Android uses one large file of tzdata, so the "read up to the maximum
possible length of a valid tzfile" code in upstream localtime.c is
broken: there is always data after the current tzfile (even the
last tzfile is followed by the zone.tab data). This patch passes the
exact length through to the read(2) call so we don't over-read, rather
than have to rewrite upstream code that measures back from the "end" of
the tzfile.
The old code failed the existing time.strftime_null_tm_zone test after
updating to tzdata2016g.
Bug: http://b/31848040
Test: time.strftime_null_tm_zone
Change-Id: Iee059b5a8c051bd4952cfd80f02b00d83e489d5e
We need to make a clearer distinction for bionic on the host. This patch
doesn't fully address things like "should host bionic try to talk to netd?"
for now, but is a step in the right direction.
Bug: http://b/31559095
Test: bionic tests.
Change-Id: I49812f8b75d9d78c4fd8a8ddf5df1201d63771d6
POSIX and Java disagree about the sign in a timezone string like "GMT+3".
This means that if you set "persist.sys.timezone" to such a string, native
code and Java code disagree about what time it is. Resolve this by
translating to POSIX form for native code.
Bug: http://b/25463955
Change-Id: I7c08c459dd8514348a12ce419edcbfbfe8f6d327
Test: manually tested with setprop and date.
We should fall back to GMT if neither the environment variable nor the
system property is set. This is the case if you wipe a WiFi-only device,
because we currently only take the time zone from cell networks.
Bug: http://b/24773112
Change-Id: I90d236d4d492b6562d75021bd312030b91c1e298
The original comment implied that Android 32 bit was the only one
using a bad time_t, but it turns out 32 bit glibc has the same time_t
as Android. Update the comment to reflect this reality.
Change-Id: I72cdd2c677a6521f7b43d4695a52fd8fdc3305bd
This is quite a large patch because we haven't updated for some time,
but the good news is that upstream is now thread-safe so a lot of our
changes go away in this update and the remaining diff is a lot smaller.
(Note that our whitespace still doesn't match upstream. I use diff -wub
to compare. Upstream doesn't even really have a consistent style. New
code seems to be two spaces, old code tabs.)
From the intervening changelogs (eliding the changes that only affected
the tools, which we don't use):
2014a:
An uninitialized-storage bug in 'localtime' has been fixed.
(Thanks to Logan Chien.)
2014b:
'zic' and 'localtime' no longer reject locations needing four
transitions per year for the forseeable future. (Thanks to Andrew
Main (Zefram).)
2014c:
<None>
2014d:
<None>
2014e:
<None>
2014f:
'localtime', 'mktime', etc. now use much less stack space if
ALL_STATE is defined. (Thanks to Elliott Hughes for reporting the
problem.)
Some lint has been removed when using GCC_DEBUG_FLAGS with GCC
4.9.0.
2014g:
Unless NETBSD_INSPIRED is defined to 0, the tz library now
supplies functions for creating and using objects that represent
time zones. The new functions are tzalloc, tzfree, localtime_rz,
mktime_z, and (if STD_INSPIRED is also defined) posix2time_z and
time2posix_z. They are intended for performance: for example,
localtime_rz (unlike localtime_r) is trivially thread-safe without
locking. (Thanks to Christos Zoulas for proposing NetBSD-inspired
functions, and to Alan Barrett and Jonathan Lennox for helping to
debug the change.)
If THREAD_SAFE is defined to 1, the tz library is now thread-safe.
Although not needed for tz's own applications, which are single-threaded,
this supports POSIX better if the tz library is used in multithreaded apps.
Some crashes have been fixed when zdump or the tz library is given
invalid or outlandish input.
The tz library no longer mishandles leap seconds on platforms with
unsigned time_t in time zones that lack ordinary transitions after 1970.
The tz code now attempts to infer TM_GMTOFF and TM_ZONE if not
already defined, to make it easier to configure on common platforms.
Define NO_TM_GMTOFF and NO_TM_ZONE to suppress this.
Unless the new macro UNINIT_TRAP is defined to 1, the tz code now
assumes that reading uninitialized memory yields garbage values
but does not cause other problems such as traps.
If TM_GMTOFF is defined and UNINIT_TRAP is 0, mktime is now
more likely to guess right for ambiguous time stamps near
transitions where tm_isdst does not change.
If HAVE_STRFTIME_L is defined to 1, the tz library now defines
strftime_l for compatibility with recent versions of POSIX.
Only the C locale is supported, though. HAVE_STRFTIME_L defaults
to 1 on recent POSIX versions, and to 0 otherwise.
tzselect -c now uses a hybrid distance measure that works better
in Africa. (Thanks to Alan Barrett for noting the problem.)
The C source code now ports to NetBSD when GCC_DEBUG_FLAGS is used,
or when time_tz is defined.
When HAVE_UTMPX_H is set the 'date' command now builds on systems
whose <utmpx.h> file does not define WTMPX_FILE, and when setting
the date it updates the wtmpx file if _PATH_WTMPX is defined.
This affects GNU/Linux and similar systems.
For easier maintenance later, some C code has been simplified,
some lint has been removed, and the code has been tweaked so that
plain 'make' is more likely to work.
The C type 'bool' is now used for boolean values, instead of 'int'.
The long-obsolete LOCALE_HOME code has been removed.
The long-obsolete 'gtime' function has been removed.
2014h:
The tz library's localtime and mktime functions now set tzname to a value
appropriate for the requested time stamp, and zdump now uses this
on platforms not defining TM_ZONE, fixing a 2014g regression.
(Thanks to Tim Parenti for reporting the problem.)
The tz library no longer sets tzname if localtime or mktime fails.
An access to uninitalized data has been fixed.
(Thanks to Jörg Richter for reporting the problem.)
When THREAD_SAFE is defined, the code ports to the C11 memory model.
A memory leak has been fixed if ALL_STATE and THREAD_SAFE are defined
and two threads race to initialize data used by gmtime-like functions.
(Thanks to Andy Heninger for reporting the problems.)
2014i:
The time-related library functions now set errno on failure,
and some crashes in the new tzalloc-related library functions
have been fixed. (Thanks to Christos Zoulas for reporting
most of these problems and for suggesting fixes.)
If USG_COMPAT is defined and the requested time stamp is
standard time, the tz library's localtime and mktime functions
now set the extern variable timezone to a value appropriate
for that time stamp; and similarly for ALTZONE, daylight
saving time, and the altzone variable. This change is a
companion to the tzname change in 2014h, and is designed to
make timezone and altzone more compatible with tzname.
The tz library's functions now set errno to EOVERFLOW if they
fail because the result cannot be represented. ctime and
ctime_r now return NULL and set errno when a time stamp is out
of range, rather than having undefined behavior.
Some bugs associated with the new 2014g functions have been
fixed. This includes a bug that largely incapacitated the new
functions time2posix_z and posix2time_z. (Thanks to Christos
Zoulas.) It also includes some uses of uninitialized
variables after tzalloc. The new code uses the standard type
'ssize_t', which the Makefile now gives porting advice about.
2014j:
<None>
2015a:
tzalloc now scrubs time zone abbreviations compatibly with the way
that tzset always has, by replacing invalid bytes with '_' and by
shortening too-long abbreviations.
2015b:
Fix integer overflow bug in reference 'mktime' implementation.
(Problem reported by Jörg Richter.)
Allow -Dtime_tz=time_t compilations, and allow -Dtime_tz=... libraries
to be used in the same executable as standard-library time_t functions.
(Problems reported by Bradley White.)
2015c:
<None>
2015d:
<None>
2015e:
<None>
2015f:
<None>
2015g:
localtime no longer mishandles America/Anchorage after 2037.
(Thanks to Bradley White for reporting the bug.)
