On 28.03.2019 18:49, Bonita Montero wrote:
> The timestamp is a time_t-value, i.e. the passed seconds since 1.1.1970.
> So we are not off-topic here because this isn't Windows-specific. ;-)
The TimeDateStamp in the COFF header is documented as "The low 32 bits
of the number of seconds since 00:00 January 1, 1970 (a C run-time
time_t value), that indicates when the file was created."
I do not see the high 32 bits of the time_t value stored anywhere. Maybe
the TimeDateStamp field is meant just as a convenient label for telling
apart different versions of the file?