1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3 //! Time related primitives.
4 //!
5 //! This module contains the kernel APIs related to time and timers that
6 //! have been ported or wrapped for usage by Rust code in the kernel.
7 //!
8 //! There are two types in this module:
9 //!
10 //! - The [`Instant`] type represents a specific point in time.
11 //! - The [`Delta`] type represents a span of time.
12 //!
13 //! Note that the C side uses `ktime_t` type to represent both. However, timestamp
14 //! and timedelta are different. To avoid confusion, we use two different types.
15 //!
16 //! A [`Instant`] object can be created by calling the [`Instant::now()`] function.
17 //! It represents a point in time at which the object was created.
18 //! By calling the [`Instant::elapsed()`] method, a [`Delta`] object representing
19 //! the elapsed time can be created. The [`Delta`] object can also be created
20 //! by subtracting two [`Instant`] objects.
21 //!
22 //! A [`Delta`] type supports methods to retrieve the duration in various units.
23 //!
24 //! C header: [`include/linux/jiffies.h`](srctree/include/linux/jiffies.h).
25 //! C header: [`include/linux/ktime.h`](srctree/include/linux/ktime.h).
26
27 use core::marker::PhantomData;
28
29 pub mod delay;
30 pub mod hrtimer;
31
32 /// The number of nanoseconds per microsecond.
33 pub const NSEC_PER_USEC: i64 = bindings::NSEC_PER_USEC as i64;
34
35 /// The number of nanoseconds per millisecond.
36 pub const NSEC_PER_MSEC: i64 = bindings::NSEC_PER_MSEC as i64;
37
38 /// The number of nanoseconds per second.
39 pub const NSEC_PER_SEC: i64 = bindings::NSEC_PER_SEC as i64;
40
41 /// The time unit of Linux kernel. One jiffy equals (1/HZ) second.
42 pub type Jiffies = crate::ffi::c_ulong;
43
44 /// The millisecond time unit.
45 pub type Msecs = crate::ffi::c_uint;
46
47 /// Converts milliseconds to jiffies.
48 #[inline]
msecs_to_jiffies(msecs: Msecs) -> Jiffies49 pub fn msecs_to_jiffies(msecs: Msecs) -> Jiffies {
50 // SAFETY: The `__msecs_to_jiffies` function is always safe to call no
51 // matter what the argument is.
52 unsafe { bindings::__msecs_to_jiffies(msecs) }
53 }
54
55 /// Trait for clock sources.
56 ///
57 /// Selection of the clock source depends on the use case. In some cases the usage of a
58 /// particular clock is mandatory, e.g. in network protocols, filesystems. In other
59 /// cases the user of the clock has to decide which clock is best suited for the
60 /// purpose. In most scenarios clock [`Monotonic`] is the best choice as it
61 /// provides a accurate monotonic notion of time (leap second smearing ignored).
62 pub trait ClockSource {
63 /// The kernel clock ID associated with this clock source.
64 ///
65 /// This constant corresponds to the C side `clockid_t` value.
66 const ID: bindings::clockid_t;
67
68 /// Get the current time from the clock source.
69 ///
70 /// The function must return a value in the range from 0 to `KTIME_MAX`.
ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t71 fn ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t;
72 }
73
74 /// A monotonically increasing clock.
75 ///
76 /// A nonsettable system-wide clock that represents monotonic time since as
77 /// described by POSIX, "some unspecified point in the past". On Linux, that
78 /// point corresponds to the number of seconds that the system has been
79 /// running since it was booted.
80 ///
81 /// The CLOCK_MONOTONIC clock is not affected by discontinuous jumps in the
82 /// CLOCK_REAL (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the
83 /// clock), but is affected by frequency adjustments. This clock does not
84 /// count time that the system is suspended.
85 pub struct Monotonic;
86
87 impl ClockSource for Monotonic {
88 const ID: bindings::clockid_t = bindings::CLOCK_MONOTONIC as bindings::clockid_t;
89
ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t90 fn ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t {
91 // SAFETY: It is always safe to call `ktime_get()` outside of NMI context.
92 unsafe { bindings::ktime_get() }
93 }
94 }
95
96 /// A settable system-wide clock that measures real (i.e., wall-clock) time.
97 ///
98 /// Setting this clock requires appropriate privileges. This clock is
99 /// affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system
100 /// administrator manually changes the clock), and by frequency adjustments
101 /// performed by NTP and similar applications via adjtime(3), adjtimex(2),
102 /// clock_adjtime(2), and ntp_adjtime(3). This clock normally counts the
103 /// number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 Coordinated Universal Time
104 /// (UTC) except that it ignores leap seconds; near a leap second it may be
105 /// adjusted by leap second smearing to stay roughly in sync with UTC. Leap
106 /// second smearing applies frequency adjustments to the clock to speed up
107 /// or slow down the clock to account for the leap second without
108 /// discontinuities in the clock. If leap second smearing is not applied,
109 /// the clock will experience discontinuity around leap second adjustment.
110 pub struct RealTime;
111
112 impl ClockSource for RealTime {
113 const ID: bindings::clockid_t = bindings::CLOCK_REALTIME as bindings::clockid_t;
114
ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t115 fn ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t {
116 // SAFETY: It is always safe to call `ktime_get_real()` outside of NMI context.
117 unsafe { bindings::ktime_get_real() }
118 }
119 }
120
121 /// A monotonic that ticks while system is suspended.
122 ///
123 /// A nonsettable system-wide clock that is identical to CLOCK_MONOTONIC,
124 /// except that it also includes any time that the system is suspended. This
125 /// allows applications to get a suspend-aware monotonic clock without
126 /// having to deal with the complications of CLOCK_REALTIME, which may have
127 /// discontinuities if the time is changed using settimeofday(2) or similar.
128 pub struct BootTime;
129
130 impl ClockSource for BootTime {
131 const ID: bindings::clockid_t = bindings::CLOCK_BOOTTIME as bindings::clockid_t;
132
ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t133 fn ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t {
134 // SAFETY: It is always safe to call `ktime_get_boottime()` outside of NMI context.
135 unsafe { bindings::ktime_get_boottime() }
136 }
137 }
138
139 /// International Atomic Time.
140 ///
141 /// A system-wide clock derived from wall-clock time but counting leap seconds.
142 ///
143 /// This clock is coupled to CLOCK_REALTIME and will be set when CLOCK_REALTIME is
144 /// set, or when the offset to CLOCK_REALTIME is changed via adjtimex(2). This
145 /// usually happens during boot and **should** not happen during normal operations.
146 /// However, if NTP or another application adjusts CLOCK_REALTIME by leap second
147 /// smearing, this clock will not be precise during leap second smearing.
148 ///
149 /// The acronym TAI refers to International Atomic Time.
150 pub struct Tai;
151
152 impl ClockSource for Tai {
153 const ID: bindings::clockid_t = bindings::CLOCK_TAI as bindings::clockid_t;
154
ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t155 fn ktime_get() -> bindings::ktime_t {
156 // SAFETY: It is always safe to call `ktime_get_tai()` outside of NMI context.
157 unsafe { bindings::ktime_get_clocktai() }
158 }
159 }
160
161 /// A specific point in time.
162 ///
163 /// # Invariants
164 ///
165 /// The `inner` value is in the range from 0 to `KTIME_MAX`.
166 #[repr(transparent)]
167 #[derive(PartialEq, PartialOrd, Eq, Ord)]
168 pub struct Instant<C: ClockSource> {
169 inner: bindings::ktime_t,
170 _c: PhantomData<C>,
171 }
172
173 impl<C: ClockSource> Clone for Instant<C> {
clone(&self) -> Self174 fn clone(&self) -> Self {
175 *self
176 }
177 }
178
179 impl<C: ClockSource> Copy for Instant<C> {}
180
181 impl<C: ClockSource> Instant<C> {
182 /// Get the current time from the clock source.
183 #[inline]
now() -> Self184 pub fn now() -> Self {
185 // INVARIANT: The `ClockSource::ktime_get()` function returns a value in the range
186 // from 0 to `KTIME_MAX`.
187 Self {
188 inner: C::ktime_get(),
189 _c: PhantomData,
190 }
191 }
192
193 /// Return the amount of time elapsed since the [`Instant`].
194 #[inline]
elapsed(&self) -> Delta195 pub fn elapsed(&self) -> Delta {
196 Self::now() - *self
197 }
198
199 #[inline]
as_nanos(&self) -> i64200 pub(crate) fn as_nanos(&self) -> i64 {
201 self.inner
202 }
203 }
204
205 impl<C: ClockSource> core::ops::Sub for Instant<C> {
206 type Output = Delta;
207
208 // By the type invariant, it never overflows.
