MKTIME(3C) Standard C Library Functions MKTIME(3C)

mktime, timegm - convert a tm structure to a calendar time

#include <time.h>
time_t mktime(struct tm *timeptr);

time_t timegm(struct tm *timeptr);

The mktime() function converts the time represented by the tm structure pointed to by timeptr into a calendar time (the number of seconds since 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970).

The tm structure contains the following members:


int  tm_sec;     /* seconds after the minute [0, 60]  */
int  tm_min;     /* minutes after the hour [0, 59] */
int  tm_hour;    /* hour since midnight [0, 23] */
int  tm_mday;    /* day of the month [1, 31] */
int  tm_mon;     /* months since January [0, 11] */
int  tm_year;    /* years since 1900 */
int  tm_wday;    /* days since Sunday [0, 6] */
int  tm_yday;    /* days since January 1 [0, 365] */
int  tm_isdst;   /* flag for daylight savings time */

In addition to computing the calendar time, mktime() normalizes the supplied tm structure. The original values of the tm_wday and tm_yday components of the structure are ignored, and the original values of the other components are not restricted to the ranges indicated in the definition of the structure. On successful completion, the values of the tm_wday and tm_yday components are set appropriately, and the other components are set to represent the specified calendar time, but with their values forced to be within the appropriate ranges. The final value of tm_mday is not set until tm_mon and tm_year are determined.

The tm_year member must be for year 1901 or later. Calendar times before 20:45:52 UTC, December 13, 1901 or after 03:14:07 UTC, January 19, 2038 cannot be represented. Portable applications should not try to create dates before 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970 or after 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 2038.

The original values of the components may be either greater than or less than the specified range. For example, a tm_hour of −1 means 1 hour before midnight, tm_mday of 0 means the day preceding the current month, and tm_mon of −2 means 2 months before January of tm_year.

If tm_isdst is positive, the original values are assumed to be in the alternate timezone. If it turns out that the alternate timezone is not valid for the computed calendar time, then the components are adjusted to the main timezone. Likewise, if tm_isdst is zero, the original values are assumed to be in the main timezone and are converted to the alternate timezone if the main timezone is not valid. If tm_isdst is negative, mktime() attempts to determine whether the alternate timezone is in effect for the specified time.

Local timezone information is used as if mktime() had called tzset(). See ctime(3C).

The timegm() function is identical to the mktime() function, except that the timegm() function ignores both the current time zone and the tm_isdst member and operates as though the time zone were set to UTC.

If the calendar time can be represented in an object of type time_t, the mktime() and timegm() functions return the specified calendar time without changing errno. If the calendar time cannot be represented, the function returns the value (time_t)−1 and sets errno to indicate the error.

The mktime() and timegm() functions will fail if:

EOVERFLOW

The date represented by the input tm struct cannot be represented in a time_t. Note that the errno setting may change if future revisions to the standards specify a different value.

The mktime() and timegm() functions are MT-Safe in multithreaded applications, as long as no user-defined function directly modifies one of the following variables: timezone, altzone, daylight, and tzname. See ctime(3C).

Note that −1 can be a valid return value for the time that is one second before the Epoch. The user should clear errno before calling mktime() and timegm(). If mktime() or timegm() then returns −1, the user should check errno to determine whether or not an error actually occurred.

The mktime() and timegm() functions assume Gregorian dates. Times before the adoption of the Gregorian calendar will not match historical records.

Example 1 Sample code using mktime().

What day of the week is July 4, 2001?


#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
static char *const wday[] = {

"Sunday", "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday",
"Thursday", "Friday", "Saturday", "-unknown-" }; struct tm time_str; /*...*/ time_str.tm_year = 2001 - 1900; time_str.tm_mon = 7 - 1; time_str.tm_mday = 4; time_str.tm_hour = 0; time_str.tm_min = 0; time_str.tm_sec = 1; time_str.tm_isdst = −1; if (mktime(&time_str)== −1)
time_str.tm_wday=7; printf("%s\n", wday[time_str.tm_wday]);

The zoneinfo timezone data files do not transition past Tue Jan 19 03:14:07 2038 UTC. Therefore for 64-bit applications using zoneinfo timezones, calculations beyond this date may not use the correct offset from standard time, and could return incorrect values. This affects the 64-bit versions of mktime() and timegm().

See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Interface Stability Standard
MT-Level MT-Safe with exceptions

ctime(3C), getenv(3C), TIMEZONE(5), attributes(7), standards(7)

February 17, 2023 OmniOS