| .. _timeutil_api: |
| |
| Time Utilities |
| ############## |
| |
| Overview |
| ******** |
| |
| :ref:`kernel_timing_uptime` in Zephyr is based on the a tick counter. With |
| the default :kconfig:option:`CONFIG_TICKLESS_KERNEL` this counter advances at a |
| nominally constant rate from zero at the instant the system started. The POSIX |
| equivalent to this counter is something like ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC`` or, in Linux, |
| ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW``. :c:func:`k_uptime_get()` provides a millisecond |
| representation of this time. |
| |
| Applications often need to correlate the Zephyr internal time with external |
| time scales used in daily life, such as local time or Coordinated Universal |
| Time. These systems interpret time in different ways and may have |
| discontinuities due to `leap seconds <https://what-if.xkcd.com/26/>`__ and |
| local time offsets like daylight saving time. |
| |
| Because of these discontinuities, as well as significant inaccuracies in the |
| clocks underlying the cycle counter, the offset between time estimated from |
| the Zephyr clock and the actual time in a "real" civil time scale is not |
| constant and can vary widely over the runtime of a Zephyr application. |
| |
| The time utilities API supports: |
| |
| * :ref:`converting between time representations <timeutil_repr>` |
| * :ref:`synchronizing and aligning time scales <timeutil_sync>` |
| |
| For terminology and concepts that support these functions see |
| :ref:`timeutil_concepts`. |
| |
| Time Utility APIs |
| ***************** |
| |
| .. _timeutil_repr: |
| |
| Representation Transformation |
| ============================= |
| |
| Time scale instants can be represented in multiple ways including: |
| |
| * Seconds since an epoch. POSIX representations of time in this form include |
| ``time_t`` and ``struct timespec``, which are generally interpreted as a |
| representation of `"UNIX Time" |
| <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8536#section-2>`__. |
| |
| * Calendar time as a year, month, day, hour, minutes, and seconds relative to |
| an epoch. POSIX representations of time in this form include ``struct tm``. |
| |
| Keep in mind that these are simply time representations that must be |
| interpreted relative to a time scale which may be local time, UTC, or some |
| other continuous or discontinuous scale. |
| |
| Some necessary transformations are available in standard C library |
| routines. For example, ``time_t`` measuring seconds since the POSIX EPOCH is |
| converted to ``struct tm`` representing calendar time with `gmtime() |
| <https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/gmtime.html>`__. |
| Sub-second timestamps like ``struct timespec`` can also use this to produce |
| the calendar time representation and deal with sub-second offsets separately. |
| |
| The inverse transformation is not standardized: APIs like ``mktime()`` expect |
| information about time zones. Zephyr provides this transformation with |
| :c:func:`timeutil_timegm` and :c:func:`timeutil_timegm64`. |
| |
| .. doxygengroup:: timeutil_repr_apis |
| |
| .. _timeutil_sync: |
| |
| Time Scale Synchronization |
| ========================== |
| |
| There are several factors that affect synchronizing time scales: |
| |
| * The rate of discrete instant representation change. For example Zephyr |
| uptime is tracked in ticks which advance at events that nominally occur at |
| :kconfig:option:`CONFIG_SYS_CLOCK_TICKS_PER_SEC` Hertz, while an external time |
| source may provide data in whole or fractional seconds (e.g. microseconds). |
| * The absolute offset required to align the two scales at a single instant. |
| * The relative error between observable instants in each scale, required to |
| align multiple instants consistently. For example a reference clock that's |
| conditioned by a 1-pulse-per-second GPS signal will be much more accurate |
| than a Zephyr system clock driven by a RC oscillator with a +/- 250 ppm |
| error. |
| |
| Synchronization or alignment between time scales is done with a multi-step |
| process: |
| |
| * An instant in a time scale is represented by an (unsigned) 64-bit integer, |
| assumed to advance at a fixed nominal rate. |
| * :c:struct:`timeutil_sync_config` records the nominal rates of a reference |
| time scale/source (e.g. TAI) and a local time source |
| (e.g. :c:func:`k_uptime_ticks`). |
| * :c:struct:`timeutil_sync_instant` records the representation of a single |
| instant in both the reference and local time scales. |
| * :c:struct:`timeutil_sync_state` provides storage for an initial instant, a |
| recently received second observation, and a skew that can adjust for |
| relative errors in the actual rate of each time scale. |
| * :c:func:`timeutil_sync_ref_from_local()` and |
| :c:func:`timeutil_sync_local_from_ref()` convert instants in one time scale |
| to another taking into account skew that can be estimated from the two |
| instances stored in the state structure by |
| :c:func:`timeutil_sync_estimate_skew`. |
| |
| .. doxygengroup:: timeutil_sync_apis |
| |
| .. _timeutil_concepts: |
| |
| Concepts Underlying Time Support in Zephyr |
| ****************************************** |
| |
| Terms from `ISO/TC 154/WG 5 N0038 |
| <https://www.loc.gov/standards/datetime/iso-tc154-wg5_n0038_iso_wd_8601-1_2016-02-16.pdf>`__ |
| (ISO/WD 8601-1) and elsewhere: |
| |
| * A *time axis* is a representation of time as an ordered sequence of |
| instants. |
| * A *time scale* is a way of representing an instant relative to an origin |
| that serves as the epoch. |
| * A time scale is *monotonic* (increasing) if the representation of successive |
| time instants never decreases in value. |
| * A time scale is *continuous* if the representation has no abrupt changes in |
| value, e.g. jumping forward or back when going between successive instants. |
| * `Civil time <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_time>`__ generally refers |
