Make two digit years specified on the command line represent
	the century that the computer currently resides.  So 99 means
	1999 this year, but 2099 next year.

Pointed out by: Peter Jeremy <peter.jeremy@auss2.alcatel.com.au>
This commit is contained in:
imp 1999-01-15 05:46:28 +00:00
parent 22fad7338c
commit b758132372

View File

@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ static const char copyright[] =
#ifndef lint
static const char rcsid[] =
"$Id$";
"$Id: tcpslice.c,v 1.5 1998/01/20 07:30:27 charnier Exp $";
#endif /* not lint */
/*
@ -325,6 +325,9 @@ fill_tm(char *time_string, int is_delta, struct tm *t, time_t *usecs_addr)
{
char *t_start, *t_stop, format_ch;
int val;
struct timeval now;
struct timezone tz;
struct tm tmnow;
#define SET_VAL(lhs,rhs) \
if (is_delta) \
@ -332,6 +335,10 @@ fill_tm(char *time_string, int is_delta, struct tm *t, time_t *usecs_addr)
else \
lhs = rhs
if (gettimeofday(&now, &tz) < 0)
err(1, "gettimeofday");
tmnow = *localtime(&now.tv_sec);
/* Loop through the time string parsing one specification at
* a time. Each specification has the form <number><letter>
* where <number> indicates the amount of time and <letter>
@ -358,6 +365,8 @@ fill_tm(char *time_string, int is_delta, struct tm *t, time_t *usecs_addr)
case 'y':
if ( val > 1900 )
val -= 1900;
else if (val < 100)
val += (tmnow.tm_year / 100) * 100;
SET_VAL(t->tm_year, val);
break;