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+/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
+/* vim: set ts=8 sts=2 et sw=2 tw=80: */
+/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
+ * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
+ * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
+
+#ifndef mozilla_TimeStamp_h
+#define mozilla_TimeStamp_h
+
+#include "mozilla/Assertions.h"
+#include "mozilla/Attributes.h"
+#include "mozilla/FloatingPoint.h"
+#include "mozilla/Types.h"
+#include <algorithm> // for std::min, std::max
+#include <ostream>
+#include <stdint.h>
+#include <type_traits>
+
+namespace IPC {
+template <typename T>
+struct ParamTraits;
+} // namespace IPC
+
+#ifdef XP_WIN
+// defines TimeStampValue as a complex value keeping both
+// GetTickCount and QueryPerformanceCounter values
+# include "TimeStamp_windows.h"
+
+# include "mozilla/Maybe.h" // For TimeStamp::RawQueryPerformanceCounterValue
+#endif
+
+namespace mozilla {
+
+#ifndef XP_WIN
+typedef uint64_t TimeStampValue;
+#endif
+
+class TimeStamp;
+class TimeStampTests;
+
+/**
+ * Platform-specific implementation details of BaseTimeDuration.
+ */
+class BaseTimeDurationPlatformUtils {
+ public:
+ static MFBT_API double ToSeconds(int64_t aTicks);
+ static MFBT_API double ToSecondsSigDigits(int64_t aTicks);
+ static MFBT_API int64_t TicksFromMilliseconds(double aMilliseconds);
+ static MFBT_API int64_t ResolutionInTicks();
+};
+
+/**
+ * Instances of this class represent the length of an interval of time.
+ * Negative durations are allowed, meaning the end is before the start.
+ *
+ * Internally the duration is stored as a int64_t in units of
+ * PR_TicksPerSecond() when building with NSPR interval timers, or a
+ * system-dependent unit when building with system clocks. The
+ * system-dependent unit must be constant, otherwise the semantics of
+ * this class would be broken.
+ *
+ * The ValueCalculator template parameter determines how arithmetic
+ * operations are performed on the integer count of ticks (mValue).
+ */
+template <typename ValueCalculator>
+class BaseTimeDuration {
+ public:
+ // The default duration is 0.
+ constexpr BaseTimeDuration() : mValue(0) {}
+ // Allow construction using '0' as the initial value, for readability,
+ // but no other numbers (so we don't have any implicit unit conversions).
+ struct _SomethingVeryRandomHere;
+ MOZ_IMPLICIT BaseTimeDuration(_SomethingVeryRandomHere* aZero) : mValue(0) {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!aZero, "Who's playing funny games here?");
+ }
+ // Default copy-constructor and assignment are OK
+
+ // Converting copy-constructor and assignment operator
+ template <typename E>
+ explicit BaseTimeDuration(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther)
+ : mValue(aOther.mValue) {}
+
+ template <typename E>
+ BaseTimeDuration& operator=(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther) {
+ mValue = aOther.mValue;
+ return *this;
+ }
+
+ double ToSeconds() const {
+ if (mValue == INT64_MAX) {
+ return PositiveInfinity<double>();
+ }
+ if (mValue == INT64_MIN) {
+ return NegativeInfinity<double>();
+ }
+ return BaseTimeDurationPlatformUtils::ToSeconds(mValue);
+ }
+ // Return a duration value that includes digits of time we think to
+ // be significant. This method should be used when displaying a
+ // time to humans.
+ double ToSecondsSigDigits() const {
+ if (mValue == INT64_MAX) {
+ return PositiveInfinity<double>();
+ }
+ if (mValue == INT64_MIN) {
+ return NegativeInfinity<double>();
+ }
+ return BaseTimeDurationPlatformUtils::ToSecondsSigDigits(mValue);
+ }
+ double ToMilliseconds() const { return ToSeconds() * 1000.0; }
+ double ToMicroseconds() const { return ToMilliseconds() * 1000.0; }
+
+ // Using a double here is safe enough; with 53 bits we can represent
+ // durations up to over 280,000 years exactly. If the units of
+ // mValue do not allow us to represent durations of that length,
+ // long durations are clamped to the max/min representable value
+ // instead of overflowing.
+ static inline BaseTimeDuration FromSeconds(double aSeconds) {
+ return FromMilliseconds(aSeconds * 1000.0);
+ }
+ static BaseTimeDuration FromMilliseconds(double aMilliseconds) {
+ if (aMilliseconds == PositiveInfinity<double>()) {
+ return Forever();
+ }
+ if (aMilliseconds == NegativeInfinity<double>()) {
+ return FromTicks(INT64_MIN);
+ }
+ return FromTicks(
+ BaseTimeDurationPlatformUtils::TicksFromMilliseconds(aMilliseconds));
+ }
+ static inline BaseTimeDuration FromMicroseconds(double aMicroseconds) {
+ return FromMilliseconds(aMicroseconds / 1000.0);
+ }
+
+ static constexpr BaseTimeDuration Zero() { return BaseTimeDuration(); }
+ static constexpr BaseTimeDuration Forever() { return FromTicks(INT64_MAX); }
+
+ BaseTimeDuration operator+(const BaseTimeDuration& aOther) const {
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Add(mValue, aOther.mValue));
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator-(const BaseTimeDuration& aOther) const {
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Subtract(mValue, aOther.mValue));
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration& operator+=(const BaseTimeDuration& aOther) {
+ mValue = ValueCalculator::Add(mValue, aOther.mValue);
+ return *this;
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration& operator-=(const BaseTimeDuration& aOther) {
+ mValue = ValueCalculator::Subtract(mValue, aOther.mValue);
+ return *this;
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator-() const {
+ // We don't just use FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Subtract(0, mValue))
+ // since that won't give the correct result for -TimeDuration::Forever().
+ int64_t ticks;
+ if (mValue == INT64_MAX) {
+ ticks = INT64_MIN;
+ } else if (mValue == INT64_MIN) {
+ ticks = INT64_MAX;
+ } else {
+ ticks = -mValue;
+ }
+
+ return FromTicks(ticks);
+ }
+
+ static BaseTimeDuration Max(const BaseTimeDuration& aA,
+ const BaseTimeDuration& aB) {
+ return FromTicks(std::max(aA.mValue, aB.mValue));
+ }
+ static BaseTimeDuration Min(const BaseTimeDuration& aA,
+ const BaseTimeDuration& aB) {
+ return FromTicks(std::min(aA.mValue, aB.mValue));
+ }
+
+#if defined(DEBUG)
+ int64_t GetValue() const { return mValue; }
+#endif
+
+ private:
+ // Block double multiplier (slower, imprecise if long duration) - Bug 853398.
+ // If required, use MultDouble explicitly and with care.
+ BaseTimeDuration operator*(const double aMultiplier) const = delete;
+
+ // Block double divisor (for the same reason, and because dividing by
+ // fractional values would otherwise invoke the int64_t variant, and rounding
+ // the passed argument can then cause divide-by-zero) - Bug 1147491.
