C++ Converting a time string to seconds from the epoch

耗尽温柔 提交于 2019-11-27 14:07:39
Martin York

Using C++11 functionality we can now use streams to parse times:

The iomanip std::get_time will convert a string based on a set of format parameters and convert them into a struct tz object.

You can then use std::mktime() to convert this into an epoch value.

#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
#include <locale>
#include <iomanip>

int main()
{
    std::tm t = {};
    std::istringstream ss("2010-11-04T23:23:01Z");

    if (ss >> std::get_time(&t, "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S"))
    {
        std::cout << std::put_time(&t, "%c") << "\n"
                  << std::mktime(&t) << "\n";
    }
    else
    {
        std::cout << "Parse failed\n";
    }
    return 0;
}

This is ISO8601 format. You can use strptime function to parse it with %FT%T%z argument. It is not a part of the C++ Standard though you can use open source implementation of it (this, for instance).

You can use a function such as strptime to convert a string to a struct tm, instead of parsing it manually.

Steve Townsend

It's not an exact dup but you will find @Cubbi's answer from here useful, I wager. This specifically assumes UTC input.

Boost also support direct conversion from ISO 8601 via boost::posix_time::from_iso_string which calls boost::date_time::parse_iso_time, here again you would just strip the trailing 'Z' and treat the TZ as implicit UTC.

#include <iostream>
#include <boost/date_time.hpp>

namespace bt = boost::posix_time;

const std::locale formats[] = {
std::locale(std::locale::classic(),new bt::time_input_facet("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")),
std::locale(std::locale::classic(),new bt::time_input_facet("%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S")),
std::locale(std::locale::classic(),new bt::time_input_facet("%d.%m.%Y %H:%M:%S")),
std::locale(std::locale::classic(),new bt::time_input_facet("%Y-%m-%d"))};
const size_t formats_n = sizeof(formats)/sizeof(formats[0]);

std::time_t pt_to_time_t(const bt::ptime& pt)
{
    bt::ptime timet_start(boost::gregorian::date(1970,1,1));
    bt::time_duration diff = pt - timet_start;
    return diff.ticks()/bt::time_duration::rep_type::ticks_per_second;

}
void seconds_from_epoch(const std::string& s)
{
    bt::ptime pt;
    for(size_t i=0; i<formats_n; ++i)
    {
        std::istringstream is(s);
        is.imbue(formats[i]);
        is >> pt;
        if(pt != bt::ptime()) break;
    }
    std::cout << " ptime is " << pt << '\n';
    std::cout << " seconds from epoch are " << pt_to_time_t(pt) << '\n';
}
int main()
{
    seconds_from_epoch("2004-03-21 12:45:33");
    seconds_from_epoch("2004/03/21 12:45:33");
    seconds_from_epoch("23.09.2004 04:12:21");
    seconds_from_epoch("2003-02-11");
}

Problem here is that mktime uses local time not UTC time.

Linux provides timegm which is what you want (i.e. mktime for UTC time).

Here is my solution, which I forced to only accept "Zulu" (Z timezone). Note that strptime doesn't actually seem to parse the time zone correctly, even though glib seems to have some support for that. That is why I just throw an exception if the string doesn't end in 'Z'.

static double EpochTime(const std::string& iso8601Time)
{
    struct tm t;
    if (iso8601Time.back() != 'Z') throw PBException("Non Zulu 8601 timezone not supported");
    char* ptr = strptime(iso8601Time.c_str(), "%FT%T", &t);
    if( ptr == nullptr)
    {
        throw PBException("strptime failed, can't parse " + iso8601Time);
    }
    double t2 = timegm(&t); // UTC
    if (*ptr)
    {
        double fraction = atof(ptr);
        t2 += fraction;
    }
    return t2;
}

New answer to an old question. Rationale for new answer: In case you want to use <chrono> types to solve a problem like this.

In addition to C++11/C++14, you'll need this free, open source date/time library:

#include "tz.h"
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>

int
main()
{
    std::istringstream is("2010-11-04T23:23:01Z");
    is.exceptions(std::ios::failbit);
    date::sys_seconds tp;
    date::parse(is, "%FT%TZ", tp);
    std::cout << "seconds from epoch is " << tp.time_since_epoch().count() << "s\n";
}

This program outputs:

seconds from epoch is 1288912981s

If the parse fails in any way, an exception will be thrown. If you would rather not throw exceptions, don't is.exceptions(std::ios::failbit);, but instead check for is.fail().

You could utilize the boost::date_time and write a small manual parser (probably regexp-based) for your strings.

Problem here is that mktime uses local time not UTC time.

How about just computing the time difference between UTC and local time, then adding it to the value returned by mktime?

time_t local = time(NULL),
       utc   = mktime(gmtime(&local));
int    diff  = utc - local;

What's wrong with strptime() ?

And on Linux, you even get the 'seconds east of UTC' field relieving you from any need to parse:

#define _XOPEN_SOURCE
#include <iostream>
#include <time.h>

int main(void) {

    const char *timestr = "2010-11-04T23:23:01Z";

    struct tm t;
    strptime(timestr, "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ", &t);

    char buf[128];
    strftime(buf, sizeof(buf), "%d %b %Y %H:%M:%S", &t);

    std::cout << timestr << " -> " << buf << std::endl;

    std::cout << "Seconds east of UTC " << t.tm_gmtoff << std::endl;
}   

which for me yields

/tmp$ g++ -o my my.cpp 
/tmp$ ./my
2010-11-04T23:23:01Z -> 04 Nov 2010 23:23:01
Seconds east of UTC 140085769590024

X/Open provides a global timezone variable which indicates the number of seconds that local time is behind UTC. You can use this to adjust the output of mktime():

#define _XOPEN_SOURCE
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>

/* 2010-11-04T23:23:01Z */
time_t zulu_time(const char *time_str)
{
    struct tm tm = { 0 };

    if (!strptime(time_str, "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ", &tm))
        return (time_t)-1;

    return mktime(&tm) - timezone;
}
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