9. Clock Manager¶
9.1. Introduction¶
The clock manager provides support for time of day and other time related capabilities. The directives provided by the clock manager are:
rtems_clock_set - Set date and time
rtems_clock_get_tod - Get date and time in TOD format
rtems_clock_get_tod_timeval - Get date and time in timeval format
rtems_clock_get_seconds_since_epoch - Get seconds since epoch
rtems_clock_get_ticks_per_second - Get ticks per second
rtems_clock_get_ticks_since_boot - Get current ticks counter value
rtems_clock_tick_later - Get tick value in the future
rtems_clock_tick_later_usec - Get tick value in the future in microseconds
rtems_clock_tick_before - Is tick value is before a point in time
rtems_clock_get_uptime - Get time since boot
rtems_clock_get_uptime_timeval - Get time since boot in timeval format
rtems_clock_get_uptime_seconds - Get seconds since boot
rtems_clock_get_uptime_nanoseconds - Get nanoseconds since boot
9.2. Background¶
9.2.1. Required Support¶
For the features provided by the clock manager to be utilized, periodic timer interrupts are required. Therefore, a real-time clock or hardware timer is necessary to create the timer interrupts. The clock tick directive is normally called by the timer ISR to announce to RTEMS that a system clock tick has occurred. Elapsed time is measured in ticks. A tick is defined to be an integral number of microseconds which is specified by the user in the Configuration Table.
9.2.2. Time and Date Data Structures¶
The clock facilities of the clock manager operate upon calendar time. These directives utilize the following date and time structure for the native time and date format:
struct rtems_tod_control {
uint32_t year; /* greater than 1987 */
uint32_t month; /* 1 - 12 */
uint32_t day; /* 1 - 31 */
uint32_t hour; /* 0 - 23 */
uint32_t minute; /* 0 - 59 */
uint32_t second; /* 0 - 59 */
uint32_t ticks; /* elapsed between seconds */
};
typedef struct rtems_tod_control rtems_time_of_day;
The native date and time format is the only format supported when setting the
system date and time using the rtems_clock_set
directive. Some
applications expect to operate on a UNIX-style date and time data structure.
The rtems_clock_get_tod_timeval
always returns the date and time in
struct timeval
format.
The struct timeval
data structure has two fields: tv_sec
and
tv_usec
which are seconds and microseconds, respectively. The tv_sec
field in this data structure is the number of seconds since the POSIX epoch of
January 1, 1970 but will never be prior to the RTEMS epoch of January 1,
1988.
9.2.3. Clock Tick and Timeslicing¶
Timeslicing is a task scheduling discipline in which tasks of equal priority are executed for a specific period of time before control of the CPU is passed to another task. It is also sometimes referred to as the automatic round-robin scheduling algorithm. The length of time allocated to each task is known as the quantum or timeslice.
The system’s timeslice is defined as an integral number of ticks, and is specified in the Configuration Table. The timeslice is defined for the entire system of tasks, but timeslicing is enabled and disabled on a per task basis.
The clock tick directives implement timeslicing by decrementing the running task’s time-remaining counter when both timeslicing and preemption are enabled. If the task’s timeslice has expired, then that task will be preempted if there exists a ready task of equal priority.
9.2.4. Delays¶
A sleep timer allows a task to delay for a given interval or up until a given
time, and then wake and continue execution. This type of timer is created
automatically by the rtems_task_wake_after
and rtems_task_wake_when
directives and, as a result, does not have an RTEMS ID. Once activated, a
sleep timer cannot be explicitly deleted. Each task may activate one and only
one sleep timer at a time.
9.2.5. Timeouts¶
Timeouts are a special type of timer automatically created when the timeout
option is used on the rtems_message_queue_receive
, rtems_event_receive
,
rtems_semaphore_obtain
and rtems_region_get_segment
directives. Each
task may have one and only one timeout active at a time. When a timeout
expires, it unblocks the task with a timeout status code.
9.3. Operations¶
9.3.1. Announcing a Tick¶
RTEMS provides the several clock tick directives which are called from the user’s real-time clock ISR to inform RTEMS that a tick has elapsed. Depending on the timer hardware capabilities the clock driver must choose the most appropriate clock tick directive. The tick frequency value, defined in microseconds, is a configuration parameter found in the Configuration Table. RTEMS divides one million microseconds (one second) by the number of microseconds per tick to determine the number of calls to the clock tick directive per second. The frequency of clock tick calls determines the resolution (granularity) for all time dependent RTEMS actions. For example, calling the clock tick directive ten times per second yields a higher resolution than calling the clock tick two times per second. The clock tick directives are responsible for maintaining both calendar time and the dynamic set of timers.
