, real-world code seems
* to expect that the SET bit in Register B functions the same way).
* That means that, e.g., when you set the clock to 1:02:03, it
* effectively really sets it to 1:02:03.5, because it will update to
* 1:02:04 only half a second later. Our caller passes the desired
* integer Hardware Clock time in sethwtime, and the corresponding
* system time (which may have a fractional part, and which may or may
* not be the same!) in refsystime. In an ideal situation, we would
* then apply sethwtime to the Hardware Clock at refsystime+500ms, so
* that when the Hardware Clock ticks forward to sethwtime+1s half a
* second later at refsystime+1000ms, everything is in sync. So we
* spin, waiting for gettimeofday() to return a time at or after that
* time (refsystime+500ms) up to a tolerance value, initially 1ms. If
* we miss that time due to being preempted for some other process,
* then we increase the margin a little bit (initially 1ms, doubling
* each time), add 1 second (or more, if needed to get a time that is
* in the future) to both the time for which we are waiting and the
* time that we will apply to the Hardware Clock, and start waiting
* again.
*
* For example, the caller requests that we set the Hardware Clock to
* 1:02:03, with reference time (current system time) = 6:07:08.250.
* We want the Hardware Clock to update to 1:02:04 at 6:07:09.250 on
* the system clock, and the first such update will occur 0.500
* seconds after we write to the Hardware Clock, so we spin until the
* system clock reads 6:07:08.750. If we get there, great, but let's
* imagine the system is so heavily loaded that our process is
* preempted and by the time we get to run again, the system clock
* reads 6:07:11.990. We now want to wait until the next xx:xx:xx.750
* time, which is 6:07:12.750 (4.5 seconds after the reference time),
* at which point we will set the Hardware Clock to 1:02:07 (4 seconds
* after the originally requested time). If we do that successfully,
* then at 6:07:13.250 (5 seconds after the reference time), the
* Hardware Clock will update to 1:02:08 (5 seconds after the
* originally requested time), and all is well thereafter.
*/
time_t newhwtime = sethwtime;
double target_time_tolerance_secs = 0.001; /* initial value */
double tolerance_incr_secs = 0.001; /* initial value */
double delay;
struct timeval rtc_set_delay_tv;
struct timeval targetsystime;
struct timeval nowsystime;
struct timeval prevsystime = refsystime;
double deltavstarget;
if (ctl->rtc_delay != -1.0) /* --delay specified */
delay = ctl->rtc_delay;
else
delay = get_hardware_delay(ctl);
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Using delay: %.6f seconds\n"), delay);
rtc_set_delay_tv.tv_sec = 0;
rtc_set_delay_tv.tv_usec = delay * 1E6;
timeradd(&refsystime, &rtc_set_delay_tv, &targetsystime);
while (1) {
double ticksize;
ON_DBG(RANDOM_SLEEP, up_to_1000ms_sleep());
gettimeofday(&nowsystime, NULL);
deltavstarget = time_diff(nowsystime, targetsystime);
ticksize = time_diff(nowsystime, prevsystime);
prevsystime = nowsystime;
if (ticksize < 0) {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("time jumped backward %.6f seconds "
"to %"PRId64".%06"PRId64" - retargeting\n"),
ticksize, (int64_t)nowsystime.tv_sec,
(int64_t)nowsystime.tv_usec);
/* The retarget is handled at the end of the loop. */
} else if (deltavstarget < 0) {
/* deltavstarget < 0 if current time < target time */
DBG(DELTA_VS_TARGET,
ul_debug("%"PRId64".%06"PRId64" < %"PRId64".%06"PRId64" (%.6f)",
(int64_t)nowsystime.tv_sec, (int64_t)nowsystime.tv_usec,
(int64_t)targetsystime.tv_sec,
(int64_t)targetsystime.tv_usec, deltavstarget));
continue; /* not there yet - keep spinning */
} else if (deltavstarget <= target_time_tolerance_secs) {
/* Close enough to the target time; done waiting. */
break;
} else /* (deltavstarget > target_time_tolerance_secs) */ {
/*
* We missed our window. Increase the tolerance and
* aim for the next opportunity.
*/
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("missed it - %"PRId64".%06"PRId64" is too far "
"past %"PRId64".%06"PRId64" (%.6f > %.6f)\n"),
(int64_t)nowsystime.tv_sec,
(int64_t)nowsystime.tv_usec,
(int64_t)targetsystime.tv_sec,
(int64_t)targetsystime.tv_usec,
deltavstarget,
target_time_tolerance_secs);
target_time_tolerance_secs += tolerance_incr_secs;
tolerance_incr_secs *= 2;
}
/*
* Aim for the same offset (tv_usec) within the second in
* either the current second (if that offset hasn't arrived
* yet), or the next second.