On hosts with signed 32-bit time_t, localtime no longer mishandles
Pacific/Fiji after 2038-01-16 14:00 UTC.
The localtime module allows the variables 'timezone', 'daylight',
and 'altzone' to be in common storage shared with other modules,
and declares them in case the system <time.h> does not.
(Problems reported by Kees Dekker.)
On platforms with tm_zone, strftime.c now assumes it is not NULL.
This simplifies the code and is consistent with zdump.c.
(Problem reported by Christos Zoulas.)
Change-Id: I9eb0a8323cb8bd9968fcfe612dc14f45aa3b59d2
logd makes a non-insignificant number of calls to localtime, 3% of
the time in logd is spent performing __system_property_get within the
context of tzset_locked().
Bug: 23685592
Change-Id: I75f8c2d436b60374e92c166b87393abda9487af7
The mktime API returned an uncorrect time when TZ is set as empty.
A timezone UTC/GMT+0 should be implied in the empty case. However
mktime keeps previous information about timezone. If mktime was called
with a timezone which has DST before, the "defaulttype" member of
"state" structure wouldn't be 0. Then it would be used next time,
even though UTC/GMT+0 doesn't have DST.
Added initialization of the "defaulttype" in the empty TZ case.
Change-Id: Ic480c63c548c05444134e0aefb30a7b380e3f40b
The recent libcore ZoneInfo changes mean that we can no longer
compile libcore's ZoneInfo against the RI. Luckily, the field in
our data file that we needed ZoneInfo for isn't actually used.
This change removes our dependence on libcore.
I've left the field in to avoid a file format change. We can remove
the field if/when we next have a real need to bump the file format.
(cherry-pick of 90cb5ffb85a9bc2e725824b3ca8db932d02c45db.)
Bug: 16168653
Change-Id: Iedad2252c2b49f4d8bb2c7d9078b39b622444ca7
This also brings our copy of strftime.c much closer to upstream, though
we still have several GNU extensions and hacks to deal with Android32's
broken time_t.
Bug: 15765976
Change-Id: Ic9ef36e8acd3619504ecc4d73feec2b61fd4dfa1
Parts of this are just getting us in sync with upstream, but the
'const' stuff is our own mess. We should kill the *_tz functions
and lose this difference from upstream.
Change-Id: I17d26534ed3f54667143d78147a8c53be56d7b33
This brings us closer to upstream's ToT localtime.c; our main interest
being their alternative fix for the stack usage we addressed in commit
8a8b0c9bfc.
Bug: 14468519
Change-Id: Ic28600115afda7f3158d91255edf422678bac082
This structure is huge (~18000 bytes on arm64) and can blow out
the stack very easily.
Modify the code to allocate these structures instead of leaving them
on the stack.
Bug: 14468519
Change-Id: I774f71235d896d32a14ab1af06f95ca9ef819f52
This costs us about 1000 fewer syscalls, which makes "adb shell strace date"
a lot more readable (which is the reason I've been meaning to fix this for a
long time now), but also actually saves a measurable amount of time.
Longer-term we should try to keep the tzdata mmap(2)ed in like libcore
does.
Change-Id: I1dd9c81968a13d3a6a55ba17f8a7d5c1f38cd103
libc/tzcode/localtime.c: In function 'differ_by_repeat':
libc/tzcode/localtime.c:338:2: error: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type [-Werror=type-limits]
Change-Id: Ic84be6391a66e9d50ed98f41d865387c77a60ffa
localtime.c and strftime.c are still quite different from upstream because of
our extensions, but the other files continue to be identical, and the two
exceptions should be otherwise identical.
From the tzcode2013e release notes:
Changes affecting Godthab time stamps after 2037 if version mismatch
Allow POSIX-like TZ strings where the transition time's hour can
range from -167 through 167, instead of the POSIX-required 0
through 24. E.g., TZ='FJT-12FJST,M10.3.1/146,M1.3.4/75' for the
new Fiji rules. This is a more-compact way to represent
far-future time stamps for America/Godthab, America/Santiago,
Antarctica/Palmer, Asia/Gaza, Asia/Hebron, Asia/Jerusalem,
Pacific/Easter, and Pacific/Fiji. Other zones are unaffected by
this change. (Derived from a suggestion by Arthur David Olson.)
Allow POSIX-like TZ strings where daylight saving time is in
effect all year. E.g., TZ='WART4WARST,J1/0,J365/25' for Western
Argentina Summer Time all year. This supports a more-compact way
to represent the 2013d data for America/Argentina/San_Luis.
Because of the change for San Luis noted above this change does not
affect the current data. (Thanks to Andrew Main (Zefram) for
suggestions that improved this change.)
Where these two TZ changes take effect, there is a minor extension
to the tz file format in that it allows new values for the
embedded TZ-format string, and the tz file format version number
has therefore been increased from 2 to 3 as a precaution.
Version-2-based client code should continue to work as before for
all time stamps before 2038. Existing version-2-based client code
(tzcode, GNU/Linux, Solaris) has been tested on version-3-format
files, and typically works in practice even for time stamps after
2037; the only known exception is America/Godthab.
Changes affecting API
Support for floating-point time_t has been removed.
It was always dicey, and POSIX no longer requires it.
(Thanks to Eric Blake for suggesting to the POSIX committee to
remove it, and thanks to Alan Barrett, Clive D.W. Feather, Andy
Heninger, Arthur David Olson, and Alois Treindl, for reporting
bugs and elucidating some of the corners of the old floating-point
implementation.)
The signatures of 'offtime', 'timeoff', and 'gtime' have been
changed back to the old practice of using 'long' to represent UT
offsets. This had been inadvertently and mistakenly changed to
'int_fast32_t'. (Thanks to Christos Zoulos.)
The code avoids undefined behavior on integer overflow in some
more places, including gmtime, localtime, mktime and zdump.
Changes affecting code internals
Minor changes pacify GCC 4.7.3 and GCC 4.8.1.
Changes affecting documentation and commentary
Documentation and commentary is more careful to distinguish UT in
general from UTC in particular. (Thanks to Steve Allen.)
From the tzcode2013f release notes:
Changes affecting API
The types of the global variables 'timezone' and 'altzone' (if present)
have been changed back to 'long'. This is required for 'timezone'
by POSIX, and for 'altzone' by common practice, e.g., Solaris 11.
These variables were originally 'long' in the tz code, but were
mistakenly changed to 'time_t' in 1987; nobody reported the
incompatibility until now. The difference matters on x32, where
'long' is 32 bits and 'time_t' is 64. (Thanks to Elliott Hughes.)
Change-Id: I14937c42a391ddb865e4d89f0783961bcc6baa21
Well, kinda... localtime.c still contains a bunch of Android-specific
hacks, as does strftime.c. But the other files are now exactly the same
as upstream.
This catches up with several years of bug fixes, and fixes most of the
compiler warnings that were in this code. (Just two remain.)
Bug: 1744909
Change-Id: I2ddfecb6fd408c847397c17afb0fff859e27feef
In the old code, the index was a file to itself, so it made sense to
read until you hit the end of the file. In the new code, the index is
followed by hundreds of KiB of data, so we need to just search the
index.
Bug: 8368791
Change-Id: Icf5f8b5516cf3a93679fa849c9f6cd1cb100e0f1
Normally, the C library implicitly caches your timezone by virtue
of the fact that the prehistoric API assumes a single timezone for
the entire process.
The unfortunate mktime_tz and localtime_tz extensions work around
this, but represent timezones as strings to their callers, so code
that makes heavy use of these needs a cache to be able to perform
acceptably until it can hopefully one day be rewritten to use
java.util.Calendar or icu4c.
Bug: 8270865
Change-Id: I92e3964e86dc33ceac925f819cc5e26ff4203f50