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Embed timestamp in object code at compile time with C++

I want to perform a printf() to display when the currently executing code was last compiled. Does C/C++ provide a macro that gives you that resolves to a timestamp dur开发者_如何学运维ing compilation?


You could use __DATE__ and __TIME__.


16.8 Predefined macro names [cpp.predefined]
1 The following macro names shall be defined by the implementation:
__LINE__ The line number of the current source line (a decimal constant).
__FILE__ The presumed name of the source file (a character string literal).
__DATE__ The date of translation of the source file (a character string literal of the form "Mmm dd yyyy", where the names of the months are the same as those generated by the asctime function, and the first character of dd is a space character if the value is less than 10). If the date of translation is not available, an implementation-defined valid date is supplied.
__TIME__ The time of translation of the source file (a character string literal of the form "hh:mm:ss" as in the time generated by the asctime function). If the time of translation is not available, an implementation-defined valid time is supplied.
__STDC__ Whether __STDC__ is predefined and if so, what its value is, are implementation-defined.
__cplusplus The name __cplusplus is defined to the value 199711L when compiling a C++ translation unit.

You want __TIME__ and possibly __DATE__.


Use the macros __DATE__ and __TIME__


If you are using gcc preprocessor then you will find what you are looking for in the __TIME__ and __DATE__ macros

Quotes from GNU C pre-processor documentation:

__DATE__

This macro expands to a string constant that describes the date on which the preprocessor is being run. The string constant contains eleven characters and looks like "Feb 12 1996". If the day of the month is less than 10, it is padded with a space on the left.

...

__TIME__

This macro expands to a string constant that describes the time at which the preprocessor is being run. The string constant contains eight characters and looks like "23:59:01".


Use a script, or create an application, to generate a C++ source file containing the build date and time. Add this file to the build setup. The other parts of the program can reference the data in this file.

This technique is also useful for embedding a version number into the program. The build process can control the version number.


It looks like compilers are expected to provide a __TIMESTAMP__ macro, which ought to work for your purposes.


I am using this to send a message to DbgView:

    OutputDebugStringA(("ATTACHED VERSION: "+ string(__DATE__) + " " + string(__TIME__)).c_str());
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