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594 lines
19 KiB
594 lines
19 KiB
// Copyright 2012-2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT |
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// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at |
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// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. |
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// |
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or |
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license |
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// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your |
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed |
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// except according to those terms. |
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|
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//! Temporal quantification. |
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//! |
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//! Example: |
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//! |
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//! ``` |
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//! use std::time::Duration; |
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//! |
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//! let five_seconds = Duration::new(5, 0); |
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//! // both declarations are equivalent |
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//! assert_eq!(Duration::new(5, 0), Duration::from_secs(5)); |
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//! ``` |
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|
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#![stable(feature = "time", since = "1.3.0")] |
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use error::Error; |
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use fmt; |
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use ops::{Add, Sub, AddAssign, SubAssign}; |
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use sys::time; |
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use sys_common::FromInner; |
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#[stable(feature = "time", since = "1.3.0")] |
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pub use core::time::Duration; |
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|
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/// A measurement of a monotonically nondecreasing clock. |
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/// Opaque and useful only with `Duration`. |
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/// |
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/// Instants are always guaranteed to be no less than any previously measured |
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/// instant when created, and are often useful for tasks such as measuring |
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/// benchmarks or timing how long an operation takes. |
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/// |
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/// Note, however, that instants are not guaranteed to be **steady**. In other |
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/// words, each tick of the underlying clock may not be the same length (e.g. |
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/// some seconds may be longer than others). An instant may jump forwards or |
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/// experience time dilation (slow down or speed up), but it will never go |
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/// backwards. |
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/// |
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/// Instants are opaque types that can only be compared to one another. There is |
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/// no method to get "the number of seconds" from an instant. Instead, it only |
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/// allows measuring the duration between two instants (or comparing two |
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/// instants). |
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/// |
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/// The size of an `Instant` struct may vary depending on the target operating |
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/// system. |
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/// |
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/// Example: |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::time::{Duration, Instant}; |
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/// use std::thread::sleep; |
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/// |
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/// fn main() { |
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/// let now = Instant::now(); |
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/// |
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/// // we sleep for 2 seconds |
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/// sleep(Duration::new(2, 0)); |
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/// // it prints '2' |
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/// println!("{}", now.elapsed().as_secs()); |
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/// } |
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/// ``` |
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#[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash)] |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub struct Instant(time::Instant); |
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|
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/// A measurement of the system clock, useful for talking to |
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/// external entities like the file system or other processes. |
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/// |
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/// Distinct from the [`Instant`] type, this time measurement **is not |
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/// monotonic**. This means that you can save a file to the file system, then |
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/// save another file to the file system, **and the second file has a |
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/// `SystemTime` measurement earlier than the first**. In other words, an |
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/// operation that happens after another operation in real time may have an |
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/// earlier `SystemTime`! |
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/// |
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/// Consequently, comparing two `SystemTime` instances to learn about the |
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/// duration between them returns a [`Result`] instead of an infallible [`Duration`] |
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/// to indicate that this sort of time drift may happen and needs to be handled. |
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/// |
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/// Although a `SystemTime` cannot be directly inspected, the [`UNIX_EPOCH`] |
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/// constant is provided in this module as an anchor in time to learn |
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/// information about a `SystemTime`. By calculating the duration from this |
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/// fixed point in time, a `SystemTime` can be converted to a human-readable time, |
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/// or perhaps some other string representation. |
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/// |
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/// The size of a `SystemTime` struct may vary depending on the target operating |
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/// system. |
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/// |
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/// [`Instant`]: ../../std/time/struct.Instant.html |
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/// [`Result`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html |
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/// [`Duration`]: ../../std/time/struct.Duration.html |
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/// [`UNIX_EPOCH`]: ../../std/time/constant.UNIX_EPOCH.html |
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/// |
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/// Example: |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::time::{Duration, SystemTime}; |
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/// use std::thread::sleep; |
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/// |
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/// fn main() { |
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/// let now = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// |
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/// // we sleep for 2 seconds |
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/// sleep(Duration::new(2, 0)); |
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/// match now.elapsed() { |
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/// Ok(elapsed) => { |
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/// // it prints '2' |
