I am once again going from Windows to Linux, I have to port a function from Windows to Linux that calculates NTP time. Seems simple but the format is in Windows FILETIME format. I sort of have an idea what the differences are but so far I can not correctly convert my Linux time to the windows filetime format. Does anyone have any ideas on how to do this?
I have seen some articles on how to do this but they all use win32 functions and I can't use them! I can post the windows code if this makes no sense, thanks.
They also take the current time and subtract it from January 1st 1900 to get the delta to find NTP, I would assume in Linux I just add the const unsigned long EPOCH = 2208988800UL to my time to get this result?
Thanks.
First, why 1601? Because the Gregorian Calendar repeats itself every 400 years, and the proleptic Gregorian Calendar starts with 0001-01-01. So 1601 was the last cycle start before 1980(1970,...) and that simplifies the calculations. (Oh, and that's why the 3rd millenium started on 2001-01-01, and not on 2000-01-01...)
To create something like a NTP time stamp with a binary fraction from a FILETIME,
Assuming you fetch the timestamp value from scrapping some website. You define
The value you fetch might need to be divided by 1000.
then you do as follow:
The Microsoft documentation for the
FILETIME
structure explains what it is. The basic idea is that a WindowsFILETIME
counts by steps of 10-7 seconds (100-nanosecond intervals) from 1 Jan 1601 (why 1601? no idea...). In Linux you can obtain time in microseconds (10-6) from 1 Jan 1970 usinggettimeofday()
. Thus the following C function does the job: