public class ASN1GeneralizedTime extends ASN1Primitive
The main difference between these and UTC time is a 4 digit year.
One second resolution date+time on UTC timezone (Z) with 4 digit year (valid from 0001 to 9999).
Timestamp format is: yyyymmddHHMMSS'Z'
11.7.1 The encoding shall terminate with a "Z", as described in the ITU-T Rec. X.680 | ISO/IEC 8824-1 clause on GeneralizedTime.
11.7.2 The seconds element shall always be present.
11.7.3 The fractional-seconds elements, if present, shall omit all trailing zeros; if the elements correspond to 0, they shall be wholly omitted, and the decimal point element also shall be omitted.
| Modifier and Type | Field and Description | 
|---|---|
protected byte[] | 
time  | 
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
ASN1GeneralizedTime(java.util.Date time)
Base constructor from a java.util.date object 
 | 
ASN1GeneralizedTime(java.util.Date time,
                   java.util.Locale locale)
Base constructor from a java.util.date and Locale - you may need to use this if the default locale
 doesn't use a Gregorian calender so that the GeneralizedTime produced is compatible with other ASN.1 implementations. 
 | 
ASN1GeneralizedTime(java.lang.String time)
The correct format for this is YYYYMMDDHHMMSS[.f]Z, or without the Z
 for local time, or Z+-HHMM on the end, for difference between local
 time and UTC time. 
 | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
java.util.Date | 
getDate()  | 
static ASN1GeneralizedTime | 
getInstance(ASN1TaggedObject obj,
           boolean explicit)
return a Generalized Time object from a tagged object. 
 | 
static ASN1GeneralizedTime | 
getInstance(java.lang.Object obj)
return a generalized time from the passed in object 
 | 
java.lang.String | 
getTime()
return the time - always in the form of
 YYYYMMDDhhmmssGMT(+hh:mm|-hh:mm). 
 | 
java.lang.String | 
getTimeString()
Return the time. 
 | 
protected boolean | 
hasFractionalSeconds()  | 
int | 
hashCode()  | 
protected boolean | 
hasMinutes()  | 
protected boolean | 
hasSeconds()  | 
equals, fromByteArray, toASN1PrimitivegetEncoded, getEncoded, hasEncodedTagValue, toASN1Objectpublic ASN1GeneralizedTime(java.lang.String time)
time - the time string.java.lang.IllegalArgumentException - if String is an illegal format.public ASN1GeneralizedTime(java.util.Date time)
time - a date object representing the time of interest.public ASN1GeneralizedTime(java.util.Date time,
                           java.util.Locale locale)
time - a date object representing the time of interest.locale - an appropriate Locale for producing an ASN.1 GeneralizedTime value.public static ASN1GeneralizedTime getInstance(java.lang.Object obj)
obj - an ASN1GeneralizedTime or an object that can be converted into one.java.lang.IllegalArgumentException - if the object cannot be converted.public static ASN1GeneralizedTime getInstance(ASN1TaggedObject obj, boolean explicit)
obj - the tagged object holding the object we wantexplicit - true if the object is meant to be explicitly
                 tagged false otherwise.java.lang.IllegalArgumentException - if the tagged object cannot
 be converted.public java.lang.String getTimeString()
public java.lang.String getTime()
Normally in a certificate we would expect "Z" rather than "GMT", however adding the "GMT" means we can just use:
     dateF = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyyMMddHHmmssz");
 
 To read in the time and get a date which is compatible with our local
 time zone.public java.util.Date getDate()
                       throws java.text.ParseException
java.text.ParseExceptionprotected boolean hasFractionalSeconds()
protected boolean hasSeconds()
protected boolean hasMinutes()
public int hashCode()
hashCode in class ASN1Primitive