On Thu, Nov 7, 2019 at 7:31 AM R.Wieser <address@not.available> wrote: > > Chris, > > > I don't think boot time would be affected by a DST switch, though. > > It should be recorded in UTC. > > The point is, it /isn't/ a recorded constant (at least not on my machine). > Its just dragged around with the clocks current time (as in: current time > minus uptime). And as such I could easily imagine a DST change will cause > the "boot time" to change accordingly. >
Yes, but even if it's not recorded as a timestamp but as an uptime counter, that counter can be referenced against the current time in UTC. A DST switch affects the displayed time, but not the internal definition of "current time" (at least, not on Linux, where the system clock should be in UTC - the rules are different on Windows, and may also be different on other Unix-like OSes); if your current UTC time is 1573072926 seconds and your uptime is 7469247.52 seconds, then you can deduce that your system booted at 1565603679, and then convert that to a displayable boot time in whatever timezone you like (for instance, "Mon Aug 12 19:54:39 2019\n" which is what my ctime() returns). A DST switch wouldn't affect any of this, assuming you have the correct tzdata to figure out whether the boot time was on summer or winter time. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list