ID: Q167296
The information in this article applies to:
Under UNIX platforms, file times are maintained in the form of a ANSI C run- time arithmetic type named 'time_t', which represents seconds since midnight January 1, 1970 UTC (coordinated universal time).
Under Win32 platforms, file times are maintained primarily in the form of a 64-bit FILETIME structure, which represents the number of 100-nanosecond intervals since January 1, 1601 UTC (coordinate universal time).
This article shows how to convert UNIX time to other Win32 time formats.
The following function converts a filetime in the UNIX time_t format to a Win32 FILETIME format. Note that time_t is a 32-bit value and FILETIME is a 64-bit structure, so the Win32 function, Int32x32To64() is used in the following function:
#include <winbase.h>
#include <winnt.h>
#include <time.h>
void UnixTimeToFileTime(time_t t, LPFILETIME pft)
{
// Note that LONGLONG is a 64-bit value
LONGLONG ll;
ll = Int32x32To64(t, 10000000) + 116444736000000000;
pft->dwLowDateTime = (DWORD)ll;
pft->dwHighDateTime = ll >> 32;
}
Once the UNIX time is converted to a FILETIME structure, other Win32 time
formats can be easily obtained by using Win32 functions such as
FileTimeToSystemTime() and FileTimeToDosDateTime().
void UnixTimeToSystemTime(time_t t, LPSYSTEMTIME pst)
{
FILETIME ft;
UnixTimeToFileTime(t, &ft);
FileTimeToSystemTime(&ft, pst);
}
Additional query words: bse time tm filetime systemtime crt
Keywords : kbprg kbnokeyword kbKernBase kbGrpKernBase
Version : 3.51 4.0
Platform : NT Win95 WINDOWS
Issue type : kbhowto
Last Reviewed: April 25, 1997