• Nick Craig-Wood's avatar
    os: Improve the accuracy of os.Chtimes · 473441fc
    Nick Craig-Wood authored
    I've been writing some code which involves syncing files (like
    rsync) and it became apparent that under Linux I could read
    modification times (os.Lstat) with nanosecond precision but
    only write them with microsecond precision.  This difference
    in precision is rather annoying when trying to discover
    whether files need syncing or not!
    
    I've patched syscall and os to increases the accuracy of of
    os.Chtimes for Linux and Windows.  This involved exposing the
    utimensat system call under Linux and a bit of extra code
    under Windows.  I decided not to expose the "at" bit of the
    system call as it is impossible to replicate under Windows, so
    the patch adds syscall.Utimens() to all architectures along
    with a ImplementsUtimens flag.
    
    If the utimensat syscall isn't available (utimensat was added
    to Linux in 2.6.22, Released, 8 July 2007) then it silently
    falls back to the microsecond accuracy version it uses now.
    The improved accuracy for Windows should be good for all
    versions of Windows.
    
    Unfortunately Darwin doesn't seem to have a utimensat system
    call that I could find so I couldn't implement it there.  The
    BSDs do, but since they share their syscall implementation
    with Darwin I couldn't figure out how to define a syscall for
    *BSD and not Darwin.  I've left this as a TODO in the code.
    
    In the process I implemented the missing methods for Timespec
    under Windows which I needed which just happened to round out
    the Timespec API for all platforms!
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Test code: http://play.golang.org/p/1xnGuYOi4b
    
    Linux Before (1000 ns precision)
    
    $ ./utimetest.linux.before z
    Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 BST
    Reading mtime 1344937903123457000: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123457 +0100 BST
    
    Linux After (1 ns precision)
    
    $ ./utimetest.linux.after z
    Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 BST
    Reading mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 BST
    
    Windows Before (1000 ns precision)
    
    X:\>utimetest.windows.before.exe c:\Test.txt
    Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 GMTDT
    Reading mtime 1344937903123456000: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456 +0100 GMTDT
    
    Windows After (100 ns precision)
    
    X:\>utimetest.windows.after.exe c:\Test.txt
    Setting mtime 1344937903123456789: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.123456789 +0100 GMTDT
    Reading mtime 1344937903123456700: 2012-08-14 10:51:43.1234567 +0100 GMTDT
    
    R=golang-dev, alex.brainman, rsc, bradfitz
    CC=golang-dev
    https://golang.org/cl/6905057
    473441fc
Name
Last commit
Last update
..
cmd Loading commit data...
lib9 Loading commit data...
libbio Loading commit data...
libmach Loading commit data...
pkg Loading commit data...
Make.dist Loading commit data...
all.bash Loading commit data...
all.bat Loading commit data...
all.rc Loading commit data...
clean.bash Loading commit data...
clean.bat Loading commit data...
clean.rc Loading commit data...
make.bash Loading commit data...
make.bat Loading commit data...
make.rc Loading commit data...
run.bash Loading commit data...
run.bat Loading commit data...
run.rc Loading commit data...
sudo.bash Loading commit data...