Fixed ngx_gmtime() on 32-bit platforms with 64-bit time_t.
In ngx_gmtime(), instead of casting to ngx_uint_t we now work with
time_t directly. This allows using dates after 2038 on 32-bit platforms
which use 64-bit time_t, notably NetBSD and OpenBSD.
As the code is not able to work with negative time_t values, argument
is now set to 0 for negative values. As a positive side effect, this
results in Epoch being used for such values instead of a date in distant
future.
diff --git a/src/core/ngx_times.c b/src/core/ngx_times.c
index 1e36675..ef63f1e 100644
--- a/src/core/ngx_times.c
+++ b/src/core/ngx_times.c
@@ -300,23 +300,25 @@
ngx_gmtime(time_t t, ngx_tm_t *tp)
{
ngx_int_t yday;
- ngx_uint_t n, sec, min, hour, mday, mon, year, wday, days, leap;
+ ngx_uint_t sec, min, hour, mday, mon, year, wday, days, leap;
/* the calculation is valid for positive time_t only */
- n = (ngx_uint_t) t;
+ if (t < 0) {
+ t = 0;
+ }
- days = n / 86400;
+ days = t / 86400;
+ sec = t % 86400;
/* January 1, 1970 was Thursday */
wday = (4 + days) % 7;
- n %= 86400;
- hour = n / 3600;
- n %= 3600;
- min = n / 60;
- sec = n % 60;
+ hour = sec / 3600;
+ sec %= 3600;
+ min = sec / 60;
+ sec %= 60;
/*
* the algorithm based on Gauss' formula,