xref: /freebsd/contrib/tzdata/leapseconds.awk (revision cab6a39d7b343596a5823e65c0f7b426551ec22d)
1# Generate zic format 'leapseconds' from NIST format 'leap-seconds.list'.
2
3# This file is in the public domain.
4
5# This program uses awk arithmetic.  POSIX requires awk to support
6# exact integer arithmetic only through 10**10, which means for NTP
7# timestamps this program works only to the year 2216, which is the
8# year 1900 plus 10**10 seconds.  However, in practice
9# POSIX-conforming awk implementations invariably use IEEE-754 double
10# and so support exact integers through 2**53.  By the year 2216,
11# POSIX will almost surely require at least 2**53 for awk, so for NTP
12# timestamps this program should be good until the year 285,428,681
13# (the year 1900 plus 2**53 seconds).  By then leap seconds will be
14# long obsolete, as the Earth will likely slow down so much that
15# there will be more than 25 hours per day and so some other scheme
16# will be needed.
17
18BEGIN {
19  print "# Allowance for leap seconds added to each time zone file."
20  print ""
21  print "# This file is in the public domain."
22  print ""
23  print "# This file is generated automatically from the data in the public-domain"
24  print "# NIST format leap-seconds.list file, which can be copied from"
25  print "# <ftp://ftp.nist.gov/pub/time/leap-seconds.list>"
26  print "# or <ftp://ftp.boulder.nist.gov/pub/time/leap-seconds.list>."
27  print "# The NIST file is used instead of its IERS upstream counterpart"
28  print "# <https://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulc/ntp/leap-seconds.list>"
29  print "# because under US law the NIST file is public domain"
30  print "# whereas the IERS file's copyright and license status is unclear."
31  print "# For more about leap-seconds.list, please see"
32  print "# The NTP Timescale and Leap Seconds"
33  print "# <https://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/leap.html>."
34  print ""
35  print "# The rules for leap seconds are specified in Annex 1 (Time scales) of:"
36  print "# Standard-frequency and time-signal emissions."
37  print "# International Telecommunication Union - Radiocommunication Sector"
38  print "# (ITU-R) Recommendation TF.460-6 (02/2002)"
39  print "# <https://www.itu.int/rec/R-REC-TF.460-6-200202-I/>."
40  print "# The International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS)"
41  print "# periodically uses leap seconds to keep UTC to within 0.9 s of UT1"
42  print "# (a proxy for Earth's angle in space as measured by astronomers)"
43  print "# and publishes leap second data in a copyrighted file"
44  print "# <https://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulc/Leap_Second.dat>."
45  print "# See: Levine J. Coordinated Universal Time and the leap second."
46  print "# URSI Radio Sci Bull. 2016;89(4):30-6. doi:10.23919/URSIRSB.2016.7909995"
47  print "# <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7909995>."
48  print ""
49  print "# There were no leap seconds before 1972, as no official mechanism"
50  print "# accounted for the discrepancy between atomic time (TAI) and the earth's"
51  print "# rotation.  The first (\"1 Jan 1972\") data line in leap-seconds.list"
52  print "# does not denote a leap second; it denotes the start of the current definition"
53  print "# of UTC."
54  print ""
55  print "# All leap-seconds are Stationary (S) at the given UTC time."
56  print "# The correction (+ or -) is made at the given time, so in the unlikely"
57  print "# event of a negative leap second, a line would look like this:"
58  print "# Leap	YEAR	MON	DAY	23:59:59	-	S"
59  print "# Typical lines look like this:"
60  print "# Leap	YEAR	MON	DAY	23:59:60	+	S"
61
62  monthabbr[ 1] = "Jan"
63  monthabbr[ 2] = "Feb"
64  monthabbr[ 3] = "Mar"
65  monthabbr[ 4] = "Apr"
66  monthabbr[ 5] = "May"
67  monthabbr[ 6] = "Jun"
68  monthabbr[ 7] = "Jul"
69  monthabbr[ 8] = "Aug"
70  monthabbr[ 9] = "Sep"
71  monthabbr[10] = "Oct"
72  monthabbr[11] = "Nov"
73  monthabbr[12] = "Dec"
74
75  sstamp_init()
76}
77
78# In case the input has CRLF form a la NIST.
79{ sub(/\r$/, "") }
80
81/^#[ \t]*[Uu]pdated through/ || /^#[ \t]*[Ff]ile expires on/ {
82    last_lines = last_lines $0 "\n"
83}
84
85/^#[$][ \t]/ { updated = $2 }
86/^#[@][ \t]/ { expires = $2 }
87
88/^[ \t]*#/ { next }
89
90{
91    NTP_timestamp = $1
92    TAI_minus_UTC = $2
93    if (old_TAI_minus_UTC) {
94	if (old_TAI_minus_UTC < TAI_minus_UTC) {
95	    sign = "23:59:60\t+"
96	} else {
97	    sign = "23:59:59\t-"
98	}
99	sstamp_to_ymdhMs(NTP_timestamp - 1, ss_NTP)
100	printf "Leap\t%d\t%s\t%d\t%s\tS\n", \
101	  ss_year, monthabbr[ss_month], ss_mday, sign
102    }
103    old_TAI_minus_UTC = TAI_minus_UTC
104}
105
106END {
107    sstamp_to_ymdhMs(expires, ss_NTP)
108
109    print ""
110    print "# UTC timestamp when this leap second list expires."
111    print "# Any additional leap seconds will come after this."
