Ok but does that mean Unix Epoch time conversion should be working, or is there some other form of secret decoder ring that is used to translate to system time? In troubleshooting/debugging scenarios, being able to associate the timestamps from the KRB5_TRACE that has been running over an extended period with external services integrating with kerberos would be... handy? I can find no real references on krb5_crypto_us_timeofday() other than a select set of developer comments within the source code, and a whole bunch of spam advertising sites representing it and other source code segments?
On Thu, Apr 2, 2020 at 10:09 PM Benjamin Kaduk <ka...@mit.edu> wrote: > On Thu, Apr 02, 2020 at 09:04:33PM -0600, Todd Grayson wrote: > > Is this some form of specialized unix epoch time timestamp or something? > > And more importantly... why? How do I convert it, normal epoch time > > conversion is yielding insane values. > > It looks to just be the seconds.microseconds output from > krb5_crypto_us_timeofday(). > > -Ben > -- Todd Grayson Principal Customer Operations Engineer Security SME ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list Kerberos@mit.edu https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos