Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Damien George
8f20cdc353 all: Rename absolute time-based functions to include "epoch".
For time-based functions that work with absolute time there is the need for
an Epoch, to set the zero-point at which the absolute time starts counting.
Such functions include time.time() and filesystem stat return values.  And
different ports may use a different Epoch.

To make it clearer what functions use the Epoch (whatever it may be), and
make the ports more consistent with their use of the Epoch, this commit
renames all Epoch related functions to include the word "epoch" in their
name (and remove references to "2000").

Along with this rename, the following things have changed:

- mp_hal_time_ns() is now specified to return the number of nanoseconds
  since the Epoch, rather than since 1970 (but since this is an internal
  function it doesn't change anything for the user).

- littlefs timestamps on the esp8266 have been fixed (they were previously
  off by 30 years in nanoseconds).

Otherwise, there is no functional change made by this commit.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-09-18 17:20:34 +10:00
Damien George
badd351150 lib/timeutils: Add helper functions to deal with nanosecs since 1970.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-08-22 15:41:10 +10:00
Damien George
69661f3343 all: Reformat C and Python source code with tools/codeformat.py.
This is run with uncrustify 0.70.1, and black 19.10b0.
2020-02-28 10:33:03 +11:00
Alexander Steffen
55f33240f3 all: Use the name MicroPython consistently in comments
There were several different spellings of MicroPython present in comments,
when there should be only one.
2017-07-31 18:35:40 +10:00
Alexander Steffen
299bc62586 all: Unify header guard usage.
The code conventions suggest using header guards, but do not define how
those should look like and instead point to existing files. However, not
all existing files follow the same scheme, sometimes omitting header guards
altogether, sometimes using non-standard names, making it easy to
accidentally pick a "wrong" example.

This commit ensures that all header files of the MicroPython project (that
were not simply copied from somewhere else) follow the same pattern, that
was already present in the majority of files, especially in the py folder.

The rules are as follows.

Naming convention:
* start with the words MICROPY_INCLUDED
* contain the full path to the file
* replace special characters with _

In addition, there are no empty lines before #ifndef, between #ifndef and
one empty line before #endif. #endif is followed by a comment containing
the name of the guard macro.

py/grammar.h cannot use header guards by design, since it has to be
included multiple times in a single C file. Several other files also do not
need header guards as they are only used internally and guaranteed to be
included only once:
* MICROPY_MPHALPORT_H
* mpconfigboard.h
* mpconfigport.h
* mpthreadport.h
* pin_defs_*.h
* qstrdefs*.h
2017-07-18 11:57:39 +10:00
Ville Skyttä
ca16c38210 various: Spelling fixes 2017-05-29 11:36:05 +03:00
Damien George
b6c7e4b143 all: Use full path name when including mp-readline/timeutils/netutils.
This follows the pattern of how all other headers are now included, and
makes it explicit where the header file comes from.  This patch also
removes -I options from Makefile's that specify the mp-readline/timeutils/
netutils directories, which are no longer needed.
2017-03-31 22:29:39 +11:00
Paul Sokolovsky
1bc8aa85a4 lib/timeutils/timeutils: Fix pedantic warning in coverage build. 2016-06-03 10:46:15 +03:00
Paul Sokolovsky
993cc3611a lib/timeutils/timeutils: timeutils_mktime may accept negative time values.
And will normalize them.
2016-06-02 22:52:42 +03:00
Paul Sokolovsky
50ef851bee lib/timeutils/timeutils: Typo fix in comment. 2016-04-27 18:52:57 +03:00
Dave Hylands
a3a14b9db7 lib: Fix some issues in timeutils
In particular, dates prior to Mar 1, 2000 are screwed up.

The easiest way to see this is to do:

>>> import time
>>> time.localtime(0)
(2000, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 5, 1)
>>> time.localtime(1)
(2000, 1, 2, 233, 197, 197, 6, 2)

With this patch, we instead get:
>>> import time
>>> time.localtime(1)
(2000, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 5, 1)

Doh - In C % is NOT a modulo operator, it's a remainder operator.
2015-05-21 23:31:50 +03:00
Josef Gajdusek
1db4253886 lib: Move time utility functions to common library. 2015-05-13 00:12:54 +01:00