+ BaseTimeDuration operator/(const double aDivisor) const = delete;
+
+ public:
+ BaseTimeDuration MultDouble(double aMultiplier) const {
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Multiply(mValue, aMultiplier));
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator*(const int32_t aMultiplier) const {
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Multiply(mValue, aMultiplier));
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator*(const uint32_t aMultiplier) const {
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Multiply(mValue, aMultiplier));
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator*(const int64_t aMultiplier) const {
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Multiply(mValue, aMultiplier));
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator*(const uint64_t aMultiplier) const {
+ if (aMultiplier > INT64_MAX) {
+ return Forever();
+ }
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Multiply(mValue, aMultiplier));
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator/(const int64_t aDivisor) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(aDivisor != 0, "Division by zero");
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Divide(mValue, aDivisor));
+ }
+ double operator/(const BaseTimeDuration& aOther) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(aOther.mValue != 0, "Division by zero");
+ return ValueCalculator::DivideDouble(mValue, aOther.mValue);
+ }
+ BaseTimeDuration operator%(const BaseTimeDuration& aOther) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(aOther.mValue != 0, "Division by zero");
+ return FromTicks(ValueCalculator::Modulo(mValue, aOther.mValue));
+ }
+
+ template <typename E>
+ bool operator<(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther) const {
+ return mValue < aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ template <typename E>
+ bool operator<=(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther) const {
+ return mValue <= aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ template <typename E>
+ bool operator>=(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther) const {
+ return mValue >= aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ template <typename E>
+ bool operator>(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther) const {
+ return mValue > aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ template <typename E>
+ bool operator==(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther) const {
+ return mValue == aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ template <typename E>
+ bool operator!=(const BaseTimeDuration<E>& aOther) const {
+ return mValue != aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ bool IsZero() const { return mValue == 0; }
+ explicit operator bool() const { return mValue != 0; }
+
+ friend std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& aStream,
+ const BaseTimeDuration& aDuration) {
+ return aStream << aDuration.ToMilliseconds() << " ms";
+ }
+
+ // Return a best guess at the system's current timing resolution,
+ // which might be variable. BaseTimeDurations below this order of
+ // magnitude are meaningless, and those at the same order of
+ // magnitude or just above are suspect.
+ static BaseTimeDuration Resolution() {
+ return FromTicks(BaseTimeDurationPlatformUtils::ResolutionInTicks());
+ }
+
+ // We could define additional operators here:
+ // -- convert to/from other time units
+ // -- scale duration by a float
+ // but let's do that on demand.
+ // Comparing durations for equality will only lead to bugs on
+ // platforms with high-resolution timers.
+
+ private:
+ friend class TimeStamp;
+ friend struct IPC::ParamTraits<mozilla::BaseTimeDuration<ValueCalculator>>;
+ template <typename>
+ friend class BaseTimeDuration;
+
+ static constexpr BaseTimeDuration FromTicks(int64_t aTicks) {
+ BaseTimeDuration t;
+ t.mValue = aTicks;
+ return t;
+ }
+
+ static BaseTimeDuration FromTicks(double aTicks) {
+ // NOTE: this MUST be a >= test, because int64_t(double(INT64_MAX))
+ // overflows and gives INT64_MIN.
+ if (aTicks >= double(INT64_MAX)) {
+ return FromTicks(INT64_MAX);
+ }
+
+ // This MUST be a <= test.
+ if (aTicks <= double(INT64_MIN)) {
+ return FromTicks(INT64_MIN);
+ }
+
+ return FromTicks(int64_t(aTicks));
+ }
+
+ // Duration, result is implementation-specific difference of two TimeStamps
+ int64_t mValue;
+};
+
+/**
+ * Perform arithmetic operations on the value of a BaseTimeDuration without
+ * doing strict checks on the range of values.
+ */
+class TimeDurationValueCalculator {
+ public:
+ static int64_t Add(int64_t aA, int64_t aB) { return aA + aB; }
+ static int64_t Subtract(int64_t aA, int64_t aB) { return aA - aB; }
+
+ template <typename T>
+ static int64_t Multiply(int64_t aA, T aB) {
+ static_assert(std::is_integral_v<T>,
+ "Using integer multiplication routine with non-integer type."
+ " Further specialization required");
+ return aA * static_cast<int64_t>(aB);
+ }
+
+ static int64_t Divide(int64_t aA, int64_t aB) { return aA / aB; }
+ static double DivideDouble(int64_t aA, int64_t aB) {
+ return static_cast<double>(aA) / aB;
+ }
+ static int64_t Modulo(int64_t aA, int64_t aB) { return aA % aB; }
+};
+
+template <>
+inline int64_t TimeDurationValueCalculator::Multiply<double>(int64_t aA,
+ double aB) {
+ return static_cast<int64_t>(aA * aB);
+}
+
+/**
+ * Specialization of BaseTimeDuration that uses TimeDurationValueCalculator for
+ * arithmetic on the mValue member.
