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Full Discussion: How to find time
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to find time Post 302090294 by dakid on Sunday 24th of September 2006 11:12:06 PM
Old 09-25-2006
blowtorch,

i have an archive directory which when the file is too old, when im viewing the files in long format, the field for time is replaced by the year.
i want to know if there is a command to know when a specific file was last modified because i cant see it useing the ls -l command.
 

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STAT(5) 							File Formats Manual							   STAT(5)

NAME
stat, wstat - inquire or change file attributes SYNOPSIS
Tstat tag[2] fid[2] Rstat tag[2] fid[2] stat[116] Twstat tag[2] fid[2] stat[116] Rwstat tag[2] fid[2] DESCRIPTION
The stat transaction inquires about the file identified by fid. The reply will contain a 116-byte (DIRLEN in <libc.h>) machine-independent directory entry laid out as follows: name[28] file name; must be / if the file is the root directory of the server uid[28] owner name gid[28] group name qid.path[4] the file server's identification for the file qid.vers[4] version number for given path mode[4] permissions and flags atime[4] last access time mtime[4] last modification time length[8] length of file in bytes type[2] for kernel use dev[2] for kernel use Integers in this encoding are in little-endian order (least significant byte first). The convM2D and convD2M routines (see fcall(2)) con- vert between directory entries and C structs. This encoding may be turned into a machine dependent Dir structure (see stat(2)) using routines defined in fcall(2). The mode contains permission bits as described in intro(5) and the following: 0x80000000 (this file is a directory), 0x40000000 (append only), 0x20000000 (exclusive use). Writes to append-only files always place their data at the end of the file; the offset in the read or write message is ignored, as is the OTRUNC bit in an open. Exclusive use files may be open for I/O by only one fid at a time across all clients of the server. If a second open is attempted, it draws an error. Servers may implement a timeout on the lock on an exclusive use file: if the fid holding the file open has been unused for an extended period (of order at least minutes), it is reasonable to break the lock and deny the initial fid further I/O. The two time fields are measured in seconds since the epoch (Jan 1 00:00 1970 GMT). The mtime field reflects the time of the last change of content. For a plain file, mtime is the time of the most recent create, open with truncation, or write; for a directory it is the time of the most recent remove, create, or wstat of a file in the directory. Similarly, the atime field records the last read of the contents; also it is set whenever mtime is set. In addition, for a directory, it is set by an attach, walk, or create, all whether successful or not. The length records the number of bytes in the file. Directories and most files representing devices have a conventional length of 0. The stat request requires no special permissions. The wstat request can change some of the file status information. The name can be changed by anyone with write permission in the parent directory; it is an error to change the name to that of an existing file. The mode and mtime can be changed by the owner of the file or the group leader of the file's current group. The directory bit cannot be changed by a wstat; the other defined permission and mode bits can. The gid can be changed: by the owner if also a member of the new group; or by the group leader of the file's current group if also leader of the new group (see intro(5) for more information about permissions and users(6) for users and groups). None of the other data can be altered by a wstat. In particular, there is no way to change the owner of a file. A read of a directory yields an integral number of directory entries in the machine independent encoding given above (see read(5)). ENTRY POINTS
Stat messages are generated by fstat and stat. Wstat messages are generated by fwstat and wstat. STAT(5)
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