112    if (! EXPIRES_LINE) {
113      print "# This Expires line is commented out for now,"
114      print "# so that pre-2020a zic implementations do not reject this file."
115    }
116    printf "%sExpires %.4d\t%s\t%.2d\t%.2d:%.2d:%.2d\n", \
117      EXPIRES_LINE ? "" : "#", \
118      ss_year, monthabbr[ss_month], ss_mday, ss_hour, ss_min, ss_sec
119
120    # The difference between the NTP and POSIX epochs is 70 years
121    # (including 17 leap days), each 24 hours of 60 minutes of 60
122    # seconds each.
123    epoch_minus_NTP = ((1970 - 1900) * 365 + 17) * 24 * 60 * 60
124
125    print ""
126    print "# POSIX timestamps for the data in this file:"
127    sstamp_to_ymdhMs(updated, ss_NTP)
128    printf "#updated %d (%.4d-%.2d-%.2d %.2d:%.2d:%.2d UTC)\n", \
129      updated - epoch_minus_NTP, \
130      ss_year, ss_month, ss_mday, ss_hour, ss_min, ss_sec
131    sstamp_to_ymdhMs(expires, ss_NTP)
132    printf "#expires %d (%.4d-%.2d-%.2d %.2d:%.2d:%.2d UTC)\n", \
133      expires - epoch_minus_NTP, \
134      ss_year, ss_month, ss_mday, ss_hour, ss_min, ss_sec
135
136    printf "\n%s", last_lines
137}
138
139# sstamp_to_ymdhMs - convert seconds timestamp to date and time
140#
141# Call as:
142#
143#    sstamp_to_ymdhMs(sstamp, epoch_days)
144#
145# where:
146#
147#    sstamp - is the seconds timestamp.
148#    epoch_days - is the timestamp epoch in Gregorian days since 1600-03-01.
149#	ss_NTP is appropriate for an NTP sstamp.
150#
151# Both arguments should be nonnegative integers.
152# On return, the following variables are set based on sstamp:
153#
154#    ss_year	- Gregorian calendar year
155#    ss_month	- month of the year (1-January to 12-December)
156#    ss_mday	- day of the month (1-31)
157#    ss_hour	- hour (0-23)
158#    ss_min	- minute (0-59)
159#    ss_sec	- second (0-59)
160#    ss_wday	- day of week (0-Sunday to 6-Saturday)
161#
162# The function sstamp_init should be called prior to using sstamp_to_ymdhMs.
163
164function sstamp_init()
165{
166  # Days in month N, where March is month 0 and January month 10.
167  ss_mon_days[ 0] = 31
168  ss_mon_days[ 1] = 30
169  ss_mon_days[ 2] = 31
170  ss_mon_days[ 3] = 30
171  ss_mon_days[ 4] = 31
172  ss_mon_days[ 5] = 31
173  ss_mon_days[ 6] = 30
174  ss_mon_days[ 7] = 31
175  ss_mon_days[ 8] = 30
176  ss_mon_days[ 9] = 31
177  ss_mon_days[10] = 31
178
179  # Counts of days in a Gregorian year, quad-year, century, and quad-century.
180  ss_year_days = 365
181  ss_quadyear_days = ss_year_days * 4 + 1
182  ss_century_days = ss_quadyear_days * 25 - 1
183  ss_quadcentury_days = ss_century_days * 4 + 1
184
185  # Standard day epochs, suitable for epoch_days.
186  # ss_MJD = 94493
187  # ss_POSIX = 135080
188  ss_NTP = 109513
189}
190
191function sstamp_to_ymdhMs(sstamp, epoch_days, \
192			  quadcentury, century, quadyear, year, month, day)
193{
194  ss_hour = int(sstamp / 3600) % 24
195  ss_min = int(sstamp / 60) % 60
196  ss_sec = sstamp % 60
197
198  # Start with a count of days since 1600-03-01 Gregorian.
199  day = epoch_days + int(sstamp / (24 * 60 * 60))
200
201  # Compute a year-month-day date with days of the month numbered
202  # 0-30, months (March-February) numbered 0-11, and years that start
203  # start March 1 and end after the last day of February.  A quad-year
204  # starts on March 1 of a year evenly divisible by 4 and ends after
205  # the last day of February 4 years later.  A century starts on and
206  # ends before March 1 in years evenly divisible by 100.
207  # A quad-century starts on and ends before March 1 in years divisible
208  # by 400.  While the number of days in a quad-century is a constant,
209  # the number of days in each other time period can vary by 1.
210  # Any variation is in the last day of the time period (there might
211  # or might not be a February 29) where it is easy to deal with.
212
213  quadcentury = int(day / ss_quadcentury_days)
214  day -= quadcentury * ss_quadcentury_days
215  ss_wday = (day + 3) % 7
216  century = int(day / ss_century_days)
217  century -= century == 4
218  day -= century * ss_century_days
219  quadyear = int(day / ss_quadyear_days)
220  day -= quadyear * ss_quadyear_days
221  year = int(day / ss_year_days)
222  year -= year == 4
223  day -= year * ss_year_days
224  for (month = 0; month < 11; month++) {
225    if (day < ss_mon_days[month])
226      break
227    day -= ss_mon_days[month]
228  }
229
230  # Convert the date to a conventional day of month (1-31),
231  # month (1-12, January-December) and Gregorian year.
232  ss_mday = day + 1
233  if (month <= 9) {
234    ss_month = month + 3
235  } else {
236    ss_month = month - 9
237    year++
238  }
239  ss_year = 1600 + quadcentury * 400 + century * 100 + quadyear * 4 + year
240}
241