pybind11/include/pybind11/chrono.h
Aaron Gokaslan b5357d1fa8
fix(clang-tidy): Enable clang-tidy else-after-return and redundant void checks (#3080)
* Enable clang-tidy else-after-return and redundant void checks

* Fix remaining else-after

* Address reviewer comments

* Fix indentation

* Rerun clang-tidy post merge
2021-07-09 06:45:53 -07:00

199 lines
8.3 KiB
C++

/*
pybind11/chrono.h: Transparent conversion between std::chrono and python's datetime
Copyright (c) 2016 Trent Houliston <trent@houliston.me> and
Wenzel Jakob <wenzel.jakob@epfl.ch>
All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a
BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
*/
#pragma once
#include "pybind11.h"
#include <cmath>
#include <ctime>
#include <chrono>
#include <datetime.h>
// Backport the PyDateTime_DELTA functions from Python3.3 if required
#ifndef PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_DAYS
#define PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_DAYS(o) (((PyDateTime_Delta*)o)->days)
#endif
#ifndef PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_SECONDS
#define PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_SECONDS(o) (((PyDateTime_Delta*)o)->seconds)
#endif
#ifndef PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_MICROSECONDS
#define PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_MICROSECONDS(o) (((PyDateTime_Delta*)o)->microseconds)
#endif
PYBIND11_NAMESPACE_BEGIN(PYBIND11_NAMESPACE)
PYBIND11_NAMESPACE_BEGIN(detail)
template <typename type> class duration_caster {
public:
using rep = typename type::rep;
using period = typename type::period;
using days = std::chrono::duration<int_least32_t, std::ratio<86400>>; // signed 25 bits required by the standard.
bool load(handle src, bool) {
using namespace std::chrono;
// Lazy initialise the PyDateTime import
if (!PyDateTimeAPI) { PyDateTime_IMPORT; }
if (!src) return false;
// If invoked with datetime.delta object
if (PyDelta_Check(src.ptr())) {
value = type(duration_cast<duration<rep, period>>(
days(PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_DAYS(src.ptr()))
+ seconds(PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_SECONDS(src.ptr()))
+ microseconds(PyDateTime_DELTA_GET_MICROSECONDS(src.ptr()))));
return true;
}
// If invoked with a float we assume it is seconds and convert
if (PyFloat_Check(src.ptr())) {
value = type(duration_cast<duration<rep, period>>(duration<double>(PyFloat_AsDouble(src.ptr()))));
return true;
}
return false;
}
// If this is a duration just return it back
static const std::chrono::duration<rep, period>& get_duration(const std::chrono::duration<rep, period> &src) {
return src;
}
// If this is a time_point get the time_since_epoch
template <typename Clock> static std::chrono::duration<rep, period> get_duration(const std::chrono::time_point<Clock, std::chrono::duration<rep, period>> &src) {
return src.time_since_epoch();
}
static handle cast(const type &src, return_value_policy /* policy */, handle /* parent */) {
using namespace std::chrono;
// Use overloaded function to get our duration from our source
// Works out if it is a duration or time_point and get the duration
auto d = get_duration(src);
// Lazy initialise the PyDateTime import
if (!PyDateTimeAPI) { PyDateTime_IMPORT; }
// Declare these special duration types so the conversions happen with the correct primitive types (int)
using dd_t = duration<int, std::ratio<86400>>;
using ss_t = duration<int, std::ratio<1>>;
using us_t = duration<int, std::micro>;
auto dd = duration_cast<dd_t>(d);
auto subd = d - dd;
auto ss = duration_cast<ss_t>(subd);
auto us = duration_cast<us_t>(subd - ss);
return PyDelta_FromDSU(dd.count(), ss.count(), us.count());
}
PYBIND11_TYPE_CASTER(type, _("datetime.timedelta"));
};
// This is for casting times on the system clock into datetime.datetime instances
template <typename Duration> class type_caster<std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::system_clock, Duration>> {
