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GETITIMER(2)		      System Calls Manual		  GETITIMER(2)

NAME
       getitimer, setitimer -- get/set value of	interval timer

LIBRARY
       Standard	C Library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
       #include	<sys/time.h>
       #define ITIMER_REAL	0
       #define ITIMER_VIRTUAL	1
       #define ITIMER_PROF	2

       int
       getitimer(int which, struct itimerval *value);

       int
       setitimer(int	 which,	    const     struct	 itimerval     *value,
	   struct itimerval *ovalue);

DESCRIPTION
       The system provides each	process	with three interval timers, defined in
       <sys/time.h>.  The getitimer() system call returns  the	current	 value
       for  the	 timer	specified  in  which  in  the structure	at value.  The
       setitimer() system call sets a timer to the specified value  (returning
       the previous value of the timer if ovalue is not	a null pointer).

       A timer value is	defined	by the itimerval structure:

	     struct itimerval {
		     struct  timeval it_interval;    /*	timer interval */
		     struct  timeval it_value;	     /*	current	value */
	     };

       If  it_value is non-zero, it indicates the time to the next timer expi-
       ration.	If it_interval is non-zero, it specifies a value to be used in
       reloading it_value when the timer expires.  Setting it_value to 0  dis-
       ables  a	 timer,	 regardless  of	 the  value  of	 it_interval.  Setting
       it_interval to 0	causes a timer to be disabled after its	 next  expira-
       tion (assuming it_value is non-zero).

       Time values smaller than	the resolution of the system clock are rounded
       up to this resolution (typically	10 milliseconds).

       The ITIMER_REAL timer decrements	in real	time.  A SIGALRM signal	is de-
       livered when this timer expires.

       The  ITIMER_VIRTUAL  timer decrements in	process	virtual	time.  It runs
       only when the process is	executing.  A SIGVTALRM	 signal	 is  delivered
       when it expires.

       The  ITIMER_PROF	timer decrements both in process virtual time and when
       the system is running on	behalf of the process.	It is designed	to  be
       used by interpreters in statistically profiling the execution of	inter-
       preted  programs.  Each time the	ITIMER_PROF timer expires, the SIGPROF
       signal is delivered.  Because this  signal  may	interrupt  in-progress
       system calls, programs using this timer must be prepared	to restart in-
       terrupted system	calls.

       The  maximum  number of seconds allowed for it_interval and it_value in
       setitimer() is 100000000.

NOTES
       Three macros for	manipulating time values are defined in	 <sys/time.h>.
       The timerclear()	macro sets a time value	to zero, timerisset() tests if
       a time value is non-zero, and timercmp()	compares two time values.

RETURN VALUES
       Upon  successful	 completion,  the  value  0 is returned; otherwise the
       value -1	is returned and	the global variable errno is set  to  indicate
       the error.

ERRORS
       The getitimer() and setitimer() system calls will fail if:

       [EFAULT]		  The value argument specified a bad address.

       [EINVAL]		  The  value  argument	specified  a time that was too
			  large	to be handled.

SEE ALSO
       gettimeofday(2),	select(2), sigaction(2), clocks(7)

STANDARDS
       The  getitimer()	 and  setitimer()  functions  conform  to   IEEE   Std
       1003.1-2001  ("POSIX.1").   The	later IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 ("POSIX.1")
       revision	however	marked both functions as obsolescent, recommending the
       use of timer_gettime(2) and timer_settime(2) instead.

HISTORY
       The getitimer() system call appeared in 4.2BSD.

FreeBSD	13.2			  May 1, 2020			  GETITIMER(2)

NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | NOTES | RETURN VALUES | ERRORS | SEE ALSO | STANDARDS | HISTORY

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