1DateTime::Format::EpochU(s3e)r Contributed Perl DocumentaDtaitoenTime::Format::Epoch(3)
2
3
4
6 DateTime::Format::Epoch - Convert DateTimes to/from epoch seconds
7
9 use DateTime::Format::Epoch;
10
11 my $dt = DateTime->new( year => 1970, month => 1, day => 1 );
12 my $formatter = DateTime::Format::Epoch->new(
13 epoch => $dt,
14 unit => 'seconds',
15 type => 'int', # or 'float', 'bigint'
16 skip_leap_seconds => 1,
17 start_at => 0,
18 local_epoch => undef,
19 );
20
21 my $dt2 = $formatter->parse_datetime( 1051488000 );
22 # 2003-04-28T00:00:00
23
24 $formatter->format_datetime($dt2);
25 # 1051488000
26
28 This module can convert a DateTime object (or any object that can be
29 converted to a DateTime object) to the number of seconds since a given
30 epoch. It can also do the reverse.
31
33 • new( ... )
34
35 Constructor of the formatter/parser object. It can take the
36 following parameters: "epoch", "unit", "type", "skip_leap_seconds",
37 "start_at", "local_epoch" and "dhms".
38
39 The epoch parameter is the only required parameter. It should be a
40 DateTime object (or at least, it has to be convertible to a
41 DateTime object). This datetime is the starting point of the day
42 count, and is usually numbered 0. If you want to start at a
43 different value, you can use the start_at parameter.
44
45 The unit parameter can be "seconds", "milliseconds, "microseconds"
46 or "nanoseconds". The default is "seconds". If you need any other
47 unit, you must specify the number of units per second. If you
48 specify a number of units per second below 1, the unit will be
49 longer than a second. In this way, you can count days: unit =>
50 1/86_400.
51
52 The type parameter specifies the type of the return value. It can
53 be "int" (returns integer value), "float" (returns floating point
54 value), or "bigint" (returns Math::BigInt value). The default is
55 either "int" (if the unit is "seconds"), or "bigint" (if the unit
56 is nanoseconds).
57
58 The default behaviour of this module is to skip leap seconds. This
59 is what (most versions of?) UNIX do. If you want to include leap
60 seconds, set skip_leap_seconds to false.
61
62 Some operating systems use an epoch defined in the local timezone
63 of the computer. If you want to use such an epoch in this module,
64 you have two options. The first is to submit a DateTime object with
65 the appropriate timezone. The second option is to set the
66 local_epoch parameter to a true value. In this case, you should
67 submit an epoch with a floating timezone. The exact epoch used in
68 "format_datetime" will then depend on the timezone of the object
69 you pass to "format_datetime".
70
71 Most often, the time since an epoch is given in seconds. In some
72 circumstances however it is expressed as a number of days, hours,
73 minutes and seconds. This is done by NASA, for the so called
74 Mission Elapsed Time. For example, 2/03:45:18 MET means it has been
75 2 days, 3 hours, 45 minutes, and 18 seconds since liftoff. If you
76 set the dhms parameter to true, format_datetime returns a four
77 element list, containing the number of days, hours, minutes and
78 seconds, and parse_datetime accepts the same four element list.
79
80 • format_datetime($datetime)
81
82 Given a DateTime object, this method returns the number of seconds
83 since the epoch.
84
85 • parse_datetime($secs)
86
87 Given a number of seconds, this method returns the corresponding
88 DateTime object.
89
91 I think there's a problem when you define a count that does not skip
92 leap seconds, and uses the local timezone. Don't do that.
93
95 Support for this module is provided via the datetime@perl.org email
96 list. See http://lists.perl.org/ for more details.
97
99 Eugene van der Pijll <pijll@gmx.net>
100
102 Copyright (c) 2003-2006 Eugene van der Pijll. All rights reserved.
103 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
104 under the same terms as Perl itself.
105
107 DateTime
108
109 datetime@perl.org mailing list
110
111
112
113perl v5.32.1 2021-01-27 DateTime::Format::Epoch(3)