.\" Copyright 2003 walter harms (walter.harms@informatik.uni-oldenburg.de) .\" Distributed under GPL .\" Modified 2003-04-04 Walter Harms .\" .\" .\" Slightly polished, aeb, 2003-04-06 .\" .TH RTIME 3 2003-04-04 "sunrpc" "RPC time function" .SH NAME rtime \- get time from a remote machine .SH SYNOPSIS .sp .B "#include " .sp .BI "int rtime(struct sockaddr_in *" addrp , .BI "struct rpc_timeval *" timep , .BI "struct rpc_timeval *" timeout ); .sp .SH DESCRIPTION This function uses the Time Server Protocol as described in RFC\ 868 to obtain the time from a remote machine. .LP The Time Server Protocol gives the time in seconds since midnight 1900-01-01, and this function subtracts the appropriate constant in order to convert the result to seconds since midnight 1970-01-01, the Unix epoch. .LP When .I timeout is non-NULL, the udp/time socket (port 37) is used. Otherwise, the tcp/time socket (port 37) is used. .SH "RETURN VALUE" On success, 0 is returned, and the obtained 32-bit time value is stored in .IR timep->tv_sec . In case of error \-1 is returned, and .I errno is set appropriately. .SH ERRORS All errors for underlying functions (sendto, poll, recvfrom, connect, read) can occur. Moreover: .TP .B EIO The number of returned bytes is not 4. .TP .B ETIMEDOUT The waiting time as defined in timeout has expired. .SH "EXAMPLE" This example requires that port 37 is up and open. You may check that the time entry within .I /etc/inetd.conf is not commented out. .br The program connects to a computer called 'linux'. Using 'localhost' does not work. The result is the localtime of the computer 'linux'. .sp .nf #include #include #include #include #include #include int use_tcp = 0; char *servername = "linux"; int main() { struct sockaddr_in name; struct rpc_timeval time1 = {0,0}; struct rpc_timeval timeout = {1,0}; struct hostent *hent; int ret; memset((char *)&name, 0, sizeof(name)); sethostent(1); hent = gethostbyname(servername); memcpy((char *)&name.sin_addr, hent->h_addr, hent->h_length); ret = rtime(&name, &time1, use_tcp ? NULL : &timeout); if (ret < 0) perror("rtime error"); else printf("%s", ctime((time_t *)&time1.tv_sec)); return 0; } .fi .SH "NOTES" Only IPV4 is supported. .LP Some .I in.timed versions only support TCP. Try the above example program with .I use_tcp set to 1. .LP Libc5 uses the prototype .br int rtime(struct sockaddr_in *, struct timeval *, struct timeval *); .br and requires .I instead of .IR . .SH "BUGS" rtime() in glibc <= 2.2.5 does not work properly on 64bit machines. .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR netdate (1), .BR ntpdate (1), .BR rdate (1), .BR inetd (8)