syscall: unify NsecToTime{spec,val}, fix for times < 1970

All the implementations of NsecToTimespec and NsecToTimeval were the
same other than types. Write a single version that uses
GOARCH/GOOS-specific setTimespec and setTimeval functions to handle the
types.

The logic in NsecToTimespec and NsecToTimeval caused times before 1970
to have a negative usec/nsec. The Linux kernel requires that usec
contain a positive number; for consistency, we do this for both
NsecToTimespec and NsecToTimeval.

Change-Id: I525eaba2e7cdb00cb57fa00182dabf19fec298ae
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/30826
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
This commit is contained in:
Ian Lance Taylor 2016-10-11 21:04:16 -07:00 committed by Russ Cox
parent 6ca48f710f
commit 6c517df4da
25 changed files with 125 additions and 216 deletions

View file

@ -14,15 +14,10 @@ type Timeval struct {
Usec int32
}
func NsecToTimespec(nsec int64) (ts Timespec) {
ts.Sec = int64(nsec / 1e9)
ts.Nsec = int32(nsec % 1e9)
return
func setTimespec(sec, nsec int64) Timespec {
return Timespec{Sec: sec, Nsec: int32(nsec)}
}
func NsecToTimeval(nsec int64) (tv Timeval) {
nsec += 999 // round up to microsecond
tv.Usec = int32(nsec % 1e9 / 1e3)
tv.Sec = int64(nsec / 1e9)
return
func setTimeval(sec, usec int64) Timeval {
return Timeval{Sec: sec, Usec: int32(usec)}
}