165 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
165 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
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# Arduino Time Library
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Time is a library that provides timekeeping functionality for Arduino.
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The code is derived from the Playground DateTime library but is updated
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to provide an API that is more flexible and easier to use.
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A primary goal was to enable date and time functionality that can be used with
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a variety of external time sources with minimum differences required in sketch logic.
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Example sketches illustrate how similar sketch code can be used with: a Real Time Clock,
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internet NTP time service, GPS time data, and Serial time messages from a computer
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for time synchronization.
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## Functionality
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The functions available in the library include
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```c
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hour(); // the hour now (0-23)
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minute(); // the minute now (0-59)
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second(); // the second now (0-59)
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day(); // the day now (1-31)
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weekday(); // day of the week (1-7), Sunday is day 1
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month(); // the month now (1-12)
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year(); // the full four digit year: (2009, 2010 etc)
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```
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there are also functions to return the hour in 12-hour format
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```c
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hourFormat12(); // the hour now in 12 hour format
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isAM(); // returns true if time now is AM
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isPM(); // returns true if time now is PM
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```
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The time and date functions can take an optional parameter for the time. This prevents
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errors if the time rolls over between elements. For example, if a new minute begins
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between getting the minute and second, the values will be inconsistent. Using the
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following functions eliminates this problem
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```c
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time_t t = now(); // store the current time in time variable t
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hour(t); // returns the hour for the given time t
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minute(t); // returns the minute for the given time t
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second(t); // returns the second for the given time t
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day(t); // the day for the given time t
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weekday(t); // day of the week for the given time t
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month(t); // the month for the given time t
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year(t); // the year for the given time t
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```
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There are also two functions that return the number of milliseconds left-over. Care
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should be taken when using this value since there are no functions to set the time
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with sub-second accuracy and the value may jump when the time is synchronized.
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However, it is always consistent with the current time. To access these functions,
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you have to `#define TIMELIB_ENABLE_MILLIS` in your sketch.
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```c
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time_t t = now(uint32_t& m) // store the current time in time variable t and milliseconds in m
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millisecond(); // the millisecond now (0-999)
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```
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Functions for managing the timer services are:
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```c
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setTime(t); // set the system time to the give time t
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setTime(hr,min,sec,day,mnth,yr); // alternative to above, yr is 2 or 4 digit yr
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// (2010 or 10 sets year to 2010)
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adjustTime(adjustment); // adjust system time by adding the adjustment value (in seconds)
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timeStatus(); // indicates if time has been set and recently synchronized
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// returns one of the following enumerations:
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timeNotSet // the time has never been set, the clock started on Jan 1, 1970
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timeNeedsSync // the time had been set but a sync attempt did not succeed
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timeSet // the time is set and is synced
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```
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Time and Date values are not valid if the status is timeNotSet. Otherwise, values can be used but
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the returned time may have drifted if the status is timeNeedsSync.
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```c
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setSyncProvider(getTimeFunction); // set the external time provider
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setSyncInterval(interval); // set the number of seconds between re-sync
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```
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There are many convenience macros in the `time.h` file for time constants and conversion
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of time units.
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To use the library, copy the download to the Library directory.
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## Examples
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The Time directory contains the Time library and some example sketches
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illustrating how the library can be used with various time sources:
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- `TimeSerial.pde` shows Arduino as a clock without external hardware.
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It is synchronized by time messages sent over the serial port.
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A companion Processing sketch will automatically provide these messages
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if it is running and connected to the Arduino serial port.
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- `TimeSerialDateStrings.pde` adds day and month name strings to the sketch above
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Short (3 characters) and long strings are available to print the days of
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the week and names of the months.
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- `TimeRTC` uses a DS1307 real-time clock to provide time synchronization.
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A basic RTC library named DS1307RTC is included in the download.
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To run this sketch the DS1307RTC library must be installed.
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- `TimeRTCSet` is similar to the above and adds the ability to set the Real Time Clock
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- `TimeRTCLog` demonstrates how to calculate the difference between times.
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It is a very simple logger application that monitors events on digital pins
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and prints (to the serial port) the time of an event and the time period since
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the previous event.
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- `TimeNTP` uses the Arduino Ethernet shield to access time using the internet NTP time service.
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The NTP protocol uses UDP and the UdpBytewise library is required, see:
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http://bitbucket.org/bjoern/arduino_osc/src/14667490521f/libraries/Ethernet/
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- `TimeGPS` gets time from a GPS
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This requires the TinyGPS library from Mikal Hart:
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http://arduiniana.org/libraries/TinyGPS
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## Differences
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Differences between this code and the playground DateTime library
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although the Time library is based on the DateTime codebase, the API has changed.
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Changes in the Time library API:
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- time elements are functions returning `int` (they are variables in DateTime)
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- Years start from 1970
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- days of the week and months start from 1 (they start from 0 in DateTime)
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- DateStrings do not require a separate library
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- time elements can be accessed non-atomically (in DateTime they are always atomic)
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- function added to automatically sync time with external source
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- `localTime` and `maketime` parameters changed, `localTime` renamed to `breakTime`
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## Technical notes:
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Internal system time is based on the standard Unix `time_t`.
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The value is the number of seconds since Jan 1, 1970.
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System time begins at zero when the sketch starts.
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The internal time can be automatically synchronized at regular intervals to an external time source.
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This is enabled by calling the `setSyncProvider(provider)` function - the provider argument is
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the address of a function that returns the current time as a `time_t`.
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See the sketches in the examples directory for usage.
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The default interval for re-syncing the time is 5 minutes but can be changed by calling the
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`setSyncInterval(interval)` method to set the number of seconds between re-sync attempts.
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The Time library defines a structure for holding time elements that is a compact version of the C tm structure.
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All the members of the Arduino tm structure are bytes and the year is offset from 1970.
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Convenience macros provide conversion to and from the Arduino format.
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Low level functions to convert between system time and individual time elements are provided:
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```c
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breakTime(time, &tm); // break time_t into elements stored in tm struct
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makeTime(&tm); // return time_t from elements stored in tm struct
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```
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The DS1307RTC library included in the download provides an example of how a time provider
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can use the low-level functions to interface with the Time library.
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