Unix time conversions in C# [duplicate]

安稳与你 提交于 2019-11-27 18:59:39

"Unix timestamp" means seconds since the epoch in most situations rather than milliseconds... be careful! However, things like Java use "milliseconds since the epoch" which may be what you actually care about - despite the tool you showed. It really depends on what you need.

Additionally, you shouldn't be doing anything with local time. Stick to universal time throughout.

I would have:

private static readonly DateTime UnixEpoch =
    new DateTime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc);

public static long GetCurrentUnixTimestampMillis()
{
    return (long) (DateTime.UtcNow - UnixEpoch).TotalMilliseconds;
}

public static DateTime DateTimeFromUnixTimestampMillis(long millis)
{
    return UnixEpoch.AddMilliseconds(millis);
}

public static long GetCurrentUnixTimestampSeconds()
{
    return (long) (DateTime.UtcNow - UnixEpoch).TotalSeconds;
}

public static DateTime DateTimeFromUnixTimestampSeconds(long seconds)
{
    return UnixEpoch.AddSeconds(seconds);
}

UNIX time is seconds since 1/1/1970, not milliseconds. Change the code to use seconds rather than milliseconds and it should work,

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