+ *
+ * Use this class for time durations that are *not* expected to hold values of
+ * Forever (or the negative equivalent) or when such time duration are *not*
+ * expected to be used in arithmetic operations.
+ */
+typedef BaseTimeDuration<TimeDurationValueCalculator> TimeDuration;
+
+/**
+ * Instances of this class represent moments in time, or a special
+ * "null" moment. We do not use the non-monotonic system clock or
+ * local time, since they can be reset, causing apparent backward
+ * travel in time, which can confuse algorithms. Instead we measure
+ * elapsed time according to the system. This time can never go
+ * backwards (i.e. it never wraps around, at least not in less than
+ * five million years of system elapsed time). It might not advance
+ * while the system is sleeping. If TimeStamp::SetNow() is not called
+ * at all for hours or days, we might not notice the passage of some
+ * of that time.
+ *
+ * We deliberately do not expose a way to convert TimeStamps to some
+ * particular unit. All you can do is compute a difference between two
+ * TimeStamps to get a TimeDuration. You can also add a TimeDuration
+ * to a TimeStamp to get a new TimeStamp. You can't do something
+ * meaningless like add two TimeStamps.
+ *
+ * Internally this is implemented as either a wrapper around
+ * - high-resolution, monotonic, system clocks if they exist on this
+ * platform
+ * - PRIntervalTime otherwise. We detect wraparounds of
+ * PRIntervalTime and work around them.
+ *
+ * This class is similar to C++11's time_point, however it is
+ * explicitly nullable and provides an IsNull() method. time_point
+ * is initialized to the clock's epoch and provides a
+ * time_since_epoch() method that functions similiarly. i.e.
+ * t.IsNull() is equivalent to t.time_since_epoch() ==
+ * decltype(t)::duration::zero();
+ *
+ * Note that, since TimeStamp objects are small, prefer to pass them by value
+ * unless there is a specific reason not to do so.
+ */
+#if defined(XP_WIN)
+// If this static_assert fails then possibly the warning comment below is no
+// longer valid and should be removed.
+static_assert(sizeof(TimeStampValue) > 8);
+#endif
+/*
+ * WARNING: On Windows, each TimeStamp is represented internally by two
+ * different raw values (one from GTC and one from QPC) and which value gets
+ * used for a given operation depends on whether both operands have QPC values
+ * or not. This duality of values can lead to some surprising results when
+ * mixing TimeStamps with and without QPC values, such as comparisons being
+ * non-transitive (ie, a > b > c might not imply a > c). See bug 1829983 for
+ * more details/an example.
+ */
+class TimeStamp {
+ public:
+ /**
+ * Initialize to the "null" moment
+ */
+ constexpr TimeStamp() : mValue(0) {}
+ // Default copy-constructor and assignment are OK
+
+ /**
+ * The system timestamps are the same as the TimeStamp
+ * retrieved by mozilla::TimeStamp. Since we need this for
+ * vsync timestamps, we enable the creation of mozilla::TimeStamps
+ * on platforms that support vsync aligned refresh drivers / compositors
+ * Verified true as of Jan 31, 2015: B2G and OS X
+ * False on Windows 7
+ * Android's event time uses CLOCK_MONOTONIC via SystemClock.uptimeMilles.
+ * So it is same value of TimeStamp posix implementation.
+ * Wayland/GTK event time also uses CLOCK_MONOTONIC on Weston/Mutter
+ * compositors.