*/
if (nowsystime.tv_usec < targetsystime.tv_usec)
targetsystime.tv_sec = nowsystime.tv_sec;
else
targetsystime.tv_sec = nowsystime.tv_sec + 1;
}
newhwtime = sethwtime
+ ceil(time_diff(nowsystime, refsystime)
- delay /* don't count this */);
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("%"PRId64".%06"PRId64" is close enough to %"PRId64".%06"PRId64" (%.6f < %.6f)\n"
"Set RTC to %"PRId64" (%"PRId64" + %d; refsystime = %"PRId64".%06"PRId64")\n"),
(int64_t)nowsystime.tv_sec, (int64_t)nowsystime.tv_usec,
(int64_t)targetsystime.tv_sec, (int64_t)targetsystime.tv_usec,
deltavstarget, target_time_tolerance_secs,
(int64_t)newhwtime, (int64_t)sethwtime,
(int)((int64_t)newhwtime - (int64_t)sethwtime),
(int64_t)refsystime.tv_sec, (int64_t)refsystime.tv_usec);
set_hardware_clock(ctl, newhwtime);
}
static int
display_time(struct timeval hwctime)
{
char buf[ISO_BUFSIZ];
if (strtimeval_iso(&hwctime, ISO_TIMESTAMP_DOT, buf, sizeof(buf)))
return EXIT_FAILURE;
printf("%s\n", buf);
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
/*
* Adjusts System time, sets the kernel's timezone and RTC timescale.
*
* The kernel warp_clock function adjusts the System time according to the
* tz.tz_minuteswest argument and sets PCIL (see below). At boot settimeofday(2)
* has one-shot access to this function as shown in the table below.
*
* +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
* | settimeofday(tv, tz) |
* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------|
* | Arguments | System Time | TZ | PCIL | | warp_clock |
* | tv | tz | set | warped | set | set | firsttime | locked |
* |---------|---------|---------------|-----|------|-----------|------------|
* | pointer | NULL | yes | no | no | no | 1 | no |
* | NULL | ptr2utc | no | no | yes | no | 0 | yes |
* | NULL | pointer | no | yes | yes | yes | 0 | yes |
* +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
* ptr2utc: tz.tz_minuteswest is zero (UTC).
* PCIL: persistent_clock_is_local, sets the "11 minute mode" timescale.
* firsttime: locks the warp_clock function (initialized to 1 at boot).
*
* +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+
* | op | RTC scale | settimeofday calls |
* |---------|-----------|-----------------------------------------------------|
* | systz | Local | 1) warps system time*, sets PCIL* and kernel tz |
* | systz | UTC | 1st) locks warp_clock* 2nd) sets kernel tz |
* | hctosys | Local | 1st) sets PCIL* & kernel tz 2nd) sets system time |
* | hctosys | UTC | 1st) locks warp* 2nd) sets tz 3rd) sets system time |
* +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+
* * only on first call after boot
*
* POSIX 2008 marked TZ in settimeofday() as deprecated. Unfortunately,
* different C libraries react to this deprecation in a different way. Since
* glibc v2.31 settimeofday() will fail if both args are not NULL, Musl-C
* ignores TZ at all, etc. We use __set_time() and __set_timezone() to hide
* these portability issues and to keep code readable.
*/
#define __set_time(_tv) settimeofday(_tv, NULL)
#ifndef SYS_settimeofday
# ifdef __NR_settimeofday
# define SYS_settimeofday __NR_settimeofday
# elif defined(__NR_settimeofday_time32)
# define SYS_settimeofday __NR_settimeofday_time32
# endif
#endif
static inline int __set_timezone(const struct timezone *tz)
{
#ifdef SYS_settimeofday
errno = 0;
return syscall(SYS_settimeofday, NULL, tz);
#else
return settimeofday(NULL, tz);
#endif
}
static int
set_system_clock(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
const struct timeval newtime)
{
struct tm broken;
int minuteswest;
int rc = 0;
localtime_r(&newtime.tv_sec, &broken);
minuteswest = -get_gmtoff(&broken) / 60;
if (ctl->verbose) {
if (ctl->universal) {
puts(_("Calling settimeofday(NULL, 0) "
"to lock the warp_clock function."));
if (!( ctl->universal && !minuteswest ))
printf(_("Calling settimeofday(NULL, %d) "
"to set the kernel timezone.\n"),
minuteswest);
} else
printf(_("Calling settimeofday(NULL, %d) to warp "
"System time, set PCIL and the kernel tz.\n"),
minuteswest);
if (ctl->hctosys)
printf(_("Calling settimeofday(%"PRId64".%06"PRId64", NULL) "
"to set the System time.\n"),
(int64_t)newtime.tv_sec, (int64_t)newtime.tv_usec);
}
if (!ctl->testing) {
const struct timezone tz_utc = { 0 };
const struct timezone tz = { minuteswest };
/* If UTC RTC: lock warp_clock and PCIL */
if (ctl->universal)
rc = __set_timezone(&tz_utc);
/* Set kernel tz; if localtime RTC: warp_clock and set PCIL */
if (!rc && !( ctl->universal && !minuteswest ))
rc = __set_timezone(&tz);
/* Set the System Clock */
if ((!rc || errno == ENOSYS) && ctl->hctosys)
rc = __set_time(&newtime);
if (rc) {
warn(_("settimeofday() failed"));
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
/*
* Refresh the last calibrated and last adjusted timestamps in <*adjtime_p>
* to facilitate future drift calculations based on this set point.
*
* With the --update-drift option:
* Update the drift factor in <*adjtime_p> based on the fact that the
* Hardware Clock was just calibrated to <nowtime> and before that was
* set to the <hclocktime> time scale.
*/
static void
adjust_drift_factor(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
struct adjtime *adjtime_p,
const struct timeval nowtime,
const struct timeval hclocktime)
{
if (!ctl->update) {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Not adjusting drift factor because the "
"--update-drift option was not used.\n"));
} else if (adjtime_p->last_calib_time == 0) {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Not adjusting drift factor because last "
"calibration time is zero,\n"
"so history is bad and calibration startover "
"is necessary.\n"));
} else if ((hclocktime.tv_sec - adjtime_p->last_calib_time) < 4 * 60 * 60) {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Not adjusting drift factor because it has "
"been less than four hours since the last "
"calibration.\n"));
} else {
/*
* At adjustment time we drift correct the hardware clock
* according to the contents of the adjtime file and refresh
* its last adjusted timestamp.
*
* At calibration time we set the Hardware Clock and refresh
* both timestamps in <*adjtime_p>.
*
* Here, with the --update-drift option, we also update the
* drift factor in <*adjtime_p>.
*
* Let us do computation in doubles. (Floats almost suffice,
* but 195 days + 1 second equals 195 days in floats.)
*/
const double sec_per_day = 24.0 * 60.0 * 60.0;
double factor_adjust;
double drift_factor;
struct timeval last_calib;
last_calib = t2tv(adjtime_p->last_calib_time);
/*
* Correction to apply to the current drift factor.
*
* Simplified: uncorrected_drift / days_since_calibration.
*
* hclocktime is fully corrected with the current drift factor.
* Its difference from nowtime is the missed drift correction.
*/
factor_adjust = time_diff(nowtime, hclocktime) /
(time_diff(nowtime, last_calib) / sec_per_day);
drift_factor = adjtime_p->drift_factor + factor_adjust;
if (fabs(drift_factor) > MAX_DRIFT) {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Clock drift factor was calculated as "
"%f seconds/day.\n"
"It is far too much. Resetting to zero.\n"),
drift_factor);
drift_factor = 0;
} else {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Clock drifted %f seconds in the past "
"%f seconds\nin spite of a drift factor of "
"%f seconds/day.\n"
"Adjusting drift factor by %f seconds/day\n"),
time_diff(nowtime, hclocktime),
time_diff(nowtime, last_calib),
adjtime_p->drift_factor, factor_adjust);
}
adjtime_p->drift_factor = drift_factor;
}
adjtime_p->last_calib_time = nowtime.tv_sec;
adjtime_p->last_adj_time = nowtime.tv_sec;
adjtime_p->not_adjusted = 0;
adjtime_p->dirty = 1;
}
/*
* Calculate the drift correction currently needed for the
* Hardware Clock based on the last time it was adjusted,
* and the current drift factor, as stored in the adjtime file.
*
* The total drift adjustment needed is stored at tdrift_p.