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/// println!("{}", elapsed.as_secs()); |
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/// } |
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/// Err(e) => { |
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/// // an error occurred! |
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/// println!("Error: {:?}", e); |
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/// } |
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/// } |
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/// } |
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/// ``` |
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#[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash)] |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub struct SystemTime(time::SystemTime); |
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/// An error returned from the `duration_since` and `elapsed` methods on |
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/// `SystemTime`, used to learn how far in the opposite direction a system time |
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/// lies. |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::thread::sleep; |
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/// use std::time::{Duration, SystemTime}; |
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/// |
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/// let sys_time = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// sleep(Duration::from_secs(1)); |
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/// let new_sys_time = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// match sys_time.duration_since(new_sys_time) { |
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/// Ok(_) => {} |
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/// Err(e) => println!("SystemTimeError difference: {:?}", e.duration()), |
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/// } |
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/// ``` |
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#[derive(Clone, Debug)] |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub struct SystemTimeError(Duration); |
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impl Instant { |
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/// Returns an instant corresponding to "now". |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ``` |
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/// use std::time::Instant; |
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/// |
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/// let now = Instant::now(); |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub fn now() -> Instant { |
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Instant(time::Instant::now()) |
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} |
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/// Returns the amount of time elapsed from another instant to this one. |
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/// |
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/// # Panics |
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/// |
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/// This function will panic if `earlier` is later than `self`. |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::time::{Duration, Instant}; |
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/// use std::thread::sleep; |
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/// |
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/// let now = Instant::now(); |
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/// sleep(Duration::new(1, 0)); |
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/// let new_now = Instant::now(); |
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/// println!("{:?}", new_now.duration_since(now)); |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub fn duration_since(&self, earlier: Instant) -> Duration { |
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self.0.sub_instant(&earlier.0) |
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} |
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/// Returns the amount of time elapsed since this instant was created. |
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/// |
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/// # Panics |
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/// |
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/// This function may panic if the current time is earlier than this |
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/// instant, which is something that can happen if an `Instant` is |
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/// produced synthetically. |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::thread::sleep; |
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/// use std::time::{Duration, Instant}; |
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/// |
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/// let instant = Instant::now(); |
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/// let three_secs = Duration::from_secs(3); |
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/// sleep(three_secs); |
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/// assert!(instant.elapsed() >= three_secs); |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub fn elapsed(&self) -> Duration { |
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Instant::now() - *self |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl Add<Duration> for Instant { |
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type Output = Instant; |
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fn add(self, other: Duration) -> Instant { |
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Instant(self.0.add_duration(&other)) |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time_augmented_assignment", since = "1.9.0")] |
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impl AddAssign<Duration> for Instant { |
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fn add_assign(&mut self, other: Duration) { |
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*self = *self + other; |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl Sub<Duration> for Instant { |
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type Output = Instant; |
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fn sub(self, other: Duration) -> Instant { |
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Instant(self.0.sub_duration(&other)) |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time_augmented_assignment", since = "1.9.0")] |
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impl SubAssign<Duration> for Instant { |
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fn sub_assign(&mut self, other: Duration) { |
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*self = *self - other; |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl Sub<Instant> for Instant { |
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type Output = Duration; |
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fn sub(self, other: Instant) -> Duration { |
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self.duration_since(other) |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl fmt::Debug for Instant { |
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fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { |
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self.0.fmt(f) |
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} |
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} |
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impl SystemTime { |
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/// An anchor in time which can be used to create new `SystemTime` instances or |
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/// learn about where in time a `SystemTime` lies. |
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/// |
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/// This constant is defined to be "1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC" on all systems with |
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/// respect to the system clock. Using `duration_since` on an existing |
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/// `SystemTime` instance can tell how far away from this point in time a |
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/// measurement lies, and using `UNIX_EPOCH + duration` can be used to create a |
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/// `SystemTime` instance to represent another fixed point in time. |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// #![feature(assoc_unix_epoch)] |
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/// use std::time::SystemTime; |
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/// |
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/// match SystemTime::now().duration_since(SystemTime::UNIX_EPOCH) { |
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/// Ok(n) => println!("1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC was {} seconds ago!", n.as_secs()), |
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/// Err(_) => panic!("SystemTime before UNIX EPOCH!"), |
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/// } |
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/// ``` |
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#[unstable(feature = "assoc_unix_epoch", issue = "49502")] |
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pub const UNIX_EPOCH: SystemTime = UNIX_EPOCH; |
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/// Returns the system time corresponding to "now". |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ``` |
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/// use std::time::SystemTime; |
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/// |
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/// let sys_time = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub fn now() -> SystemTime { |
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SystemTime(time::SystemTime::now()) |
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} |
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/// Returns the amount of time elapsed from an earlier point in time. |
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/// |
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/// This function may fail because measurements taken earlier are not |
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/// guaranteed to always be before later measurements (due to anomalies such |
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/// as the system clock being adjusted either forwards or backwards). |
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/// |
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/// If successful, [`Ok`]`(`[`Duration`]`)` is returned where the duration represents |
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/// the amount of time elapsed from the specified measurement to this one. |
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/// |
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/// Returns an [`Err`] if `earlier` is later than `self`, and the error |
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/// contains how far from `self` the time is. |
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/// |
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/// [`Ok`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Ok |
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/// [`Duration`]: ../../std/time/struct.Duration.html |
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/// [`Err`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Err |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ``` |
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/// use std::time::SystemTime; |
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/// |
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/// let sys_time = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// let difference = sys_time.duration_since(sys_time) |
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/// .expect("SystemTime::duration_since failed"); |
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/// println!("{:?}", difference); |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub fn duration_since(&self, earlier: SystemTime) |
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-> Result<Duration, SystemTimeError> { |
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self.0.sub_time(&earlier.0).map_err(SystemTimeError) |
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} |
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/// Returns the amount of time elapsed since this system time was created. |
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/// |
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/// This function may fail as the underlying system clock is susceptible to |
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/// drift and updates (e.g. the system clock could go backwards), so this |
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/// function may not always succeed. If successful, [`Ok`]`(`[`Duration`]`)` is |
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/// returned where the duration represents the amount of time elapsed from |
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/// this time measurement to the current time. |
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/// |
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/// Returns an [`Err`] if `self` is later than the current system time, and |
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/// the error contains how far from the current system time `self` is. |
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/// |
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/// [`Ok`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Ok |
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/// [`Duration`]: ../../std/time/struct.Duration.html |
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/// [`Err`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Err |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::thread::sleep; |
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/// use std::time::{Duration, SystemTime}; |
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/// |
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/// let sys_time = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// let one_sec = Duration::from_secs(1); |
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/// sleep(one_sec); |
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/// assert!(sys_time.elapsed().unwrap() >= one_sec); |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub fn elapsed(&self) -> Result<Duration, SystemTimeError> { |
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SystemTime::now().duration_since(*self) |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl Add<Duration> for SystemTime { |
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type Output = SystemTime; |
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fn add(self, dur: Duration) -> SystemTime { |
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SystemTime(self.0.add_duration(&dur)) |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time_augmented_assignment", since = "1.9.0")] |
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impl AddAssign<Duration> for SystemTime { |
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fn add_assign(&mut self, other: Duration) { |
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*self = *self + other; |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl Sub<Duration> for SystemTime { |
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type Output = SystemTime; |
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fn sub(self, dur: Duration) -> SystemTime { |
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SystemTime(self.0.sub_duration(&dur)) |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time_augmented_assignment", since = "1.9.0")] |
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impl SubAssign<Duration> for SystemTime { |
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fn sub_assign(&mut self, other: Duration) { |
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*self = *self - other; |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl fmt::Debug for SystemTime { |
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fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { |
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self.0.fmt(f) |
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} |
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} |
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/// An anchor in time which can be used to create new `SystemTime` instances or |
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/// learn about where in time a `SystemTime` lies. |
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/// |
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/// This constant is defined to be "1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC" on all systems with |
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/// respect to the system clock. Using `duration_since` on an existing |
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/// [`SystemTime`] instance can tell how far away from this point in time a |
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/// measurement lies, and using `UNIX_EPOCH + duration` can be used to create a |
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/// [`SystemTime`] instance to represent another fixed point in time. |
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/// |
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/// [`SystemTime`]: ../../std/time/struct.SystemTime.html |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::time::{SystemTime, UNIX_EPOCH}; |
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/// |
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/// match SystemTime::now().duration_since(UNIX_EPOCH) { |
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/// Ok(n) => println!("1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC was {} seconds ago!", n.as_secs()), |
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/// Err(_) => panic!("SystemTime before UNIX EPOCH!"), |
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/// } |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub const UNIX_EPOCH: SystemTime = SystemTime(time::UNIX_EPOCH); |
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impl SystemTimeError { |
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/// Returns the positive duration which represents how far forward the |
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/// second system time was from the first. |
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/// |
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/// A `SystemTimeError` is returned from the [`duration_since`] and [`elapsed`] |
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/// methods of [`SystemTime`] whenever the second system time represents a point later |
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/// in time than the `self` of the method call. |
