Safe Haskell | Safe |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
Fast access to the system clock.
Synopsis
Documentation
systemEpochDay :: Day Source #
The day of the epoch of SystemTime
, 1970-01-01
data SystemTime Source #
SystemTime
is time returned by system clock functions.
Its semantics depends on the clock function, but the epoch is typically the beginning of 1970.
Note that systemNanoseconds
of 1E9 to 2E9-1 can be used to represent leap seconds.
Instances
Eq SystemTime Source # | |
(==) :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> Bool # (/=) :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> Bool # | |
Ord SystemTime Source # | |
compare :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> Ordering # (<) :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> Bool # (<=) :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> Bool # (>) :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> Bool # (>=) :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> Bool # max :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> SystemTime # min :: SystemTime -> SystemTime -> SystemTime # | |
Show SystemTime Source # | |
NFData SystemTime Source # | |
rnf :: SystemTime -> () Source # |
truncateSystemTimeLeapSecond :: SystemTime -> SystemTime Source #
Map leap-second values to the start of the following second.
The resulting systemNanoseconds
will always be in the range 0 to 1E9-1.
getSystemTime :: IO SystemTime Source #
Get the system time, epoch start of 1970 UTC, leap-seconds ignored.
getSystemTime
is typically much faster than getCurrentTime
.
systemToUTCTime :: SystemTime -> UTCTime Source #
Convert SystemTime
to UTCTime
, matching zero SystemTime
to midnight of systemEpochDay
UTC.
utcToSystemTime :: UTCTime -> SystemTime Source #
Convert UTCTime
to SystemTime
, matching zero SystemTime
to midnight of systemEpochDay
UTC.
systemToTAITime :: SystemTime -> AbsoluteTime Source #
Convert SystemTime
to AbsoluteTime
, matching zero SystemTime
to midnight of systemEpochDay
TAI.