TIMER_GETOVERRUN(2) manual page
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timer_getoverrun - get overrun count for a
POSIX per-process timer
#include <time.h>int timer_getoverrun(timer_t timerid);
Link with -lrt.
Feature
Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)
):
timer_getoverrun():
_POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 199309L
timer_getoverrun() returns the "overrun
count" for the timer referred to by timerid. An application can use the
overrun count to accurately calculate the number of timer expirations that
would have occurred over a given time interval. Timer overruns can occur
both when receiving expiration notifications via signals (SIGEV_SIGNAL),
and via threads (SIGEV_THREAD).
When expiration notifications are delivered
via a signal, overruns can occur as follows. Regardless of whether or not
a real-time signal is used for timer notifications, the system queues at
most one signal per timer. (This is the behavior specified by POSIX.1-2001.
The alternative, queuing one signal for each timer expiration, could easily
result in overflowing the allowed limits for queued signals on the system.)
Because of system scheduling delays, or because the signal may be temporarily
blocked, there can be a delay between the time when the notification signal
is generated and the time when it is delivered (e.g., caught by a signal
handler) or accepted (e.g., using sigwaitinfo(2)
). In this interval, further
timer expirations may occur. The timer overrun count is the number of additional
timer expirations that occurred between the time when the signal was generated
and when it was delivered or accepted.
Timer overruns can also occur when
expiration notifications are delivered via invocation of a thread, since
there may be an arbitrary delay between an expiration of the timer and
the invocation of the notification thread, and in that delay interval,
additional timer expirations may occur.
On success, timer_getoverrun()
returns the overrun count of the specified timer; this count may be 0 if
no overruns have occurred. On failure, -1 is returned, and errno is set to
indicate the error.
- EINVAL
- timerid is not a valid timer ID.
This
system call is available since Linux 2.6.
POSIX.1-2001.
When
timer notifications are delivered via signals (SIGEV_SIGNAL), on Linux
it is also possible to obtain the overrun count via the si_overrun field
of the siginfo_t structure (see sigaction(2)
). This allows an application
to avoid the overhead of making a system call to obtain the overrun count,
but is a nonportable extension to POSIX.1-2001.
POSIX.1-2001 discusses timer
overruns only in the context of timer notifications using signals.
POSIX.1-2001
specifies that if the timer overrun count is equal to or greater than an
implementation-defined maximum, DELAYTIMER_MAX, then timer_getoverrun()
should return DELAYTIMER_MAX. However, Linux does not implement this feature:
instead, if the timer overrun value exceeds the maximum representable integer,
the counter cycles, starting once more from low values.
See timer_create(2)
.
clock_gettime(2)
, sigaction(2)
, signalfd(2)
, sigwaitinfo(2)
, timer_create(2)
,
timer_delete(2)
, timer_settime(2)
, signal(7)
, time(7)
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