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/// |
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/// [`duration_since`]: ../../std/time/struct.SystemTime.html#method.duration_since |
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/// [`elapsed`]: ../../std/time/struct.SystemTime.html#method.elapsed |
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/// [`SystemTime`]: ../../std/time/struct.SystemTime.html |
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/// |
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/// # Examples |
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/// |
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/// ```no_run |
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/// use std::thread::sleep; |
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/// use std::time::{Duration, SystemTime}; |
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/// |
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/// let sys_time = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// sleep(Duration::from_secs(1)); |
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/// let new_sys_time = SystemTime::now(); |
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/// match sys_time.duration_since(new_sys_time) { |
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/// Ok(_) => {} |
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/// Err(e) => println!("SystemTimeError difference: {:?}", e.duration()), |
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/// } |
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/// ``` |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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pub fn duration(&self) -> Duration { |
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self.0 |
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} |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl Error for SystemTimeError { |
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fn description(&self) -> &str { "other time was not earlier than self" } |
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} |
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")] |
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impl fmt::Display for SystemTimeError { |
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fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { |
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write!(f, "second time provided was later than self") |
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} |
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} |
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impl FromInner<time::SystemTime> for SystemTime { |
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fn from_inner(time: time::SystemTime) -> SystemTime { |
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SystemTime(time) |
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} |
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} |
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#[cfg(test)] |
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mod tests { |
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use super::{Instant, SystemTime, Duration, UNIX_EPOCH}; |
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macro_rules! assert_almost_eq { |
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($a:expr, $b:expr) => ({ |
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let (a, b) = ($a, $b); |
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if a != b { |
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let (a, b) = if a > b {(a, b)} else {(b, a)}; |
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assert!(a - Duration::new(0, 100) <= b); |
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} |
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}) |
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} |
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#[test] |
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fn instant_monotonic() { |
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let a = Instant::now(); |
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let b = Instant::now(); |
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assert!(b >= a); |
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} |
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#[test] |
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fn instant_elapsed() { |
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let a = Instant::now(); |
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a.elapsed(); |
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} |
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#[test] |
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fn instant_math() { |
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let a = Instant::now(); |
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let b = Instant::now(); |
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let dur = b.duration_since(a); |
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assert_almost_eq!(b - dur, a); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a + dur, b); |
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let second = Duration::new(1, 0); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a - second + second, a); |
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} |
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#[test] |
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#[should_panic] |
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fn instant_duration_panic() { |
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let a = Instant::now(); |
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(a - Duration::new(1, 0)).duration_since(a); |
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} |
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#[test] |
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fn system_time_math() { |
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let a = SystemTime::now(); |
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let b = SystemTime::now(); |
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match b.duration_since(a) { |
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Ok(dur) if dur == Duration::new(0, 0) => { |
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assert_almost_eq!(a, b); |
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} |
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Ok(dur) => { |
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assert!(b > a); |
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assert_almost_eq!(b - dur, a); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a + dur, b); |
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} |
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Err(dur) => { |
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let dur = dur.duration(); |
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assert!(a > b); |
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assert_almost_eq!(b + dur, a); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a - dur, b); |
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} |
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} |
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let second = Duration::new(1, 0); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a.duration_since(a - second).unwrap(), second); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a.duration_since(a + second).unwrap_err() |
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.duration(), second); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a - second + second, a); |
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// A difference of 80 and 800 years cannot fit inside a 32-bit time_t |
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if !(cfg!(unix) && ::mem::size_of::<::libc::time_t>() <= 4) { |
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let eighty_years = second * 60 * 60 * 24 * 365 * 80; |
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assert_almost_eq!(a - eighty_years + eighty_years, a); |
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assert_almost_eq!(a - (eighty_years * 10) + (eighty_years * 10), a); |
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} |
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let one_second_from_epoch = UNIX_EPOCH + Duration::new(1, 0); |
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let one_second_from_epoch2 = UNIX_EPOCH + Duration::new(0, 500_000_000) |
|
+ Duration::new(0, 500_000_000); |
|
assert_eq!(one_second_from_epoch, one_second_from_epoch2); |
|
} |
|
|
|
#[test] |
|
fn system_time_elapsed() { |
|
let a = SystemTime::now(); |
|
drop(a.elapsed()); |
|
} |
|
|
|
#[test] |
|
fn since_epoch() { |
|
let ts = SystemTime::now(); |
|
let a = ts.duration_since(UNIX_EPOCH).unwrap(); |
|
let b = ts.duration_since(UNIX_EPOCH - Duration::new(1, 0)).unwrap(); |
|
assert!(b > a); |
|
assert_eq!(b - a, Duration::new(1, 0)); |
|
|
|
let thirty_years = Duration::new(1, 0) * 60 * 60 * 24 * 365 * 30; |
|
|
|
// Right now for CI this test is run in an emulator, and apparently the |
|
// aarch64 emulator's sense of time is that we're still living in the |
|
// 70s. |
|
// |
|
// Otherwise let's assume that we're all running computers later than |
|
// 2000. |
|
if !cfg!(target_arch = "aarch64") { |
|
assert!(a > thirty_years); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// let's assume that we're all running computers earlier than 2090. |
|
// Should give us ~70 years to fix this! |
|
let hundred_twenty_years = thirty_years * 4; |
|
assert!(a < hundred_twenty_years); |
|
} |
|
}
|
|
|