*
*/
static void
calculate_adjustment(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
const double factor,
const time_t last_time,
const double not_adjusted,
const time_t systime, struct timeval *tdrift_p)
{
double exact_adjustment;
exact_adjustment =
((double)(systime - last_time)) * factor / (24 * 60 * 60)
+ not_adjusted;
tdrift_p->tv_sec = (time_t) floor(exact_adjustment);
tdrift_p->tv_usec = (exact_adjustment -
(double)tdrift_p->tv_sec) * 1E6;
if (ctl->verbose) {
printf(P_("Time since last adjustment is %"PRId64" second\n",
"Time since last adjustment is %"PRId64" seconds\n",
((int64_t)systime - (int64_t)last_time)),
((int64_t)systime - (int64_t)last_time));
printf(_("Calculated Hardware Clock drift is %"PRId64".%06"PRId64" seconds\n"),
(int64_t)tdrift_p->tv_sec, (int64_t)tdrift_p->tv_usec);
}
}
/*
* Write the contents of the <adjtime> structure to its disk file.
*
* But if the contents are clean (unchanged since read from disk), don't
* bother.
*/
static int save_adjtime(const struct hwclock_control *ctl,
const struct adjtime *adjtime)
{
char *content; /* Stuff to write to disk file */
FILE *fp;
xasprintf(&content, "%f %"PRId64" %f\n%"PRId64"\n%s\n",
adjtime->drift_factor,
(int64_t)adjtime->last_adj_time,
adjtime->not_adjusted,
(int64_t)adjtime->last_calib_time,
(adjtime->local_utc == LOCAL) ? "LOCAL" : "UTC");
if (ctl->verbose){
printf(_("New %s data:\n%s"),
ctl->adj_file_name, content);
}
if (!ctl->testing) {
fp = fopen(ctl->adj_file_name, "w");
if (fp == NULL) {
warn(_("cannot open %s"), ctl->adj_file_name);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
if (fputs(content, fp) < 0 || close_stream(fp) != 0) {
warn(_("cannot update %s"), ctl->adj_file_name);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
/*
* Do the adjustment requested, by 1) setting the Hardware Clock (if
* necessary), and 2) updating the last-adjusted time in the adjtime
* structure.
*
* Do not update anything if the Hardware Clock does not currently present a
* valid time.
*
* <hclocktime> is the drift corrected time read from the Hardware Clock.
*
* <read_time> was the system time when the <hclocktime> was read, which due
* to computational delay could be a short time ago. It is used to define a
* trigger point for setting the Hardware Clock. The fractional part of the
* Hardware clock set time is subtracted from read_time to 'refer back', or
* delay, the trigger point. Fractional parts must be accounted for in this
* way, because the Hardware Clock can only be set to a whole second.
*
* <universal>: the Hardware Clock is kept in UTC.
*
* <testing>: We are running in test mode (no updating of clock).
*
*/
static void
do_adjustment(const struct hwclock_control *ctl, struct adjtime *adjtime_p,
const struct timeval hclocktime,
const struct timeval read_time)
{
if (adjtime_p->last_adj_time == 0) {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Not setting clock because last adjustment time is zero, "
"so history is bad.\n"));
} else if (fabs(adjtime_p->drift_factor) > MAX_DRIFT) {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("Not setting clock because drift factor %f is far too high.\n"),
adjtime_p->drift_factor);
} else {
set_hardware_clock_exact(ctl, hclocktime.tv_sec,
time_inc(read_time,
-(hclocktime.tv_usec / 1E6)));
adjtime_p->last_adj_time = hclocktime.tv_sec;
adjtime_p->not_adjusted = 0;
adjtime_p->dirty = 1;
}
}
static void determine_clock_access_method(const struct hwclock_control *ctl)
{
ur = NULL;
#ifdef USE_HWCLOCK_CMOS
if (ctl->directisa)
ur = probe_for_cmos_clock();
#endif
#ifdef __linux__
if (!ur)
ur = probe_for_rtc_clock(ctl);
#endif
if (ur) {
if (ctl->verbose)
puts(ur->interface_name);
} else {
if (ctl->verbose)
printf(_("No usable clock interface found.\n"));
warnx(_("Cannot access the Hardware Clock via "
"any known method."));
if (!ctl->verbose)
warnx(_("Use the --verbose option to see the "
"details of our search for an access "
"method."));
hwclock_exit(ctl, EXIT_FAILURE);
}
}
/* Do all the normal work of hwclock - read, set clock, etc. */
static int
manipulate_clock(const struct hwclock_control *ctl, const time_t set_time,
const struct timeval startup_time, struct adjtime *adjtime)
{
/* The time at which we read the Hardware Clock */
struct timeval read_time = { 0 };