+ * UNTESTED ON OTHER PLATFORMS
+ */
+#if defined(XP_DARWIN) || defined(MOZ_WIDGET_ANDROID) || defined(MOZ_WIDGET_GTK)
+ static TimeStamp FromSystemTime(int64_t aSystemTime) {
+ static_assert(sizeof(aSystemTime) == sizeof(TimeStampValue),
+ "System timestamp should be same units as TimeStampValue");
+ return TimeStamp(aSystemTime);
+ }
+#endif
+
+ /**
+ * Return true if this is the "null" moment
+ */
+ constexpr bool IsNull() const { return mValue == 0; }
+
+ /**
+ * Return true if this is not the "null" moment, may be used in tests, e.g.:
+ * |if (timestamp) { ... }|
+ */
+ explicit operator bool() const { return mValue != 0; }
+
+ /**
+ * Return a timestamp reflecting the current elapsed system time. This
+ * is monotonically increasing (i.e., does not decrease) over the
+ * lifetime of this process' XPCOM session.
+ *
+ * Now() is trying to ensure the best possible precision on each platform,
+ * at least one millisecond.
+ *
+ * NowLoRes() has been introduced to workaround performance problems of
+ * QueryPerformanceCounter on the Windows platform. NowLoRes() is giving
+ * lower precision, usually 15.6 ms, but with very good performance benefit.
+ * Use it for measurements of longer times, like >200ms timeouts.
+ */
+ static TimeStamp Now() { return Now(true); }
+ static TimeStamp NowLoRes() { return Now(false); }
+
+ /**
+ * Return a timestamp representing the time when the current process was
+ * created which will be comparable with other timestamps taken with this
+ * class.
+ *
+ * @returns A timestamp representing the time when the process was created
+ */
+ static MFBT_API TimeStamp ProcessCreation();
+
+ /**
+ * Return the very first timestamp that was taken. This can be used instead
+ * of TimeStamp::ProcessCreation() by code that might not allow running the
+ * complex logic required to compute the real process creation. This will
+ * necessarily have been recorded sometimes after TimeStamp::ProcessCreation()
+ * or at best should be equal to it.
+ *
+ * @returns The first tiemstamp that was taken by this process
+ */
+ static MFBT_API TimeStamp FirstTimeStamp();
+
+ /**
+ * Records a process restart. After this call ProcessCreation() will return
+ * the time when the browser was restarted instead of the actual time when
+ * the process was created.
+ */
+ static MFBT_API void RecordProcessRestart();
+
+#ifdef XP_LINUX
+ uint64_t RawClockMonotonicNanosecondsSinceBoot() {
+ return static_cast<uint64_t>(mValue);
+ }
+#endif
+
+#ifdef XP_DARWIN
+ // Returns the number of nanoseconds since the mach_absolute_time origin.
+ MFBT_API uint64_t RawMachAbsoluteTimeNanoseconds() const;
+#endif
+
+#ifdef XP_WIN
+ Maybe<uint64_t> RawQueryPerformanceCounterValue() const {
+ // mQPC is stored in `mt` i.e. QueryPerformanceCounter * 1000
+ // so divide out the 1000
+ return mValue.mHasQPC ? Some(mValue.mQPC / 1000ULL) : Nothing();
+ }
+#endif
+
+ /**
+ * Compute the difference between two timestamps. Both must be non-null.
+ */
+ TimeDuration operator-(const TimeStamp& aOther) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!IsNull(), "Cannot compute with a null value");
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!aOther.IsNull(), "Cannot compute with aOther null value");
+ static_assert(-INT64_MAX > INT64_MIN, "int64_t sanity check");
+ int64_t ticks = int64_t(mValue - aOther.mValue);
+ // Check for overflow.
+ if (mValue > aOther.mValue) {
+ if (ticks < 0) {
+ ticks = INT64_MAX;
+ }
+ } else {
+ if (ticks > 0) {
+ ticks = INT64_MIN;
+ }
+ }
+ return TimeDuration::FromTicks(ticks);
+ }
+
+ TimeStamp operator+(const TimeDuration& aOther) const {
+ TimeStamp result = *this;
+ result += aOther;
+ return result;
+ }
+ TimeStamp operator-(const TimeDuration& aOther) const {
+ TimeStamp result = *this;
+ result -= aOther;
+ return result;
+ }
+ TimeStamp& operator+=(const TimeDuration& aOther) {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!IsNull(), "Cannot compute with a null value");
+ TimeStampValue value = mValue + aOther.mValue;
+ // Check for underflow.
