Mercurial > emacs
changeset 24816:cc789d9ef186
(get_boot_time): Don't look at /proc/uptime; it
doesn't work if the system date is changed, or if the system
is suspended. Look at the last-modified time of
/var/run/random-seed instead.
author | Karl Heuer <kwzh@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 05 Jun 1999 01:13:36 +0000 |
parents | aea50239347a |
children | 3e8c8a06329b |
files | src/filelock.c |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 5 insertions(+), 36 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/src/filelock.c Fri Jun 04 18:48:16 1999 +0000 +++ b/src/filelock.c Sat Jun 05 01:13:36 1999 +0000 @@ -112,50 +112,19 @@ static time_t get_boot_time () { - struct utmp ut, *utp; - int fd; - EMACS_TIME time_before, after; int counter; + struct stat st; if (boot_time_initialized) return boot_time; boot_time_initialized = 1; - EMACS_GET_TIME (time_before); - - /* Try calculating the last boot time - from the uptime as obtained from /proc/uptime. - - This has a disadvantage in that if the system time has been - changed (say to correct the clock), - then current_time - uptime != wtmp_boot_time. - However, the speedup from doing this can be so great - that I think it is worth that problem occasionally. */ - - while ((fd = open ("/proc/uptime", O_RDONLY)) >= 0) + if (stat ("/var/run/random-seed", &st) == 0) { - char buf[100]; - int res; - double upsecs; - time_t uptime; + boot_time = st.st_mtime; + return boot_time; + } - read (fd, buf, sizeof buf); - close (fd); - - res = sscanf (buf, "%lf", &upsecs); - - /* If the current time did not tick while we were getting the - uptime, we have a valid result. */ - EMACS_GET_TIME (after); - if (res == 1 && EMACS_SECS (after) == EMACS_SECS (time_before)) - { - boot_time = EMACS_SECS (time_before) - (time_t) upsecs; - return boot_time; - } - - /* Otherwise, try again to read the uptime. */ - time_before = after; - } #if defined (CTL_KERN) && defined (KERN_BOOTTIME) { int mib[2];