• 0x0@programming.dev
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      2 hours ago

      My 32-bit VM:

      type     : size (bytes)
      int      : 4
      long     : 4
      long long: 8
      double   : 8
      time_t   : 4
      float    : 4
      l double : 12
      int8_t   : 1	INT8_MAX  : 127
      int16_t  : 2	INT16_MAX : 32767
      int32t   : 4	INT32_MAX : 2147483647
      int64_t  : 8	INT64_MAX : 9223372036854775807
      uint8_t  : 1	UINT8_MAX : 255
      uint16_t : 2	UINT16_MAX: 65535
      uint32t  : 4	UINT32_MAX: 4294967295
      uint64_t : 8	UINT64_MAX: 18446744073709551615
      

      It does support 64-bit sizes, weirdly enough time_t is not one of them.

      • lengau@midwest.social
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        3 minutes ago

        time_t will remain 32-bit to avoid breaking ABI compatibility. However, Linux on 32-bit platforms has a full set of syscalls that return time64_t values. I don’t know about other distros, but since 24.04 Ubuntu has had everything in its repositories using those calls.