Hi Anca, I'm sorry, but $Tsm return microseconds, not milliseconds.
Also, despite gettimeofday() documentation, on CentOS 5.5 $Tsm returns _current_ microseconds, not timestamp in microseconds. But this seems correct, because of underlying function gettimeofday() returns microseconds' field in a long int type. It capacity is 10 digit (4 bytes) and for microseconds it should has 16 digits (at least 7 bytes). > -----Original Message----- > From: users-boun...@lists.opensips.org [mailto:users- > boun...@lists.opensips.org] On Behalf Of Anca Vamanu > Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 3:26 PM > To: users@lists.opensips.org > Subject: Re: [OpenSIPS-Users] milliseconds and random values > > > On 01/17/2011 12:19 PM, Anton Zagorskiy wrote: > > Inspection source code I've found a $Tsm pseudo variable that returns > > milliseconds of a current time. > > But this variable isn't described in docs (Only in the 1.6.2 > changelog). > > > > Please update docs. > > > Thanks, Anton! I updated the docs: > http://www.opensips.org/Resources/DocsCoreVar#toc83. > It seems that there is no function to get a random values. Of course, > you could use perl code for that. > > -- > Anca Vamanu > www.voice-system.ro > > > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > Users@lists.opensips.org > http://lists.opensips.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users _______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@lists.opensips.org http://lists.opensips.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users