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_mkgmtime, _mkgmtime32, _mkgmtime64

Converts a UTC time represented by a tm struct to a UTC time represented by a time_t type.

time_t _mkgmtime(
   struct tm* timeptr
);
__time32_t _mkgmtime32(
   struct tm* timeptr
);
__time64_t _mkgmtime64(
   struct tm* timeptr
);

Parameters

  • timeptr
    A pointer to the UTC time as a struct tm to convert.

Return Value

A quantity of type __time32_t or __time64_t representing the number of seconds elapsed since midnight, January 1, 1970, in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). If the date is out of range (see the Remarks section) or the input cannot be interpreted as a valid time, the return value is –1.

Remarks

The _mkgmtime32 and _mkgmtime64 functions convert a UTC time to a __time32_t or __time64_t type representing the time in UTC. To convert a local time to UTC time, use mktime, _mktime32, and _mktime64 instead.

_mkgmtime is an inline function that evaluates to _mkgmtime64, and time_t is equivalent to __time64_t. If you need to force the compiler to interpret time_tas the old 32-bit time_t, you can define _USE_32BIT_TIME_T. This is not recommended because your application might fail after January 19, 2038 (the maximum range of a 32-bit time_t), and it is not allowed at all on 64-bit platforms.

The time structure passed in will be changed as follows, in the same way as they are changed with the _mktime functions: the tm_wday and tm_yday fields are set to new values based on the values of tm_mday and tm_year. When specifying a tm structure time, set the tm_isdst field to:

  • Zero (0) to indicate that standard time is in effect.

  • A value greater than 0 to indicate that daylight saving time is in effect.

  • A value less than zero to have the C run-time library code compute whether standard time or daylight saving time is in effect.

The C run-time library uses the TZ environment variable to determine the correct daylight savings time. If TZ is not set, the operating system is queried to get the correct regional daylight savings time behavior. tm_isdst is a required field. If not set, its value is undefined and the return value from mktime is unpredictable.

The range of the _mkgmtime32 function is from midnight, January 1, 1970, UTC to January 19, 3:14:07, 2038, UTC. The range of _mkgmtime64 is from midnight, January 1, 1970, UTC to 23:59:59, December 31, 3000, UTC. An out-of-range date results in a return value of –1. The range of _mkgmtime depends on whether _USE_32BIT_TIME_T is defined. If not defined (the default) the range is that of _mkgmtime64; otherwise, the range is limited to the 32-bit range of _mkgmtime32.

Note that gmtime and localtime use a single statically allocated buffer for the conversion. If you supply this buffer to mkgmtime, the previous contents are destroyed.

Example

// crt_mkgmtime.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>

int main()
{
    struct tm t1, t2;
    time_t now, mytime, gmtime;
    char buff[30];

    time( & now );

    _localtime64_s( &t1, &now );
    _gmtime64_s( &t2, &now );

    mytime = mktime(&t1);
    gmtime = _mkgmtime(&t2);

    printf("Seconds since midnight, January 1, 1970\n");
    printf("My time: %I64d\nGM time (UTC): %I64d\n\n", mytime, gmtime);

    /* Use asctime_s to display these times. */

    _localtime64_s( &t1, &mytime );
    asctime_s( buff, sizeof(buff), &t1 );
    printf( "Local Time: %s\n", buff );

    _gmtime64_s( &t2, &gmtime );
    asctime_s( buff, sizeof(buff), &t2 );
    printf( "Greenwich Mean Time: %s\n", buff );

}

Sample Output

Seconds since midnight, January 1, 1970
My time: 1171588492
GM time (UTC): 1171588492

Local Time: Thu Feb 15 17:14:52 2007

Greenwich Mean Time: Fri Feb 16 01:14:52 2007

The following example shows how the incomplete structure is filled out with the computed values of the day of the week and the day of the year.

// crt_mkgmtime2.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <memory.h>

int main()
{
    struct tm t1, t2;
    time_t gmtime;
    char buff[30];

    memset(&t1, 0, sizeof(struct tm));
    memset(&t2, 0, sizeof(struct tm));

    t1.tm_mon = 1;
    t1.tm_isdst = 0;
    t1.tm_year = 103;
    t1.tm_mday = 12;

    // The day of the week and year will be incorrect in the output here.
    asctime_s( buff, sizeof(buff), &t1);
    printf("Before calling _mkgmtime, t1 = %s t.tm_yday = %d\n",
            buff, t1.tm_yday );

    gmtime = _mkgmtime(&t1);

    // The correct day of the week and year were determined.
    asctime_s( buff, sizeof(buff), &t1);
    printf("After calling _mkgmtime, t1 = %s t.tm_yday = %d\n",
            buff, t1.tm_yday );

}

Output

Before calling _mkgmtime, t1 = Sun Feb 12 00:00:00 2003
 t.tm_yday = 0
After calling _mkgmtime, t1 = Wed Feb 12 00:00:00 2003
 t.tm_yday = 42

See Also

Reference

Time Management

asctime, _wasctime

asctime_s, _wasctime_s

gmtime, _gmtime32, _gmtime64

gmtime_s, _gmtime32_s, _gmtime64_s

localtime_s, _localtime32_s, _localtime64_s

time, _time32, _time64