Unix time representation

Frank Fock Frank.Fock____t-online.de
Wed Apr 23 22:19:05 CEST 2003


Hi Dave,

Just remove the "#ifndef WIN32" and DateAndTime
will also be available on Windows. I strongly
recommend using the DateAndTime TC (because it's
the standard way).

Best regards,
Frank


Dave Barratt wrote:
> Hi Frank,
> Thanks, but this isn't defined for a windoze platform (my OS).  All I'm
> looking to do is display a time_t long nicely - is the only way by using
> OCTET STRING & using a standard ctime format?  I could have a column in my
> table for time as long & have another col for OCTET STRING representation of
> the time to do this, but it seems wasteful of table space.  Any ideas?
> Dave
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <Frank.Fock____t-online.de>
> To: "Dave Barratt" <dbarratt____codimatech.com>
> Cc: <agentpp-dl____agentpp.com>
> Sent: Wednesday, April 23, 2003 12:08 PM
> Subject: Re: Unix time representation
> 
> 
> 
>>Hi Dave,
>>
>>It's the DateAndTime TC. It is implemented in
>>snmp_textuial_conventions.cpp of AGENT++ and
>>defined in
>>http://www.mibexplorer.com/export/ietf/SNMPv2-TC.pdf
>>
>>Best regards,
>>Frank
>>
>>
>>Dave Barratt schrieb:
>>
>>>Hi,
>>>A quick Mib question - is there a Textual convention or
>>>the like for representing Unix time i.e. the time in
>>>seconds since January 1, 1970 UTC?
>>>
>>>Dave Barratt
>>>Developer
>>>Codima Technologies - redefining the art of network
>>>management
>>>E-mail:  dbarratt at codimatech.com
>>>
>>
>>
> 
> 
> 






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