209 #[inline]
sub(self, other: Instant<C>) -> Delta210 fn sub(self, other: Instant<C>) -> Delta {
211 Delta {
212 nanos: self.inner - other.inner,
213 }
214 }
215 }
216
217 /// A span of time.
218 ///
219 /// This struct represents a span of time, with its value stored as nanoseconds.
220 /// The value can represent any valid i64 value, including negative, zero, and
221 /// positive numbers.
222 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, PartialOrd, Eq, Ord, Debug)]
223 pub struct Delta {
224 nanos: i64,
225 }
226
227 impl Delta {
228 /// A span of time equal to zero.
229 pub const ZERO: Self = Self { nanos: 0 };
230
231 /// Create a new [`Delta`] from a number of microseconds.
232 ///
233 /// The `micros` can range from -9_223_372_036_854_775 to 9_223_372_036_854_775.
234 /// If `micros` is outside this range, `i64::MIN` is used for negative values,
235 /// and `i64::MAX` is used for positive values due to saturation.
236 #[inline]
from_micros(micros: i64) -> Self237 pub const fn from_micros(micros: i64) -> Self {
238 Self {
239 nanos: micros.saturating_mul(NSEC_PER_USEC),
240 }
241 }
242
243 /// Create a new [`Delta`] from a number of milliseconds.
244 ///
245 /// The `millis` can range from -9_223_372_036_854 to 9_223_372_036_854.
246 /// If `millis` is outside this range, `i64::MIN` is used for negative values,
247 /// and `i64::MAX` is used for positive values due to saturation.
248 #[inline]
from_millis(millis: i64) -> Self249 pub const fn from_millis(millis: i64) -> Self {
250 Self {
251 nanos: millis.saturating_mul(NSEC_PER_MSEC),
252 }
253 }
254
255 /// Create a new [`Delta`] from a number of seconds.
256 ///
257 /// The `secs` can range from -9_223_372_036 to 9_223_372_036.
258 /// If `secs` is outside this range, `i64::MIN` is used for negative values,
259 /// and `i64::MAX` is used for positive values due to saturation.
260 #[inline]
from_secs(secs: i64) -> Self261 pub const fn from_secs(secs: i64) -> Self {
262 Self {
263 nanos: secs.saturating_mul(NSEC_PER_SEC),
264 }
265 }
266
267 /// Return `true` if the [`Delta`] spans no time.
268 #[inline]
is_zero(self) -> bool269 pub fn is_zero(self) -> bool {
270 self.as_nanos() == 0
271 }
272
273 /// Return `true` if the [`Delta`] spans a negative amount of time.
274 #[inline]
is_negative(self) -> bool275 pub fn is_negative(self) -> bool {
276 self.as_nanos() < 0
277 }
278
279 /// Return the number of nanoseconds in the [`Delta`].
280 #[inline]
as_nanos(self) -> i64281 pub const fn as_nanos(self) -> i64 {
282 self.nanos
283 }
284
285 /// Return the smallest number of microseconds greater than or equal
286 /// to the value in the [`Delta`].
287 #[inline]
as_micros_ceil(self) -> i64288 pub fn as_micros_ceil(self) -> i64 {
289 #[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
290 {
291 self.as_nanos().saturating_add(NSEC_PER_USEC - 1) / NSEC_PER_USEC
292 }
293
294 #[cfg(not(CONFIG_64BIT))]
295 // SAFETY: It is always safe to call `ktime_to_us()` with any value.
296 unsafe {
297 bindings::ktime_to_us(self.as_nanos().saturating_add(NSEC_PER_USEC - 1))
298 }
299 }
300
301 /// Return the number of milliseconds in the [`Delta`].
302 #[inline]
as_millis(self) -> i64303 pub fn as_millis(self) -> i64 {
304 #[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
305 {
306 self.as_nanos() / NSEC_PER_MSEC
307 }
308
309 #[cfg(not(CONFIG_64BIT))]
310 // SAFETY: It is always safe to call `ktime_to_ms()` with any value.
311 unsafe {
312 bindings::ktime_to_ms(self.as_nanos())
313 }
314 }
315 }
316