ASN1_TIME *ASN1_TIME_set(ASN1_TIME *s, time_t t); ASN1_TIME *ASN1_TIME_adj(ASN1_TIME *s, time_t t, int offset_day, long offset_sec); int ASN1_TIME_set_string(ASN1_TIME *s, const char *str); int ASN1_TIME_check(const ASN1_TIME *t); int ASN1_TIME_print(BIO *b, const ASN1_TIME *s); int ASN1_TIME_diff(int *pday, int *psec, const ASN1_TIME *from, const ASN1_TIME *to);
ASN1_TIME_adj() sets the ASN1_TIME structure s to the time represented by the time offset_day and offset_sec after the time_t value t. The values of offset_day or offset_sec can be negative to set a time before t. The offset_sec value can also exceed the number of seconds in a day. If s is NULL a new ASN1_TIME structure is allocated and returned.
ASN1_TIME_set_string() sets ASN1_TIME structure s to the time represented by string str which must be in appropriate ASN.1 time format (for example YYMMDDHHMMSSZ or YYYYMMDDHHMMSSZ).
ASN1_TIME_check() checks the syntax of ASN1_TIME structure s.
ASN1_TIME_print() prints out the time s to BIO b in human readable format. It will be of the format MMM DD HH:MM:SS YYYY [GMT], for example ``Feb 3 00:55:52 2015 GMT'' it does not include a newline. If the time structure has invalid format it prints out ``Bad time value'' and returns an error.
ASN1_TIME_diff() sets *pday and *psec to the time difference between from and to. If to represents a time later than from then one or both (depending on the time difference) of *pday and *psec will be positive. If to represents a time earlier than from then one or both of *pday and *psec will be negative. If to and from represent the same time then *pday and *psec will both be zero. If both *pday and *psec are non-zero they will always have the same sign. The value of *psec will always be less than the number of seconds in a day. If from or to is NULL the current time is used.
The ASN1_TIME structure is represented as an ASN1_STRING internally and can be freed up using ASN1_STRING_free().
The ASN1_TIME structure can represent years from 0000 to 9999 but no attempt is made to correct ancient calendar changes (for example from Julian to Gregorian calendars).
Some applications add offset times directly to a time_t value and pass the results to ASN1_TIME_set() (or equivalent). This can cause problems as the time_t value can overflow on some systems resulting in unexpected results. New applications should use ASN1_TIME_adj() instead and pass the offset value in the offset_sec and offset_day parameters instead of directly manipulating a time_t value.
#include <time.h> #include <openssl/asn1.h> ASN1_TIME *tm; time_t t; BIO *b; t = time(NULL); tm = ASN1_TIME_adj(NULL, t, 0, 60 * 60); b = BIO_new_fp(stdout, BIO_NOCLOSE); ASN1_TIME_print(b, tm); ASN1_STRING_free(tm); BIO_free(b);
Determine if one time is later or sooner than the current time:
int day, sec; if (!ASN1_TIME_diff(&day, &sec, NULL, to)) /* Invalid time format */ if (day > 0 || sec > 0) printf("Later\n"); else if (day < 0 || sec < 0) printf("Sooner\n"); else printf("Same\n");
ASN1_TIME_set_string() returns 1 if the time value is successfully set and 0 otherwise.
ASN1_TIME_check() returns 1 if the structure is syntactically correct and 0 otherwise.
ASN1_TIME_print() returns 1 if the time is successfully printed out and 0 if an error occurred (I/O error or invalid time format).
ASN1_TIME_diff() returns 1 for sucess and 0 for failure. It can fail if the pass ASN1_TIME structure has invalid syntax for example.