| to time scales that legally defined by civil authorities, like local |
| governments, often to align local midnight to solar time. |
| |
| Relevant Time Scales |
| ==================== |
| |
| `International Atomic Time |
| <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Atomic_Time>`__ (TAI) is a time |
| scale based on averaging clocks that count in SI seconds. TAI is a monotonic |
| and continuous time scale. |
| |
| `Universal Time <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Time>`__ (UT) is a |
| time scale based on Earth’s rotation. UT is a discontinuous time scale as it |
| requires occasional adjustments (`leap seconds |
| <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_second>`__) to maintain alignment to |
| changes in Earth’s rotation. Thus the difference between TAI and UT varies |
| over time. There are several variants of UT, with `UTC |
| <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordinated_Universal_Time>`__ being the most |
| common. |
| |
| UT times are independent of location. UT is the basis for Standard Time |
| (or "local time") which is the time at a particular location. Standard |
| time has a fixed offset from UT at any given instant, primarily |
| influenced by longitude, but the offset may be adjusted ("daylight |
| saving time") to align standard time to the local solar time. In a sense |
| local time is "more discontinuous" than UT. |
| |
| `POSIX Time <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8536#section-2>`__ is a time scale |
| that counts seconds since the "POSIX epoch" at 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z (i.e. the |
| start of 1970 UTC). `UNIX Time |
| <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8536#section-2>`__ is an extension of POSIX |
| time using negative values to represent times before the POSIX epoch. Both of |
| these scales assume that every day has exactly 86400 seconds. In normal use |
| instants in these scales correspond to times in the UTC scale, so they inherit |
| the discontinuity. |
| |
| The continuous analogue is `UNIX Leap Time |
| <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8536#section-2>`__ which is UNIX time plus all |
| leap-second corrections added after the POSIX epoch (when TAI-UTC was 8 s). |
| |
| Example of Time Scale Differences |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| A positive leap second was introduced at the end of 2016, increasing the |
| difference between TAI and UTC from 36 seconds to 37 seconds. There was |
| no leap second introduced at the end of 1999, when the difference |
| between TAI and UTC was only 32 seconds. The following table shows |
| relevant civil and epoch times in several scales: |
| |
| ==================== ========== =================== ======= ============== |
| UTC Date UNIX time TAI Date TAI-UTC UNIX Leap Time |
| ==================== ========== =================== ======= ============== |
| 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z 0 1970-01-01T00:00:08 +8 0 |
| 1999-12-31T23:59:28Z 946684768 2000-01-01T00:00:00 +32 946684792 |
| 1999-12-31T23:59:59Z 946684799 2000-01-01T00:00:31 +32 946684823 |
| 2000-01-01T00:00:00Z 946684800 2000-01-01T00:00:32 +32 946684824 |
| 2016-12-31T23:59:59Z 1483228799 2017-01-01T00:00:35 +36 1483228827 |
| 2016-12-31T23:59:60Z undefined 2017-01-01T00:00:36 +36 1483228828 |
| 2017-01-01T00:00:00Z 1483228800 2017-01-01T00:00:37 +37 1483228829 |
| ==================== ========== =================== ======= ============== |
| |
| Functional Requirements |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| The Zephyr tick counter has no concept of leap seconds or standard time |
| offsets and is a continuous time scale. However it can be relatively |
| inaccurate, with drifts as much as three minutes per hour (assuming an RC |
| timer with 5% tolerance). |
| |
| There are two stages required to support conversion between Zephyr time and |
| common human time scales: |
| |
| * Translation between the continuous but inaccurate Zephyr time scale and an |
| accurate external stable time scale; |
| * Translation between the stable time scale and the (possibly discontinuous) |
| civil time scale. |
| |
| The API around :c:func:`timeutil_sync_state_update()` supports the first step |
| of converting between continuous time scales. |
| |
| The second step requires external information including schedules of leap |
| seconds and local time offset changes. This may be best provided by an |
| external library, and is not currently part of the time utility APIs. |
| |
| Selecting an External Source and Time Scale |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| If an application requires civil time accuracy within several seconds then UTC |
| could be used as the stable time source. However, if the external source |
| adjusts to a leap second there will be a discontinuity: the elapsed time |
| between two observations taken at 1 Hz is not equal to the numeric difference |
| between their timestamps. |
| |
| For precise activities a continuous scale that is independent of local and |
| solar adjustments simplifies things considerably. Suitable continuous scales |
| include: |
| |
| - GPS time: epoch of 1980-01-06T00:00:00Z, continuous following TAI with an |
| offset of TAI-GPS=19 s. |
| - Bluetooth mesh time: epoch of 2000-01-01T00:00:00Z, continuous following TAI |
| with an offset of -32. |
| - UNIX Leap Time: epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z, continuous following TAI with |
| an offset of -8. |
| |
| Because C and Zephyr library functions support conversion between integral and |
| calendar time representations using the UNIX epoch, UNIX Leap Time is an ideal |
| choice for the external time scale. |
| |
| The mechanism used to populate synchronization points is not relevant: it may |
| involve reading from a local high-precision RTC peripheral, exchanging packets |
| over a network using a protocol like NTP or PTP, or processing NMEA messages |
| received a GPS with or without a 1pps signal. |