+ // (We don't check for overflow because it's not obvious what the error
+ // behavior should be in that case.)
+ if (aOther.mValue < 0 && value > mValue) {
+ value = 0;
+ }
+ mValue = value;
+ return *this;
+ }
+ TimeStamp& operator-=(const TimeDuration& aOther) {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!IsNull(), "Cannot compute with a null value");
+ TimeStampValue value = mValue - aOther.mValue;
+ // Check for underflow.
+ // (We don't check for overflow because it's not obvious what the error
+ // behavior should be in that case.)
+ if (aOther.mValue > 0 && value > mValue) {
+ value = 0;
+ }
+ mValue = value;
+ return *this;
+ }
+
+ constexpr bool operator<(const TimeStamp& aOther) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!IsNull(), "Cannot compute with a null value");
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!aOther.IsNull(), "Cannot compute with aOther null value");
+ return mValue < aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ constexpr bool operator<=(const TimeStamp& aOther) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!IsNull(), "Cannot compute with a null value");
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!aOther.IsNull(), "Cannot compute with aOther null value");
+ return mValue <= aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ constexpr bool operator>=(const TimeStamp& aOther) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!IsNull(), "Cannot compute with a null value");
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!aOther.IsNull(), "Cannot compute with aOther null value");
+ return mValue >= aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ constexpr bool operator>(const TimeStamp& aOther) const {
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!IsNull(), "Cannot compute with a null value");
+ MOZ_ASSERT(!aOther.IsNull(), "Cannot compute with aOther null value");
+ return mValue > aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ bool operator==(const TimeStamp& aOther) const {
+ return IsNull() ? aOther.IsNull()
+ : !aOther.IsNull() && mValue == aOther.mValue;
+ }
+ bool operator!=(const TimeStamp& aOther) const { return !(*this == aOther); }
+
+ // Comparing TimeStamps for equality should be discouraged. Adding
+ // two TimeStamps, or scaling TimeStamps, is nonsense and must never
+ // be allowed.
+
+ static MFBT_API void Startup();
+ static MFBT_API void Shutdown();
+
+#if defined(DEBUG)
+ TimeStampValue GetValue() const { return mValue; }
+#endif
+
+ private:
+ friend struct IPC::ParamTraits<mozilla::TimeStamp>;
+ friend struct TimeStampInitialization;
+ friend class TimeStampTests;
+
+ constexpr MOZ_IMPLICIT TimeStamp(TimeStampValue aValue) : mValue(aValue) {}
+
+ static MFBT_API TimeStamp Now(bool aHighResolution);
+
+ /**
+ * Computes the uptime of the current process in microseconds. The result
+ * is platform-dependent and needs to be checked against existing timestamps
+ * for consistency.
+ *
+ * @returns The number of microseconds since the calling process was started
+ * or 0 if an error was encountered while computing the uptime
+ */
+ static MFBT_API uint64_t ComputeProcessUptime();
+
+ /**
+ * When built with PRIntervalTime, a value of 0 means this instance
+ * is "null". Otherwise, the low 32 bits represent a PRIntervalTime,
+ * and the high 32 bits represent a counter of the number of
+ * rollovers of PRIntervalTime that we've seen. This counter starts
+ * at 1 to avoid a real time colliding with the "null" value.
+ *
+ * PR_INTERVAL_MAX is set at 100,000 ticks per second. So the minimum
+ * time to wrap around is about 2^64/100000 seconds, i.e. about
+ * 5,849,424 years.
+ *
+ * When using a system clock, a value is system dependent.
+ */
+ TimeStampValue mValue;
+};
+
+} // namespace mozilla
+
+#endif /* mozilla_TimeStamp_h */