public:
using type = std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::system_clock, Duration>;
bool load(handle src, bool) {
using namespace std::chrono;
// Lazy initialise the PyDateTime import
if (!PyDateTimeAPI) { PyDateTime_IMPORT; }
if (!src) return false;
std::tm cal;
microseconds msecs;
if (PyDateTime_Check(src.ptr())) {
cal.tm_sec = PyDateTime_DATE_GET_SECOND(src.ptr());
cal.tm_min = PyDateTime_DATE_GET_MINUTE(src.ptr());
cal.tm_hour = PyDateTime_DATE_GET_HOUR(src.ptr());
cal.tm_mday = PyDateTime_GET_DAY(src.ptr());
cal.tm_mon = PyDateTime_GET_MONTH(src.ptr()) - 1;
cal.tm_year = PyDateTime_GET_YEAR(src.ptr()) - 1900;
cal.tm_isdst = -1;
msecs = microseconds(PyDateTime_DATE_GET_MICROSECOND(src.ptr()));
} else if (PyDate_Check(src.ptr())) {
cal.tm_sec = 0;
cal.tm_min = 0;
cal.tm_hour = 0;
cal.tm_mday = PyDateTime_GET_DAY(src.ptr());
cal.tm_mon = PyDateTime_GET_MONTH(src.ptr()) - 1;
cal.tm_year = PyDateTime_GET_YEAR(src.ptr()) - 1900;
cal.tm_isdst = -1;
msecs = microseconds(0);
} else if (PyTime_Check(src.ptr())) {
cal.tm_sec = PyDateTime_TIME_GET_SECOND(src.ptr());
cal.tm_min = PyDateTime_TIME_GET_MINUTE(src.ptr());
cal.tm_hour = PyDateTime_TIME_GET_HOUR(src.ptr());
cal.tm_mday = 1; // This date (day, month, year) = (1, 0, 70)
cal.tm_mon = 0; // represents 1-Jan-1970, which is the first
cal.tm_year = 70; // earliest available date for Python's datetime
cal.tm_isdst = -1;
msecs = microseconds(PyDateTime_TIME_GET_MICROSECOND(src.ptr()));
}
else return false;
value = time_point_cast<Duration>(system_clock::from_time_t(std::mktime(&cal)) + msecs);
return true;
}
static handle cast(const std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::system_clock, Duration> &src, return_value_policy /* policy */, handle /* parent */) {
using namespace std::chrono;
// Lazy initialise the PyDateTime import
if (!PyDateTimeAPI) { PyDateTime_IMPORT; }
// Get out microseconds, and make sure they are positive, to avoid bug in eastern hemisphere time zones
// (cfr. https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/issues/2417)
using us_t = duration<int, std::micro>;
auto us = duration_cast<us_t>(src.time_since_epoch() % seconds(1));
if (us.count() < 0)
us += seconds(1);
// Subtract microseconds BEFORE `system_clock::to_time_t`, because:
// > If std::time_t has lower precision, it is implementation-defined whether the value is rounded or truncated.
// (https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/chrono/system_clock/to_time_t)
std::time_t tt = system_clock::to_time_t(time_point_cast<system_clock::duration>(src - us));
// std::localtime returns a pointer to a static internal std::tm object on success,
// or null pointer otherwise
std::tm *localtime_ptr = std::localtime(&tt);
if (!localtime_ptr)
throw cast_error("Unable to represent system_clock in local time");
// this function uses static memory so it's best to copy it out asap just in case
// otherwise other code that is using localtime may break this (not just python code)
std::tm localtime = *localtime_ptr;
return PyDateTime_FromDateAndTime(localtime.tm_year + 1900,
localtime.tm_mon + 1,
localtime.tm_mday,
localtime.tm_hour,
localtime.tm_min,
localtime.tm_sec,
us.count());
}
PYBIND11_TYPE_CASTER(type, _("datetime.datetime"));
};
// Other clocks that are not the system clock are not measured as datetime.datetime objects
// since they are not measured on calendar time. So instead we just make them timedeltas
// Or if they have passed us a time as a float we convert that
template <typename Clock, typename Duration> class type_caster<std::chrono::time_point<Clock, Duration>>
: public duration_caster<std::chrono::time_point<Clock, Duration>> {
};
template <typename Rep, typename Period> class type_caster<std::chrono::duration<Rep, Period>>
: public duration_caster<std::chrono::duration<Rep, Period>> {
};
PYBIND11_NAMESPACE_END(detail)
PYBIND11_NAMESPACE_END(PYBIND11_NAMESPACE)