9.3.2. Setting the Time¶
The rtems_clock_set
directive allows a task or an ISR to set the date and
time maintained by RTEMS. If setting the date and time causes any outstanding
timers to pass their deadline, then the expired timers will be fired during the
invocation of the rtems_clock_set
directive.
9.3.3. Obtaining the Time¶
RTEMS provides multiple directives which can be used by an application to obtain the current date and time or date and time related information. These directives allow a task or an ISR to obtain the current date and time or date and time related information. The current date and time can be returned in either native or UNIX-style format. Additionally, the application can obtain date and time related information such as the number of seconds since the RTEMS epoch, the number of ticks since the executive was initialized, and the number of ticks per second. The following directives are available:
rtems_clock_get_tod
obtain native style date and time
rtems_clock_get_time_value
obtain UNIX-style date and time
rtems_clock_get_ticks_since_boot
obtain number of ticks since RTEMS was initialized
rtems_clock_get_seconds_since_epoch
obtain number of seconds since RTEMS epoch
rtems_clock_get_ticks_per_second
obtain number of clock ticks per second
Calendar time operations will return an error code if invoked before the date and time have been set.
9.3.4. Transition Advice for the Removed rtems_clock_get()¶
The directive CLOCK_GET - Get date and time information took an untyped pointer with an options argument to indicate the time information desired. This has been replaced with a set of typed directives:
These directives directly correspond to what were previously referred to as
clock options. These strongly typed directives were available for multiple
releases in parallel with rtems_clock_get()
until that directive was
removed.
9.4. Directives¶
This section details the clock manager’s directives. A subsection is dedicated to each of this manager’s directives and describes the calling sequence, related constants, usage, and status codes.
9.4.1. CLOCK_SET - Set date and time¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_clock_set( rtems_time_of_day *time_buffer );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
date and time set successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
time_buffer
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_CLOCK
invalid time of day
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive sets the system date and time. The date, time, and ticks in the time_buffer structure are all range-checked, and an error is returned if any one is out of its valid range.
- NOTES:
Years before 1988 are invalid.
The system date and time are based on the configured tick rate (number of microseconds in a tick).
Setting the time forward may cause a higher priority task, blocked waiting on a specific time, to be made ready. In this case, the calling task will be preempted after the next clock tick.
Re-initializing RTEMS causes the system date and time to be reset to an uninitialized state. Another call to
rtems_clock_set
is required to re-initialize the system date and time to application specific specifications.
9.4.2. CLOCK_GET_TOD - Get date and time in TOD format¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_clock_get_tod( rtems_time_of_day *time_buffer );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
current time obtained successfully
RTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
system date and time is not set
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
time_buffer
is NULL- DESCRIPTION:
This directive obtains the system date and time. If the date and time has not been set with a previous call to
rtems_clock_set
, then theRTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
status code is returned.- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted. Re-initializing RTEMS causes the system date and time to be reset to an uninitialized state. Another call to
rtems_clock_set
is required to re-initialize the system date and time to application specific specifications.
9.4.3. CLOCK_GET_TOD_TIMEVAL - Get date and time in timeval format¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_clock_get_tod_interval( struct timeval *time );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive obtains the system date and time in POSIX
struct timeval
format. If the date and time has not been set with a previous call tortems_clock_set
, then theRTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
status code is returned.- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted. Re-initializing RTEMS causes the system date and time to be reset to an uninitialized state. Another call to
rtems_clock_set
is required to re-initialize the system date and time to application specific specifications.
9.4.4. CLOCK_GET_SECONDS_SINCE_EPOCH - Get seconds since epoch¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_clock_get_seconds_since_epoch( rtems_interval *the_interval );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the number of seconds since the RTEMS epoch and the current system date and time. If the date and time has not been set with a previous call to
rtems_clock_set
, then theRTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
status code is returned.- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted. Re-initializing RTEMS causes the system date and time to be reset to an uninitialized state. Another call to
rtems_clock_set
is required to re-initialize the system date and time to application specific specifications.
9.4.5. CLOCK_GET_TICKS_PER_SECOND - Get ticks per second¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_interval rtems_clock_get_ticks_per_second(void);
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
NONE
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the number of clock ticks per second. This is strictly based upon the microseconds per clock tick that the application has configured.
- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
9.4.6. CLOCK_GET_TICKS_SINCE_BOOT - Get current ticks counter value¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_interval rtems_clock_get_ticks_since_boot(void);
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
NONE
DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the current tick counter value. With a 1ms clock tick, this counter overflows after 50 days since boot. This is the historical measure of uptime in an RTEMS system. The newer service
rtems_clock_get_uptime
is another and potentially more accurate way of obtaining similar information.
NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
9.4.7. CLOCK_TICK_LATER - Get tick value in the future¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_interval rtems_clock_tick_later( rtems_interval delta );
- DESCRIPTION:
Returns the ticks counter value delta ticks in the future.
- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
9.4.8. CLOCK_TICK_LATER_USEC - Get tick value in the future in microseconds¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_interval rtems_clock_tick_later_usec( rtems_interval delta_in_usec );
- DESCRIPTION:
Returns the ticks counter value at least delta microseconds in the future.
- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
9.4.9. CLOCK_TICK_BEFORE - Is tick value is before a point in time¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_interval rtems_clock_tick_before( rtems_interval tick );
- DESCRIPTION:
Returns true if the current ticks counter value indicates a time before the time specified by the tick value and false otherwise.
- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
- EXAMPLE:
status busy( void ) { rtems_interval timeout = rtems_clock_tick_later_usec( 10000 ); do { if ( ok() ) { return success; } } while ( rtems_clock_tick_before( timeout ) ); return timeout; }
9.4.10. CLOCK_GET_UPTIME - Get the time since boot¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_clock_get_uptime( struct timespec *uptime );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the seconds and nanoseconds since the system was booted. If the BSP supports nanosecond clock accuracy, the time reported will probably be different on every call.
- NOTES:
This directive may be called from an ISR.
9.4.11. CLOCK_GET_UPTIME_TIMEVAL - Get the time since boot in timeval format¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
void rtems_clock_get_uptime_timeval( struct timeval *uptime );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
NONE
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the seconds and microseconds since the system was booted. If the BSP supports nanosecond clock accuracy, the time reported will probably be different on every call.
- NOTES:
This directive may be called from an ISR.
9.4.12. CLOCK_GET_UPTIME_SECONDS - Get the seconds since boot¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
time_t rtems_clock_get_uptime_seconds(void);
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
The system uptime in seconds.
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the seconds since the system was booted.
- NOTES:
This directive may be called from an ISR.
9.4.13. CLOCK_GET_UPTIME_NANOSECONDS - Get the nanoseconds since boot¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
uint64_t rtems_clock_get_uptime_nanoseconds(void);
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
The system uptime in nanoseconds.
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the nanoseconds since the system was booted.
- NOTES:
This directive may be called from an ISR.
9.5. Removed Directives¶
9.5.1. CLOCK_GET - Get date and time information¶
Warning
This directive was removed in RTEMS 5.1. See also Transition Advice for the Removed rtems_clock_get().
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_clock_get( rtems_clock_get_options option, void *time_buffer );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
current time obtained successfully
RTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
system date and time is not set
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
time_buffer
is NULL- DESCRIPTION:
This directive obtains the system date and time. If the caller is attempting to obtain the date and time (i.e. option is set to either
RTEMS_CLOCK_GET_SECONDS_SINCE_EPOCH
,RTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TOD
, orRTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TIME_VALUE
) and the date and time has not been set with a previous call tortems_clock_set
, then theRTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
status code is returned. The caller can always obtain the number of ticks per second (option isRTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TICKS_PER_SECOND
) and the number of ticks since the executive was initialized option isRTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TICKS_SINCE_BOOT
).The
option
argument may taken on any value of the enumerated typertems_clock_get_options
. The data type expected fortime_buffer
is based on the value ofoption
as indicated below:Option
Return type
RTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TOD
(rtems_time_of_day *)
RTEMS_CLOCK_GET_SECONDS_SINCE_EPOCH
(rtems_interval *)
RTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TICKS_SINCE_BOOT
(rtems_interval *)
RTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TICKS_PER_SECOND
(rtems_interval *)
RTEMS_CLOCK_GET_TIME_VALUE
(struct timeval *)
- NOTES:
This directive is callable from an ISR.
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted. Re-initializing RTEMS causes the system date and time to be reset to an uninitialized state. Another call to
rtems_clock_set
is required to re-initialize the system date and time to application specific specifications.