DWORD Time Puzzle
-
I know this isn't strictly a C++ problem but the application in question is written in C++ and this seems to be as good a place as any for some genius to come across this and answer it! OK, I have this puzzle that's been driving me crazy for over a week. Perhaps if I explain it to you someone can help me to crack it! I'm trying to replicated the behaviour of some software. It's a digital signage system and consists of a server application running, at the moment, on my PC, and a client which is a giant LCD screen with a built-in PC running Windows XP Embedded. In case anyone's familiar with it the sofware is MagicInfo by Samsung. The server application has the option to create an alert ticker message. It can be formatted, colours selected, etc. And when it's ready you hit the 'Send' button in the server console and instantly the message appears on the remote client screen. It'll keep running for the length of time I specified in the message setup or I can stop it by pressing the 'Stop' button in the server console. I've determined that the message itself and its formatting is contained in a simple XML file, which I'll paste below. Every time I update the message in the server the XML file on the client is updated. So, it's simple for me to come up with my own way to change the message. The hard part is how to trigger the display of the message. Remember, it can't be scheduled, it only appears when that 'Send' button is pressed. I have searched high and low on the client for SOMEWHERE that might store the on/off flag, or SOME indication of what changes when the message is activated. Getting in a bit over my head I've used network sniffer programs to examine the data packets sent between the server and the client when the message is activated and, sure enough, I can see the text of the updated message being sent. The client is permanently running a little application called XL_TICKER which seems to just sit there and wait for these packets from the server. However, attempting to replicate the packets manually with my limited knowledge has thus far failed to trigger the message on the client. So here's the puzzle. The ONLY thing that appears to change on the client each time I trigger the message (other than the XML file itself) is an entry in the Windows Registry, in a node containing various details about MagicInfo. There are two keys, called TickerStartTimeHigh and TickerStartTimeLow. These are DWORD values. The latter, TickerStartTimeLow, changes every time I trigger the ticker
-
I know this isn't strictly a C++ problem but the application in question is written in C++ and this seems to be as good a place as any for some genius to come across this and answer it! OK, I have this puzzle that's been driving me crazy for over a week. Perhaps if I explain it to you someone can help me to crack it! I'm trying to replicated the behaviour of some software. It's a digital signage system and consists of a server application running, at the moment, on my PC, and a client which is a giant LCD screen with a built-in PC running Windows XP Embedded. In case anyone's familiar with it the sofware is MagicInfo by Samsung. The server application has the option to create an alert ticker message. It can be formatted, colours selected, etc. And when it's ready you hit the 'Send' button in the server console and instantly the message appears on the remote client screen. It'll keep running for the length of time I specified in the message setup or I can stop it by pressing the 'Stop' button in the server console. I've determined that the message itself and its formatting is contained in a simple XML file, which I'll paste below. Every time I update the message in the server the XML file on the client is updated. So, it's simple for me to come up with my own way to change the message. The hard part is how to trigger the display of the message. Remember, it can't be scheduled, it only appears when that 'Send' button is pressed. I have searched high and low on the client for SOMEWHERE that might store the on/off flag, or SOME indication of what changes when the message is activated. Getting in a bit over my head I've used network sniffer programs to examine the data packets sent between the server and the client when the message is activated and, sure enough, I can see the text of the updated message being sent. The client is permanently running a little application called XL_TICKER which seems to just sit there and wait for these packets from the server. However, attempting to replicate the packets manually with my limited knowledge has thus far failed to trigger the message on the client. So here's the puzzle. The ONLY thing that appears to change on the client each time I trigger the message (other than the XML file itself) is an entry in the Windows Registry, in a node containing various details about MagicInfo. There are two keys, called TickerStartTimeHigh and TickerStartTimeLow. These are DWORD values. The latter, TickerStartTimeLow, changes every time I trigger the ticker
The time is a FILETIME[^]. In fact, here's a little program that confirms that by using one of the times you give in your link, assigning it to a FILETIME and converting that to a SYSTEMTIME and writing out the time parts.
#include <Windows.h>
#include <iostream>int main()
{
SYSTEMTIME st;
FILETIME ft;
ft.dwLowDateTime = 2960830672;
ft.dwHighDateTime = 30031143;
FileTimeToSystemTime(&ft, &st);std::cout << st.wYear << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wMonth << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wDay << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wHour << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wMinute << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wSecond << std::endl;
}Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
-
The time is a FILETIME[^]. In fact, here's a little program that confirms that by using one of the times you give in your link, assigning it to a FILETIME and converting that to a SYSTEMTIME and writing out the time parts.
#include <Windows.h>
#include <iostream>int main()
{
SYSTEMTIME st;
FILETIME ft;
ft.dwLowDateTime = 2960830672;
ft.dwHighDateTime = 30031143;
FileTimeToSystemTime(&ft, &st);std::cout << st.wYear << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wMonth << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wDay << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wHour << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wMinute << std::endl;
std::cout << st.wSecond << std::endl;
}Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
Thanks Stuart, I'm so grateful that you were able to crack that one! Your code looks tantalisingly simple, but unfortunately I don't know C(++) at all and don't have anything to compile it with. I know VB.NET, though, and in fact that's what I'm using to write the program I'm hoping to incorporate this into. I've spent most of today Googling FileTime and SystemTime, creating my own structures in VB.NET and trying to achieve the feat of extracting the parts of the date as you have, but so far without success. At the moment it's returning a year of "67137" and a month of "65537", which seem completely meaningless to me and suggest that I've totally misunderstood what I'm doing and have just got lucky and managed to compile some code which will actually run, however pointless! I don't suppose you know how to achieve what your code does in VB.NET, do you?
-
Thanks Stuart, I'm so grateful that you were able to crack that one! Your code looks tantalisingly simple, but unfortunately I don't know C(++) at all and don't have anything to compile it with. I know VB.NET, though, and in fact that's what I'm using to write the program I'm hoping to incorporate this into. I've spent most of today Googling FileTime and SystemTime, creating my own structures in VB.NET and trying to achieve the feat of extracting the parts of the date as you have, but so far without success. At the moment it's returning a year of "67137" and a month of "65537", which seem completely meaningless to me and suggest that I've totally misunderstood what I'm doing and have just got lucky and managed to compile some code which will actually run, however pointless! I don't suppose you know how to achieve what your code does in VB.NET, do you?
I'd start with Pinvoke.net[^], as that contains code snippets for declaring the necessary structures and function declarations. Once you've got those definitions in your code, the VB.NET code should follow logically form the C++ code - all I do is set the FILETIME structure to your time parts, call FileTimeToSystemTime and extract the date/time parts. This page[^] might also help.
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
-
I'd start with Pinvoke.net[^], as that contains code snippets for declaring the necessary structures and function declarations. Once you've got those definitions in your code, the VB.NET code should follow logically form the C++ code - all I do is set the FILETIME structure to your time parts, call FileTimeToSystemTime and extract the date/time parts. This page[^] might also help.
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
I've already been on Pinvoke.net and it seems that I have my structures and functions declared correctly. At the moment, using the same figures you plugged into your C code, I'm getting a year of "67137", a month of "65537" and a day of "5439544", without going into the hours, etc. Am I completely on the wrong track or are these numbers correct and just in need of some kind of further conversion to a date I an actually understand?
-
I've already been on Pinvoke.net and it seems that I have my structures and functions declared correctly. At the moment, using the same figures you plugged into your C code, I'm getting a year of "67137", a month of "65537" and a day of "5439544", without going into the hours, etc. Am I completely on the wrong track or are these numbers correct and just in need of some kind of further conversion to a date I an actually understand?
Imports System
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServicesModule Module1
<StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)> \_ Public Structure FILETIME Public dwLowDateTime As UInteger Public dwHighDateTime As UInteger Public ReadOnly Property Value() As ULong Get Return CType(dwHighDateTime << 32, ULong) + dwLowDateTime End Get End Property End Structure <StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)> \_ Public Structure SYSTEMTIME <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Year As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Month As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public DayOfWeek As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Day As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Hour As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Minute As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Second As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Milliseconds As Short End Structure <DllImport( \_ "kernel32.dll", \_ CharSet:=CharSet.Auto, \_ SetLastError:=True)> \_ Public Function FileTimeToSystemTime( \_ <\[In\]()> ByRef lpFileTime As FILETIME, \_ <Out()> ByRef lpSystemTime As SYSTEMTIME) \_ As Boolean End Function Sub Main() Dim st As SYSTEMTIME Dim ft As FILETIME ft.dwLowDateTime = 2960830672 ft.dwHighDateTime = 30031143 FileTimeToSystemTime(ft, st) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Year) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Month) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Day) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Hour) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Minute) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Second) End Sub
End Module
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
-
Imports System
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServicesModule Module1
<StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)> \_ Public Structure FILETIME Public dwLowDateTime As UInteger Public dwHighDateTime As UInteger Public ReadOnly Property Value() As ULong Get Return CType(dwHighDateTime << 32, ULong) + dwLowDateTime End Get End Property End Structure <StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)> \_ Public Structure SYSTEMTIME <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Year As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Month As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public DayOfWeek As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Day As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Hour As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Minute As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Second As Short <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.U2)> Public Milliseconds As Short End Structure <DllImport( \_ "kernel32.dll", \_ CharSet:=CharSet.Auto, \_ SetLastError:=True)> \_ Public Function FileTimeToSystemTime( \_ <\[In\]()> ByRef lpFileTime As FILETIME, \_ <Out()> ByRef lpSystemTime As SYSTEMTIME) \_ As Boolean End Function Sub Main() Dim st As SYSTEMTIME Dim ft As FILETIME ft.dwLowDateTime = 2960830672 ft.dwHighDateTime = 30031143 FileTimeToSystemTime(ft, st) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Year) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Month) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Day) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Hour) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Minute) System.Console.WriteLine(st.Second) End Sub
End Module
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
That is fantastic, thank you so much for taking the time. Your code worked perfectly for me and I've been able to extrapolate from that how to convert in the other direction too. I was very close to the code you've written, I'm not exactly sure where I was going wrong, but I don't care any more! Thanks again.