blob: dadce6fafe88685dd0989762ff044b663e300e10 [file] [log] [blame]
/*
* Copyright (C) 2019, Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch> and others
*
* This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the
* terms of the Eclipse Distribution License v. 1.0 which is available at
* https://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/edl-v10.php.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
*/
package org.eclipse.jgit.treewalk;
import java.time.Instant;
import java.util.Comparator;
/**
* Specialized comparator for {@link Instant}s. If either timestamp has a zero
* fraction, compares only seconds. If either timestamp has no time fraction
* smaller than a millisecond, compares only milliseconds. If either timestamp
* has no fraction smaller than a microsecond, compares only microseconds.
*/
class InstantComparator implements Comparator<Instant> {
@Override
public int compare(Instant a, Instant b) {
return compare(a, b, false);
}
/**
* Compares two {@link Instant}s to the lower resolution of the two
* instants. See {@link InstantComparator}.
*
* @param a
* first {@link Instant} to compare
* @param b
* second {@link Instant} to compare
* @param forceSecondsOnly
* whether to omit all fraction comparison
* @return a value &lt; 0 if a &lt; b, a value &gt; 0 if a &gt; b, and 0 if
* a == b
*/
public int compare(Instant a, Instant b, boolean forceSecondsOnly) {
long aSeconds = a.getEpochSecond();
long bSeconds = b.getEpochSecond();
int result = Long.compare(aSeconds, bSeconds);
if (result != 0) {
return result;
}
int aSubSecond = a.getNano();
int bSubSecond = b.getNano();
if (forceSecondsOnly || (aSubSecond == 0)
|| (bSubSecond == 0)) {
// Don't check the subseconds part.
return 0;
} else if (aSubSecond != bSubSecond) {
// If either has nothing smaller than a millisecond, compare only
// milliseconds.
int aSubMillis = aSubSecond % 1_000_000;
int bSubMillis = bSubSecond % 1_000_000;
if (aSubMillis == 0) {
bSubSecond -= bSubMillis;
} else if (bSubMillis == 0) {
aSubSecond -= aSubMillis;
} else {
// Same again, but for microsecond resolution. NTFS has 100ns
// resolution, but WindowsFileAttributes may provide only
// microseconds (1000ns). Similar for some Unix file systems.
int aSubMicros = aSubSecond % 1000;
int bSubMicros = bSubSecond % 1000;
if (aSubMicros == 0) {
bSubSecond -= bSubMicros;
} else if (bSubMicros == 0) {
aSubSecond -= aSubMicros;
}
}
}
return Integer.compare(aSubSecond, bSubSecond);
}
}