[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH 1/3] xenbaked: properly use time_t in dump_stats()
On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 04:05:37PM +0200, Jan Beulich wrote: > "int" is not a suitable type to convert time()'s return value to. Avoid > casts and other extra fiddling by using difftime(), on the assumption > that the overhead of using "double" doesn't matter here. dump_stats() seems to be only used once, so it's probably fine. > Coverity ID: 1509374 > Signed-off-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxx> > > --- unstable.orig/tools/xenmon/xenbaked.c 2022-01-06 16:12:39.000000000 > +0100 > +++ unstable/tools/xenmon/xenbaked.c 2022-08-18 15:36:39.918706853 +0200 > @@ -230,11 +230,7 @@ static void check_gotten_sum(void) > static void dump_stats(void) > { > stat_map_t *smt = stat_map; > - time_t end_time, run_time; > - > - time(&end_time); > - > - run_time = end_time - start_time; > + double run_time = difftime(time(NULL), start_time); > > printf("Event counts:\n"); > while (smt->text != NULL) { > @@ -242,13 +238,11 @@ static void dump_stats(void) > smt++; > } > > - printf("processed %d total records in %d seconds (%ld per second)\n", > - rec_count, (int)run_time, > - run_time ? (long)(rec_count/run_time) : 0L); > + printf("processed %d total records in %0f seconds (%0f per second)\n", Did you want to write "%.0f" or even "%.f" instead of "%0f"? It seems that the '0' here mean '0'-padded, but without field width there would be nothing to pad. I'm guessing you would want printf to write something like "266 seconds" instead of "266.646168 seconds". Am I missing something ? > + rec_count, run_time, run_time ? rec_count / run_time : 0); > > - printf("woke up %d times in %d seconds (%ld per second)\n", > - wakeups, (int) run_time, > - run_time ? (long)(wakeups/run_time) : 0L); > + printf("woke up %d times in %0f seconds (%0f per second)\n", > + wakeups, run_time, run_time ? wakeups / run_time : 0); > > check_gotten_sum(); > } > -- Anthony PERARD
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