Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: date problem
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers date problem Post 19507 by thehoghunter on Thursday 11th of April 2002 11:19:04 PM
Old 04-12-2002
You can set an alias to give you something different like:

date +'%n %D %A %T%n'

But I do not believe attempting it to show GMT will give you the same time (I'm not even sure you can do that - I've never found a list of which letters do what with date...some are listed in the man page but the others I have found by trying)
thehoghunter
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Problem with the date help

Hi everybody I have a problem with a shell. It runs every night just once a night on my sun system. #!/bin/ksh export pfad_work=/usr/users/ftp/testdaten export pfad_daten=/u01/projects/iris_unix/inp_test_daten/data export pfad_term=/u01/projects/iris_unix/inp_test_term/data cd... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Peterh
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

small date problem

Hi there I currently use a line in a script ndate=$(date +"%d/%m/%Y") This obviously returns the date in a format i have chosen. However, I need to come up with a solution for weekends and as such need a way of returning todays date minus two days in the same format (24/11/2004) so for... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

problem in date

Hai, i need the date should be older than 30 days input 14-02-2006 output 15-01-2006 Please help me (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: readycpbala
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

problem with date

i have a process ---------------------------------------------------------------------- pipe 1044528 1278036 4 Dec 07 - 58:23 java -Xms128m -Xmx1024m -D_AppName=DBMaint com.eMeter.dbmaint.DBMaintAdapter /home/pipe/conf/appProperties/DBMaint.properties root 1073166 1134628 0 Feb... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ali560045
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

simple date problem

i have a script that grep for today date a=`date +"%F"`--------greps current/today date wat if suppose i want to grep a date for yesterday... how to do that using the above format: i,e 2008-01-20 (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ali560045
4 Replies

6. AIX

problem with date

hi friends I am using AIX 5.2 version when ever i try to use echo $(date -d yesterday +"%Y%m%d") I am getting error as date: not recognized flag d please help me solve this. I wanted to find the next date from a given date. I tried using diff script but all of them failed at some... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sameerspice
5 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Date time problem

Hi Guys, I have a file a.txt Start Date/Time End Date/Time from Prob_Dura. ----------------- ----------------- ----- ------ 20090525 23:58:59 20090526 00:00:00 machine1 000051 20090525 23:58:09 20090526 00:00:11 machine2 000150 The perl or shell script can: 1. remove... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimmy_y
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Date Range problem

Hi , I need a function that verfies the given date is between start date and end date . I have written this but this not working if start date is 1900/01/01 Below is my code validateDate() { RC=$# if then return 0 else ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Satyak
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

date problem

hi everyone i have another date problem i need to find out the last week number and in that last week i need to find out at what day monday comes. please help (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aishsimplesweet
5 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Date Format Problem

I have written a code in Linux environment which compares two dates and print "correct" if 1st date is less than 2nd date. But when I'm running the same code in SunOS environment, "date -d is an illegal format" is the error it is throwing. How different should my code be so that it executes well in... (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: Chandan_Bose
18 Replies
HTTP::Date(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     HTTP::Date(3)

NAME
HTTP::Date - date conversion routines SYNOPSIS
use HTTP::Date; $string = time2str($time); # Format as GMT ASCII time $time = str2time($string); # convert ASCII date to machine time DESCRIPTION
This module provides functions that deal the date formats used by the HTTP protocol (and then some more). Only the first two functions, time2str() and str2time(), are exported by default. time2str( [$time] ) The time2str() function converts a machine time (seconds since epoch) to a string. If the function is called without an argument or with an undefined argument, it will use the current time. The string returned is in the format preferred for the HTTP protocol. This is a fixed length subset of the format defined by RFC 1123, represented in Universal Time (GMT). An example of a time stamp in this format is: Sun, 06 Nov 1994 08:49:37 GMT str2time( $str [, $zone] ) The str2time() function converts a string to machine time. It returns "undef" if the format of $str is unrecognized, otherwise whatever the "Time::Local" functions can make out of the parsed time. Dates before the system's epoch may not work on all operating systems. The time formats recognized are the same as for parse_date(). The function also takes an optional second argument that specifies the default time zone to use when converting the date. This parameter is ignored if the zone is found in the date string itself. If this parameter is missing, and the date string format does not contain any zone specification, then the local time zone is assumed. If the zone is not ""GMT"" or numerical (like ""-0800"" or "+0100"), then the "Time::Zone" module must be installed in order to get the date recognized. parse_date( $str ) This function will try to parse a date string, and then return it as a list of numerical values followed by a (possible undefined) time zone specifier; ($year, $month, $day, $hour, $min, $sec, $tz). The $year will be the full 4-digit year, and $month numbers start with 1 (for January). In scalar context the numbers are interpolated in a string of the "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss TZ"-format and returned. If the date is unrecognized, then the empty list is returned ("undef" in scalar context). The function is able to parse the following formats: "Wed, 09 Feb 1994 22:23:32 GMT" -- HTTP format "Thu Feb 3 17:03:55 GMT 1994" -- ctime(3) format "Thu Feb 3 00:00:00 1994", -- ANSI C asctime() format "Tuesday, 08-Feb-94 14:15:29 GMT" -- old rfc850 HTTP format "Tuesday, 08-Feb-1994 14:15:29 GMT" -- broken rfc850 HTTP format "03/Feb/1994:17:03:55 -0700" -- common logfile format "09 Feb 1994 22:23:32 GMT" -- HTTP format (no weekday) "08-Feb-94 14:15:29 GMT" -- rfc850 format (no weekday) "08-Feb-1994 14:15:29 GMT" -- broken rfc850 format (no weekday) "1994-02-03 14:15:29 -0100" -- ISO 8601 format "1994-02-03 14:15:29" -- zone is optional "1994-02-03" -- only date "1994-02-03T14:15:29" -- Use T as separator "19940203T141529Z" -- ISO 8601 compact format "19940203" -- only date "08-Feb-94" -- old rfc850 HTTP format (no weekday, no time) "08-Feb-1994" -- broken rfc850 HTTP format (no weekday, no time) "09 Feb 1994" -- proposed new HTTP format (no weekday, no time) "03/Feb/1994" -- common logfile format (no time, no offset) "Feb 3 1994" -- Unix 'ls -l' format "Feb 3 17:03" -- Unix 'ls -l' format "11-15-96 03:52PM" -- Windows 'dir' format The parser ignores leading and trailing whitespace. It also allow the seconds to be missing and the month to be numerical in most formats. If the year is missing, then we assume that the date is the first matching date before current month. If the year is given with only 2 digits, then parse_date() will select the century that makes the year closest to the current date. time2iso( [$time] ) Same as time2str(), but returns a "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss"-formatted string representing time in the local time zone. time2isoz( [$time] ) Same as time2str(), but returns a "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ssZ"-formatted string representing Universal Time. SEE ALSO
"time" in perlfunc, Time::Zone COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995-1999, Gisle Aas This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.16.3 2012-03-30 HTTP::Date(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:33 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy