@cm0002 to Programmer [email protected] • 1 month agoY-10Klemmy.mlimagemessage-square25arrow-up1396arrow-down16cross-posted to: [email protected]
arrow-up1390arrow-down1imageY-10Klemmy.ml@cm0002 to Programmer [email protected] • 1 month agomessage-square25cross-posted to: [email protected]
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink24•1 month agoAnd not using 32-bit integers to calculate time. Which is still a thing in many many many codebases written in C or C++…
minus-squareJustEnoughDuckslinkfedilink3•1 month ago32 bit embedded processors us a lot of 32 bit time, though i am not sure if date time libraries in SDKs have been updated to use 64 bit for time.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink6•1 month agoLinux kernel updated to 64 bit time quite recently. In 2038 I can guarantee somebody in a very serious business is still using an ancient RHEL and will have issues.
And not using 32-bit integers to calculate time. Which is still a thing in many many many codebases written in C or C++…
32 bit embedded processors us a lot of 32 bit time, though i am not sure if date time libraries in SDKs have been updated to use 64 bit for time.
Linux kernel updated to 64 bit time quite recently. In 2038 I can guarantee somebody in a very serious business is still using an ancient RHEL and will have issues.