[LEAPSECS] LEAPSECS Digest, Vol 34, Issue 8
Magnus Danielson
magnus at rubidium.dyndns.org
Sat Oct 10 09:28:50 EDT 2009
M. Warner Losh wrote:
> In message: <4ACFF759.3090903 at rubidium.dyndns.org>
> Magnus Danielson <magnus at rubidium.dyndns.org> writes:
> : M. Warner Losh wrote:
> : > In message: <13205C286662DE4387D9AF3AC30EF456AFA8697A05 at EMBX01-WF.jnpr.net>
> : > Jonathan Natale <jnatale at juniper.net> writes:
> : > : AFAIK, routers also just re-sych. The OS's are not capable of
> : > : xx:xx:60 time. For reading router logs this is fine in most cases
> : > : which is all NTP is really for. I don't think they simply step the
> : > : time, I am pretty sure they do tweak the freq. I could be wrong and
> : > : I am NOT representing Juniper here, just my thoughts. :-)
> : >
> : > FreeBSD will cope with the xx:xx:60 second correctly, assuming it is
> : > told about the leapsecond soon enough. Not all other parts of the
> : > system can cope with the xx:xx:60, but that's a posix time_t
> : > limitation that you can't do anything about[*].
> : >
> : > Warner
> : >
> : > [*] The 'right' timezone files attempt to do things correctly, but in
> : > doing so they break time_t definition...
> :
> : I assumed you meant to say that it breaks the POSIX time_t definition.
>
> Yes. The most current time_t definition is the one codified by POSIX.
> Older standards are fuzzier about what time_t really means.
Indeed. As there exist several time_t definitions, I wanted to make sure
you was refering to the POSIX mapping of UTC time into time_t, which
forms an "interesting" timescale of its own, almost but not close
enought to UTC.
Cheers,
Magnus
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