1 /* 2 * This file is part of gtkD. 3 * 4 * gtkD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 5 * it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License 6 * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 7 * of the License, or (at your option) any later version, with 8 * some exceptions, please read the COPYING file. 9 * 10 * gtkD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 11 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 12 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 13 * GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. 14 * 15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License 16 * along with gtkD; if not, write to the Free Software 17 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA 18 */ 19 20 // generated automatically - do not change 21 // find conversion definition on APILookup.txt 22 // implement new conversion functionalities on the wrap.utils pakage 23 24 25 module glib.TimeVal; 26 27 private import glib.MemorySlice; 28 private import glib.Str; 29 private import glib.c.functions; 30 public import glib.c.types; 31 public import gtkc.glibtypes; 32 private import gtkd.Loader; 33 34 35 /** 36 * Represents a precise time, with seconds and microseconds. 37 * Similar to the struct timeval returned by the gettimeofday() 38 * UNIX system call. 39 * 40 * GLib is attempting to unify around the use of 64bit integers to 41 * represent microsecond-precision time. As such, this type will be 42 * removed from a future version of GLib. 43 */ 44 public final class TimeVal 45 { 46 /** the main Gtk struct */ 47 protected GTimeVal* gTimeVal; 48 protected bool ownedRef; 49 50 /** Get the main Gtk struct */ 51 public GTimeVal* getTimeValStruct(bool transferOwnership = false) 52 { 53 if (transferOwnership) 54 ownedRef = false; 55 return gTimeVal; 56 } 57 58 /** the main Gtk struct as a void* */ 59 protected void* getStruct() 60 { 61 return cast(void*)gTimeVal; 62 } 63 64 /** 65 * Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class. 66 */ 67 public this (GTimeVal* gTimeVal, bool ownedRef = false) 68 { 69 this.gTimeVal = gTimeVal; 70 this.ownedRef = ownedRef; 71 } 72 73 ~this () 74 { 75 if ( Linker.isLoaded(LIBRARY_GLIB) && ownedRef ) 76 g_free(gTimeVal); 77 } 78 79 80 /** 81 * seconds 82 */ 83 public @property glong tvSec() 84 { 85 return gTimeVal.tvSec; 86 } 87 88 /** Ditto */ 89 public @property void tvSec(glong value) 90 { 91 gTimeVal.tvSec = value; 92 } 93 94 /** 95 * microseconds 96 */ 97 public @property glong tvUsec() 98 { 99 return gTimeVal.tvUsec; 100 } 101 102 /** Ditto */ 103 public @property void tvUsec(glong value) 104 { 105 gTimeVal.tvUsec = value; 106 } 107 108 /** 109 * Adds the given number of microseconds to @time_. @microseconds can 110 * also be negative to decrease the value of @time_. 111 * 112 * Params: 113 * microseconds = number of microseconds to add to @time 114 */ 115 public void add(glong microseconds) 116 { 117 g_time_val_add(gTimeVal, microseconds); 118 } 119 120 /** 121 * Converts @time_ into an RFC 3339 encoded string, relative to the 122 * Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). This is one of the many formats 123 * allowed by ISO 8601. 124 * 125 * ISO 8601 allows a large number of date/time formats, with or without 126 * punctuation and optional elements. The format returned by this function 127 * is a complete date and time, with optional punctuation included, the 128 * UTC time zone represented as "Z", and the @tv_usec part included if 129 * and only if it is nonzero, i.e. either 130 * "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSZ" or "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS.fffffZ". 131 * 132 * This corresponds to the Internet date/time format defined by 133 * [RFC 3339](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3339.txt), 134 * and to either of the two most-precise formats defined by 135 * the W3C Note 136 * [Date and Time Formats](http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime-19980827). 137 * Both of these documents are profiles of ISO 8601. 138 * 139 * Use g_date_time_format() or g_strdup_printf() if a different 140 * variation of ISO 8601 format is required. 141 * 142 * If @time_ represents a date which is too large to fit into a `struct tm`, 143 * %NULL will be returned. This is platform dependent, but it is safe to assume 144 * years up to 3000 are supported. The return value of g_time_val_to_iso8601() 145 * has been nullable since GLib 2.54; before then, GLib would crash under the 146 * same conditions. 147 * 148 * Returns: a newly allocated string containing an ISO 8601 date, 149 * or %NULL if @time_ was too large 150 * 151 * Since: 2.12 152 */ 153 public string toIso8601() 154 { 155 auto retStr = g_time_val_to_iso8601(gTimeVal); 156 157 scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr); 158 return Str.toString(retStr); 159 } 160 161 /** 162 * Converts a string containing an ISO 8601 encoded date and time 163 * to a #GTimeVal and puts it into @time_. 164 * 165 * @iso_date must include year, month, day, hours, minutes, and 166 * seconds. It can optionally include fractions of a second and a time 167 * zone indicator. (In the absence of any time zone indication, the 168 * timestamp is assumed to be in local time.) 169 * 170 * Params: 171 * isoDate = an ISO 8601 encoded date string 172 * time = a #GTimeVal 173 * 174 * Returns: %TRUE if the conversion was successful. 175 * 176 * Since: 2.12 177 */ 178 public static bool fromIso8601(string isoDate, out TimeVal time) 179 { 180 GTimeVal* outtime = sliceNew!GTimeVal(); 181 182 auto p = g_time_val_from_iso8601(Str.toStringz(isoDate), outtime) != 0; 183 184 time = new TimeVal(outtime, true); 185 186 return p; 187 } 188 189 /** 190 * Equivalent to the UNIX gettimeofday() function, but portable. 191 * 192 * You may find g_get_real_time() to be more convenient. 193 * 194 * Params: 195 * result = #GTimeVal structure in which to store current time. 196 */ 197 public static void getCurrentTime(TimeVal result) 198 { 199 g_get_current_time((result is null) ? null : result.getTimeValStruct()); 200 } 201 202 /** 203 * Queries the system monotonic time. 204 * 205 * The monotonic clock will always increase and doesn't suffer 206 * discontinuities when the user (or NTP) changes the system time. It 207 * may or may not continue to tick during times where the machine is 208 * suspended. 209 * 210 * We try to use the clock that corresponds as closely as possible to 211 * the passage of time as measured by system calls such as poll() but it 212 * may not always be possible to do this. 213 * 214 * Returns: the monotonic time, in microseconds 215 * 216 * Since: 2.28 217 */ 218 public static long getMonotonicTime() 219 { 220 return g_get_monotonic_time(); 221 } 222 223 /** 224 * Queries the system wall-clock time. 225 * 226 * This call is functionally equivalent to g_get_current_time() except 227 * that the return value is often more convenient than dealing with a 228 * #GTimeVal. 229 * 230 * You should only use this call if you are actually interested in the real 231 * wall-clock time. g_get_monotonic_time() is probably more useful for 232 * measuring intervals. 233 * 234 * Returns: the number of microseconds since January 1, 1970 UTC. 235 * 236 * Since: 2.28 237 */ 238 public static long getRealTime() 239 { 240 return g_get_real_time(); 241 } 242 243 /** 244 * Pauses the current thread for the given number of microseconds. 245 * 246 * There are 1 million microseconds per second (represented by the 247 * #G_USEC_PER_SEC macro). g_usleep() may have limited precision, 248 * depending on hardware and operating system; don't rely on the exact 249 * length of the sleep. 250 * 251 * Params: 252 * microseconds = number of microseconds to pause 253 */ 254 public static void usleep(gulong microseconds) 255 { 256 g_usleep(microseconds); 257 } 258 }