timer_getoverrun
, timer_gettime
,
timer_settime
—
per-process timers (REALTIME)
POSIX Real-time Library (librt, -lrt)
#include <time.h>
int
timer_getoverrun
(timer_t
timerid);
int
timer_gettime
(timer_t
timerid, struct
itimerspec *value);
int
timer_settime
(timer_t timerid,
int flags, const struct itimerspec
*restrict value, struct itimerspec *restrict
ovalue);
The timer_gettime
() system call stores the amount of
time until the specified timer, timerid, expires and the
reload value of the timer into the space pointed to by the
value argument. The it_value
member of this structure contains the amount of time before the timer expires,
or zero if the timer is disarmed. This value is returned as the interval until
timer expiration, even if the timer was armed with absolute time. The
it_interval member of value
contains the reload value last set by timer_settime
().
The timer_settime
() system call sets the
time until the next expiration of the timer specified by
timerid from the it_value member
of the value argument and arms the timer if the
it_value member of value is
non-zero. If the specified timer was already armed when
timer_settime
() is called, this call resets the time
until next expiration to the value specified. If the
it_value member of value is
zero, the timer is disarmed. If the timer is disarmed, then pending signal
is removed.
If the flag TIMER_ABSTIME
is not set in
the argument flags,
timer_settime
() behaves as if the time until next
expiration is set to be equal to the interval specified by the
it_value member of value. That
is, the timer expires in it_value nanoseconds from
when the call is made. If the flag TIMER_ABSTIME
is
set in the argument flags,
timer_settime
() behaves as if the time until next
expiration is set to be equal to the difference between the absolute time
specified by the it_value member of value and the current value of the clock
associated with timerid. That is, the timer expires
when the clock reaches the value specified by the
it_value member of value. If the
specified time has already passed, the system call succeeds and the
expiration notification is made.
The reload value of the timer is set to the value specified by the
it_interval member of value.
When a timer is armed with a non-zero it_interval, a
periodic (or repetitive) timer is specified.
Time values that are between two consecutive non-negative integer
multiples of the resolution of the specified timer are rounded up to the
larger multiple of the resolution. Quantization error will not cause the
timer to expire earlier than the rounded time value.
If the argument ovalue is not
NULL
, the timer_settime
()
system call stores, in the location referenced by
ovalue, a value representing the previous amount of
time before the timer would have expired, or zero if the timer was disarmed,
together with the previous timer reload value. Timers do not expire before
their scheduled time.
Only a single signal is queued to the process for a given timer at
any point in time. When a timer for which a signal is still pending expires,
no signal is queued, and a timer overrun will occur. When a timer expiration
signal is accepted by a process, the
timer_getoverrun
() system call returns the timer
expiration overrun count for the specified timer. The overrun count returned
contains the number of extra timer expirations that occurred between the
time the signal was generated (queued) and when it was accepted, up to but
not including an maximum of {DELAYTIMER_MAX
}. If the
number of such extra expirations is greater than or equal to
{DELAYTIMER_MAX
}, then the overrun count is set to
{DELAYTIMER_MAX
}. The value returned by
timer_getoverrun
() applies to the most recent
expiration signal acceptance for the timer. If no expiration signal has been
delivered for the timer, the return value of
timer_getoverrun
() is unspecified.
If the timer_getoverrun
() system call succeeds, it
returns the timer expiration overrun count as explained above. Otherwise the
value -1 is returned, and the global variable errno is
set to indicate the error.
The timer_gettime
() and
timer_settime
() functions return the value 0
if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and the global
variable errno is set to indicate the error.
The timer_settime
() system call will fail if:
- [
EINVAL
]
- A value structure specified a nanosecond value less
than zero or greater than or equal to 1000 million, and the
it_value member of that structure did not specify
zero seconds and nanoseconds.
These system calls may fail if:
- [
EINVAL
]
- The timerid argument does not correspond to an ID
returned by
timer_create
() but not yet deleted by
timer_delete
().
The timer_settime
() system call may fail
if:
- [
EINVAL
]
- The it_interval member of
value is not zero and the timer was created with
notification by creation of a new thread
(sigev_sigev_notify was
SIGEV_THREAD
) and a fixed stack address has been
set in the thread attribute pointed to by
sigev_notify_attributes.
The timer_gettime
() and
timer_settime
() system calls may fail if:
- [
EFAULT
]
- Any arguments point outside the allocated address space or there is a
memory protection fault.
The timer_getoverrun
(),
timer_gettime
(), and
timer_settime
() system calls conform to
IEEE Std 1003.1-2004 (“POSIX.1”).
Support for POSIX per-process timer first appeared in FreeBSD
7.0.