/* * Copyright (C) 2006 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package android.os; import android.annotation.NonNull; import android.annotation.UnsupportedAppUsage; import android.app.IAlarmManager; import android.content.Context; import android.location.ILocationManager; import android.location.LocationTime; import android.util.Slog; import dalvik.annotation.optimization.CriticalNative; import java.time.Clock; import java.time.DateTimeException; import java.time.ZoneOffset; /** * Core timekeeping facilities. * *
Three different clocks are available, and they should not be confused: * *
{@link System#currentTimeMillis System.currentTimeMillis()} * is the standard "wall" clock (time and date) expressing milliseconds * since the epoch. The wall clock can be set by the user or the phone * network (see {@link #setCurrentTimeMillis}), so the time may jump * backwards or forwards unpredictably. This clock should only be used * when correspondence with real-world dates and times is important, such * as in a calendar or alarm clock application. Interval or elapsed * time measurements should use a different clock. If you are using * System.currentTimeMillis(), consider listening to the * {@link android.content.Intent#ACTION_TIME_TICK ACTION_TIME_TICK}, * {@link android.content.Intent#ACTION_TIME_CHANGED ACTION_TIME_CHANGED} * and {@link android.content.Intent#ACTION_TIMEZONE_CHANGED * ACTION_TIMEZONE_CHANGED} {@link android.content.Intent Intent} * broadcasts to find out when the time changes. * *
{@link #uptimeMillis} is counted in milliseconds since the * system was booted. This clock stops when the system enters deep * sleep (CPU off, display dark, device waiting for external input), * but is not affected by clock scaling, idle, or other power saving * mechanisms. This is the basis for most interval timing * such as {@link Thread#sleep(long) Thread.sleep(millls)}, * {@link Object#wait(long) Object.wait(millis)}, and * {@link System#nanoTime System.nanoTime()}. This clock is guaranteed * to be monotonic, and is suitable for interval timing when the * interval does not span device sleep. Most methods that accept a * timestamp value currently expect the {@link #uptimeMillis} clock. * *
{@link #elapsedRealtime} and {@link #elapsedRealtimeNanos} * return the time since the system was booted, and include deep sleep. * This clock is guaranteed to be monotonic, and continues to tick even * when the CPU is in power saving modes, so is the recommend basis * for general purpose interval timing. * *
Standard functions like {@link Thread#sleep(long) * Thread.sleep(millis)} and {@link Object#wait(long) Object.wait(millis)} * are always available. These functions use the {@link #uptimeMillis} * clock; if the device enters sleep, the remainder of the time will be * postponed until the device wakes up. These synchronous functions may * be interrupted with {@link Thread#interrupt Thread.interrupt()}, and * you must handle {@link InterruptedException}. * *
{@link #sleep SystemClock.sleep(millis)} is a utility function * very similar to {@link Thread#sleep(long) Thread.sleep(millis)}, but it * ignores {@link InterruptedException}. Use this function for delays if * you do not use {@link Thread#interrupt Thread.interrupt()}, as it will * preserve the interrupted state of the thread. * *
The {@link android.os.Handler} class can schedule asynchronous * callbacks at an absolute or relative time. Handler objects also use the * {@link #uptimeMillis} clock, and require an {@link android.os.Looper * event loop} (normally present in any GUI application). * *
The {@link android.app.AlarmManager} can trigger one-time or * recurring events which occur even when the device is in deep sleep * or your application is not running. Events may be scheduled with your * choice of {@link java.lang.System#currentTimeMillis} (RTC) or * {@link #elapsedRealtime} (ELAPSED_REALTIME), and cause an * {@link android.content.Intent} broadcast when they occur. *
* While the time returned by {@link System#currentTimeMillis()} can be * adjusted by the user, the time returned by this method cannot be adjusted * by the user. Note that synchronization may occur using an insecure * network protocol, so the returned time should not be used for security * purposes. *
* This performs no blocking network operations and returns values based on * a recent successful synchronization event; it will either return a valid * time or throw. * * @throws DateTimeException when no accurate network time can be provided. * @hide */ public static long currentNetworkTimeMillis() { final IAlarmManager mgr = IAlarmManager.Stub .asInterface(ServiceManager.getService(Context.ALARM_SERVICE)); if (mgr != null) { try { return mgr.currentNetworkTimeMillis(); } catch (ParcelableException e) { e.maybeRethrow(DateTimeException.class); throw new RuntimeException(e); } catch (RemoteException e) { throw e.rethrowFromSystemServer(); } } else { throw new RuntimeException(new DeadSystemException()); } } /** * Returns a {@link Clock} that starts at January 1, 1970 00:00:00.0 UTC, * synchronized using a remote network source outside the device. *
* While the time returned by {@link System#currentTimeMillis()} can be * adjusted by the user, the time returned by this method cannot be adjusted * by the user. Note that synchronization may occur using an insecure * network protocol, so the returned time should not be used for security * purposes. *
* This performs no blocking network operations and returns values based on * a recent successful synchronization event; it will either return a valid * time or throw. * * @throws DateTimeException when no accurate network time can be provided. * @hide */ public static @NonNull Clock currentNetworkTimeClock() { return new SimpleClock(ZoneOffset.UTC) { @Override public long millis() { return SystemClock.currentNetworkTimeMillis(); } }; } /** * Returns a {@link Clock} that starts at January 1, 1970 00:00:00.0 UTC, * synchronized using the device's location provider. * * @throws DateTimeException when the location provider has not had a location fix since boot. */ public static @NonNull Clock currentGnssTimeClock() { return new SimpleClock(ZoneOffset.UTC) { private final ILocationManager mMgr = ILocationManager.Stub .asInterface(ServiceManager.getService(Context.LOCATION_SERVICE)); @Override public long millis() { LocationTime time; try { time = mMgr.getGnssTimeMillis(); } catch (RemoteException e) { e.rethrowFromSystemServer(); return 0; } if (time == null) { throw new DateTimeException("Gnss based time is not available."); } long currentNanos = elapsedRealtimeNanos(); long deltaMs = (currentNanos - time.getElapsedRealtimeNanos()) / 1000000L; return time.getTime() + deltaMs; } }; } }