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cfiletimestattime.h

how to change file timestamp including nanoseconds


I am making a program to copy files from a source to a destination directory and would like to change the destination file timestamps so they match the source file timestamps.

So far I have discovered the utime() function and have manipulated the utimbuf struct with the times I would like to use.

However, the times do not take into account the nanoseconds.

For example:

If I want to copy "file1" and it has a timestamp of 123.213241, my copy will have 123.000000 when running my current program. I would like to include the nanoseconds .213241 etc.

Here is my code so far:

    struct stat buf; 
    struct utimbuf time;

    stat(filename, &buf) // get metadata of file "filename" and then store in buf

    time.actime = buf.st_atim.tv_sec; // set times in time struct
    time.modtime = buf.st_mtim.tv_sec;

    utime(filename_copy, &time); // load file copy with time struct

How can I include nanoseconds in my file timestamps?


Solution

  • According to POSIX, the function you need is utimensat() (or its close relative, futimens()). Both of these take a pair of struct timespec values in an array, which allows you to specify a time to nanoseconds. The first element is the access time; the second is the modification time.

    Not all file systems support nanosecond timestamps. Not all systems actually support nanosecond resolution — they might round to the nearest microsecond.

    Note that modern versions of the stat() function return a structure with elements st_atim, st_ctim, and st_mtim. These are also struct timespec values. The <sys/stat.h> defines some backwards-compatibility macros:

    For compatibility with earlier versions of this standard, the st_atime macro shall be defined with the value st_atim.tv_sec. Similarly, st_ctime and st_mtime shall be defined as macros with the values st_ctim.tv_sec and st_mtim.tv_sec, respectively.

    For Linux, see utimensat(2). However, the documentation for stat(2) only mentions subsecond times in the Notes section near the bottom. Be cautious.