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9.6 Delay Statements, Duration, and Time
1
A
delay_statement
is used to block further execution until a specified
expiration time
is reached. The expiration time can be specified either as a particular
point in time (in a
delay_until_statement),
or in seconds from the current time (in a
delay_relative_statement).
The language-defined package Calendar provides definitions for a type
Time and associated operations, including a function Clock that returns
the current time.
Syntax
2
delay_statement
::= delay_until_statement |
delay_relative_statement
3
delay_until_statement
::= delay until delay_expression;
4
delay_relative_statement
::= delay delay_expression;
Name Resolution Rules
5
The expected type for the
delay_expression in a
delay_relative_statement
is the predefined type Duration.
The
delay_expression
in a
delay_until_statement is expected
to be of any nonlimited type.
Legality Rules
6
There
can be multiple time bases, each with a corresponding clock, and a corresponding
time type. The type of the
delay_expression
in a
delay_until_statement shall
be a time type -- either the type Time defined in the language-defined
package Calendar (see below), or some other implementation-defined time
type (see
D.8).
Static Semantics
7
There is a predefined fixed point type named Duration,
declared in the visible part of package Standard; a value of type Duration
is used to represent the length of an interval of time, expressed in
seconds. The type Duration is not specific to a particular time base,
but can be used with any time base.
8
A value of the type Time in package Calendar,
or of some other implementation-defined time type, represents a time
as reported by a corresponding clock.
9
The following language-defined
library package exists:
10
package Ada.Calendar is
type Time is private;
11
subtype Year_Number is Integer range 1901 .. 2099;
subtype Month_Number is Integer range 1 .. 12;
subtype Day_Number is Integer range 1 .. 31;
subtype Day_Duration is Duration range 0.0 .. 86_400.0;
12
function Clock return Time;
13
function Year (Date : Time) return Year_Number;
function Month (Date : Time) return Month_Number;
function Day (Date : Time) return Day_Number;
function Seconds(Date : Time) return Day_Duration;
14
procedure Split (Date : in Time;
Year : out Year_Number;
Month : out Month_Number;
Day : out Day_Number;
Seconds : out Day_Duration);
15
function Time_Of(Year : Year_Number;
Month : Month_Number;
Day : Day_Number;
Seconds : Day_Duration := 0.0)
return Time;
16
function "+" (Left : Time; Right : Duration) return Time;
function "+" (Left : Duration; Right : Time) return Time;
function "-" (Left : Time; Right : Duration) return Time;
function "-" (Left : Time; Right : Time) return Duration;
17
function "<" (Left, Right : Time) return Boolean;
function "<="(Left, Right : Time) return Boolean;
function ">" (Left, Right : Time) return Boolean;
function ">="(Left, Right : Time) return Boolean;
18
19
private
... -- not specified by the language
end Ada.Calendar;
Dynamic Semantics
20
For the execution of a
delay_statement,
the
delay_expression is first
evaluated.
For a
delay_until_statement,
the expiration time for the delay is the value of the
delay_expression,
in the time base associated with the type of the
expression.
For a
delay_relative_statement,
the expiration time is defined as the current time, in the time base
associated with relative delays, plus the value of the
delay_expression
converted to the type Duration, and then rounded up to the next clock
tick.
The time base associated with relative delays
is as defined in
D.9, ``
Delay
Accuracy'' or is implementation defined.
21
The task executing a
delay_statement
is blocked until the expiration time is reached, at which point it becomes
ready again. If the expiration time has already passed, the task is not
blocked.
22
If an attempt is made to
cancel the
delay_statement
(as part of an
asynchronous_select
or abort -- see
9.7.4 and
9.8),
the
_statement is cancelled if the
expiration time has not yet passed, thereby completing the
delay_statement.
23
The time base associated with the type Time of
package Calendar is implementation defined. The function Clock of package
Calendar returns a value representing the current time for this time
base. The implementation-defined value of the named number System.Tick
(see
13.7) is an approximation of the length
of the real-time interval during which the value of Calendar.Clock remains
constant.
24
The functions Year, Month, Day, and Seconds return
the corresponding values for a given value of the type Time, as appropriate
to an implementation-defined timezone; the procedure Split returns all
four corresponding values. Conversely, the function Time_Of combines
a year number, a month number, a day number, and a duration, into a value
of type Time. The operators "+" and "-" for addition
and subtraction of times and durations, and the relational operators
for times, have the conventional meaning.
25
If Time_Of is called with a seconds value of
86_400.0, the value returned is equal to the value of Time_Of for the
next day with a seconds value of 0.0. The value returned by the function
Seconds or through the Seconds parameter of the procedure Split is always
less than 86_400.0.
26/1
The exception Time_Error is raised by the function
Time_Of if the actual parameters do not form a proper date. This exception
is also raised by the operators "+" and "-" if the
result is not representable in the type Time or Duration, as appropriate.
This exception is also raised by the functions Year, Month, Day, and
Seconds and the procedure Split if the year number of the given date
is outside of the range of the subtype Year_Number.
Implementation Requirements
27
The implementation of the type Duration shall
allow representation of time intervals (both positive and negative) up
to at least 86400 seconds (one day); Duration'Small shall not be greater
than twenty milliseconds. The implementation of the type Time shall allow
representation of all dates with year numbers in the range of Year_Number;
it may allow representation of other dates as well (both earlier and
later).
Implementation Permissions
28
An implementation may define additional time
types (see
D.8).
29
An implementation may raise Time_Error if the
value of a delay_expression
in a delay_until_statement of a
select_statement represents a time
more than 90 days past the current time. The actual limit, if any, is
implementation-defined.
Implementation Advice
30
Whenever possible in an implementation, the value
of Duration'Small should be no greater than 100 microseconds.
31
The time base for delay_relative_statements
should be monotonic; it need not be the same time base as used for Calendar.Clock.
32
31 A delay_relative_statement
with a negative value of the delay_expression
is equivalent to one with a zero value.
33
32 A delay_statement
may be executed by the environment task; consequently delay_statements
may be executed as part of the elaboration of a library_item
or the execution of the main subprogram. Such statements delay the environment
task (see 10.2).
34
33 A
delay_statement is an abort completion
point and a potentially blocking operation, even if the task is not actually
blocked.
35
34 There is no necessary
relationship between System.Tick (the resolution of the clock of package
Calendar) and Duration'Small (the small of type Duration).
36
35 Additional requirements
associated with delay_statements
are given in D.9, ``Delay
Accuracy''.
Examples
37
Example of a
relative delay statement:
38
delay 3.0; -- delay 3.0 seconds
39
Example
of a periodic task:
40
declare
use Ada.Calendar;
Next_Time : Time := Clock + Period;
-- Period is a global constant of type Duration
begin
loop -- repeated every Period seconds
delay until Next_Time;
... -- perform some actions
Next_Time := Next_Time + Period;
end loop;
end;
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