NAME
    `Time::timegm' - a UTC version of `mktime()'

SYNOPSIS
     use Time::timegm qw( timegm );

     my $epoch = timegm( 0, 0, 0, 14, 6-1, 2012-1900 );

     print "2012-06-14 00:00:00 UTC happened at ",
        scalar localtime($epoch), " localtime\n";

DESCRIPTION
    The POSIX standard provides three functions for converting between
    integer epoch values and 6-component "broken-down" time representations.
    `localtime' and `gmtime' convert an epoch into the 6 components of
    seconds, minutes, hours, day of month, month and year, in either local
    timezone or UTC. The `mktime' function converts a local broken-down time
    into an epoch value. However, `POSIX' does not provide a UTC version of
    this.

    This module provides a function `timegm' which has this ability.

    Unlike some other CPAN implementations of this behaviour, this version
    does not re-implement the time handling logic internally. It reuses the
    `mktime' and `gmtime' functions provided by the system to ensure its
    results are always consistent with the other functions.

FUNCTIONS
  $epoch = timegm( $sec, $min, $hour, $mday, $mon, $year )
    Returns the epoch integer value representing the time given by the 6
    broken-down components.

    As with `POSIX::mktime' it is *not* required that these values be within
    their "valid" ranges. This function will normalise values out of range.
    For example, the 25th hour of a day is normalised to the 1st hour of the
    following day; or the 0th month is normalised to the 12th month of the
    preceeding year.

COMPARISON WITH Time::Local
    The Time::Local module also provides a function called `timegm()' with
    similar behaviour to this one. The differences are:

    * `Time::timegm::timegm()' handles denormalised values (that is, seconds
      or minutes outside of the range 0 to 59, hours outside 0 to 23, etc..)
      by adjusting the next largest unit (such that 61 seconds is 1 second
      of the next minute, etc). `Time::Local::timegm()' croaks on
      out-of-range input. `Time::Local' also provides a function
      `timegm_nocheck()' which does not croak but it is documented that the
      behavior is unspecified on out-of-range values.

    * `Time::timegm::timegm()' is implemented by a light XS wrapper around
      the `timegm(3)' or `_mkgmtime(3)' function provided by the platform's
      C library if such a function is provided, so its behaviour is
      consistent with the rest of the platform. `Time::Local' re-implements
      the logic in perl code. `Time::timegm' will fall back to a perl
      implementation only if the XS one cannot be used.

AUTHOR
    Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>