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Auto merge of #56988 - alexcrichton:monotonic-instant, r=sfackler
std: Force `Instant::now()` to be monotonic This commit is an attempt to force `Instant::now` to be monotonic through any means possible. We tried relying on OS/hardware/clock implementations, but those seem buggy enough that we can't rely on them in practice. This commit implements the same hammer Firefox recently implemented (noted in #56612) which is to just keep whatever the lastest `Instant::now()` return value was in memory, returning that instead of the OS looks like it's moving backwards. Closes #48514 Closes #49281 cc #51648 cc #56560 Closes #56612 Closes #56940
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commit
2f19f8cec9
@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ use session::config::Options;
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use std::fs;
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use std::io::{self, StderrLock, Write};
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use std::time::{Duration, Instant};
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use std::time::Instant;
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macro_rules! define_categories {
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($($name:ident,)*) => {
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@ -205,20 +205,7 @@ impl SelfProfiler {
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}
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fn stop_timer(&mut self) -> u64 {
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let elapsed = if cfg!(windows) {
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// On Windows, timers don't always appear to be monotonic (see #51648)
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// which can lead to panics when calculating elapsed time.
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// Work around this by testing to see if the current time is less than
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// our recorded time, and if it is, just returning 0.
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let now = Instant::now();
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if self.current_timer >= now {
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Duration::new(0, 0)
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} else {
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self.current_timer.elapsed()
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}
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} else {
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self.current_timer.elapsed()
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};
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let elapsed = self.current_timer.elapsed();
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self.current_timer = Instant::now();
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@ -25,6 +25,14 @@ impl Instant {
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}
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}
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pub fn actually_monotonic() -> bool {
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true
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}
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pub const fn zero() -> Instant {
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Instant { t: 0 }
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}
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pub fn sub_instant(&self, other: &Instant) -> Duration {
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let diff = self.t
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.checked_sub(other.t)
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@ -128,6 +128,14 @@ impl Instant {
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Instant { t: now(syscall::CLOCK_MONOTONIC) }
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}
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pub const fn zero() -> Instant {
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Instant { t: Timespec { t: syscall::TimeSpec { tv_sec: 0, tv_nsec: 0 } } }
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}
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pub fn actually_monotonic() -> bool {
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false
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}
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pub fn sub_instant(&self, other: &Instant) -> Duration {
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self.t.sub_timespec(&other.t).unwrap_or_else(|_| {
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panic!("specified instant was later than self")
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@ -14,6 +14,12 @@ struct Timespec {
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}
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impl Timespec {
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const fn zero() -> Timespec {
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Timespec {
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t: libc::timespec { tv_sec: 0, tv_nsec: 0 },
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}
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}
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fn sub_timespec(&self, other: &Timespec) -> Result<Duration, Duration> {
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if self >= other {
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Ok(if self.t.tv_nsec >= other.t.tv_nsec {
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@ -128,12 +134,7 @@ mod inner {
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}
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pub const UNIX_EPOCH: SystemTime = SystemTime {
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t: Timespec {
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t: libc::timespec {
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tv_sec: 0,
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tv_nsec: 0,
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},
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},
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t: Timespec::zero(),
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};
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impl Instant {
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@ -141,6 +142,14 @@ mod inner {
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Instant { t: unsafe { libc::mach_absolute_time() } }
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}
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pub const fn zero() -> Instant {
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Instant { t: 0 }
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}
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pub fn actually_monotonic() -> bool {
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true
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}
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pub fn sub_instant(&self, other: &Instant) -> Duration {
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let info = info();
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let diff = self.t.checked_sub(other.t)
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@ -258,12 +267,7 @@ mod inner {
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}
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pub const UNIX_EPOCH: SystemTime = SystemTime {
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t: Timespec {
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t: libc::timespec {
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tv_sec: 0,
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tv_nsec: 0,
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},
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},
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t: Timespec::zero(),
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};
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impl Instant {
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@ -271,6 +275,18 @@ mod inner {
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Instant { t: now(libc::CLOCK_MONOTONIC) }
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}
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pub const fn zero() -> Instant {
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Instant {
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t: Timespec::zero(),
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}
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}
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pub fn actually_monotonic() -> bool {
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(cfg!(target_os = "linux") && cfg!(target_arch = "x86_64")) ||
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(cfg!(target_os = "linux") && cfg!(target_arch = "x86")) ||
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false // last clause, used so `||` is always trailing above
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}
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pub fn sub_instant(&self, other: &Instant) -> Duration {
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self.t.sub_timespec(&other.t).unwrap_or_else(|_| {
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panic!("specified instant was later than self")
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@ -14,6 +14,14 @@ impl Instant {
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Instant(TimeSysCall::perform(TimeClock::Monotonic))
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}
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pub const fn zero() -> Instant {
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Instant(Duration::from_secs(0))
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}
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pub fn actually_monotonic() -> bool {
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false
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}
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pub fn sub_instant(&self, other: &Instant) -> Duration {
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self.0 - other.0
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}
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@ -40,6 +40,14 @@ impl Instant {
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t
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}
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pub fn actually_monotonic() -> bool {
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false
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}
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pub const fn zero() -> Instant {
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Instant { t: 0 }
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}
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pub fn sub_instant(&self, other: &Instant) -> Duration {
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// Values which are +- 1 need to be considered as basically the same
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// units in time due to various measurement oddities, according to
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@ -12,11 +12,13 @@
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#![stable(feature = "time", since = "1.3.0")]
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use cmp;
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use error::Error;
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use fmt;
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use ops::{Add, Sub, AddAssign, SubAssign};
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use sys::time;
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use sys_common::FromInner;
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use sys_common::mutex::Mutex;
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#[stable(feature = "time", since = "1.3.0")]
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pub use core::time::Duration;
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@ -153,7 +155,45 @@ impl Instant {
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/// ```
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#[stable(feature = "time2", since = "1.8.0")]
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pub fn now() -> Instant {
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Instant(time::Instant::now())
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let os_now = time::Instant::now();
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// And here we come upon a sad state of affairs. The whole point of
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// `Instant` is that it's monotonically increasing. We've found in the
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// wild, however, that it's not actually monotonically increasing for
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// one reason or another. These appear to be OS and hardware level bugs,
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// and there's not really a whole lot we can do about them. Here's a
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// taste of what we've found:
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//
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// * #48514 - OpenBSD, x86_64
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// * #49281 - linux arm64 and s390x
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// * #51648 - windows, x86
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// * #56560 - windows, x86_64, AWS
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// * #56612 - windows, x86, vm (?)
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// * #56940 - linux, arm64
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// * https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1487778 - a similar
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// Firefox bug
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//
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// It simply seems that this it just happens so that a lot in the wild
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// we're seeing panics across various platforms where consecutive calls
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// to `Instant::now`, such as via the `elapsed` function, are panicking
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// as they're going backwards. Placed here is a last-ditch effort to try
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// to fix things up. We keep a global "latest now" instance which is
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// returned instead of what the OS says if the OS goes backwards.
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//
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// To hopefully mitigate the impact of this though a few platforms are
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// whitelisted as "these at least haven't gone backwards yet".
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if time::Instant::actually_monotonic() {
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return Instant(os_now)
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}
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static LOCK: Mutex = Mutex::new();
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static mut LAST_NOW: time::Instant = time::Instant::zero();
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unsafe {
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let _lock = LOCK.lock();
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let now = cmp::max(LAST_NOW, os_now);
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LAST_NOW = now;
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Instant(now)
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}
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}
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/// Returns the amount of time elapsed from another instant to this one.
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