05-25-2006
Well im putting them into variables, such as when they enter day, then month followed by day number i do a grep of;
grep -c "$day $month $daynum" ....
I thought that as the daynum contains a figure such as 12, it may match up with a line which doesnt have a daynumber of that value, but a time involving that number.
Also when i put the $year variable in the grep code after $daynum, e.g. "2006" it breaks the count and none of the hits appear anymore...
Last edited by Jaken; 05-25-2006 at 09:22 AM..
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holidays(4) File Formats holidays(4)
NAME
holidays - prime/nonprime table for the accounting system
SYNOPSIS
/etc/acct/holidays
DESCRIPTION
The /etc/acct/holidays file describes which hours are considered prime time and which days are holidays. Holidays and weekends are con-
sidered non-prime time hours. /etc/acct/holidays is used by the accounting system.
All lines beginning with an "*" are comments.
The /etc/acct/holidays file consists of two sections. The first non-comment line defines the current year and the start time of prime and
non-prime time hours, in the form:
current_year prime_start non_prime_start
The remaining non-comment lines define the holidays in the form:
month/day company_holiday
Of these two fields, only the month/day is actually used by the accounting system programs.
The /etc/acct/holidays file must be updated each year.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Example of the /etc/acct/holidays file.
The following is an example of the /etc/acct/holidays file:
* Prime/Nonprime Table for the accounting system
*
* Curr Prime Non-Prime
* Year Start Start
*
1991 0830 1800
*
* only the first column (month/day) is significant.
*
* month/day Company Holiday
*
1/1 New Years Day
5/30 Memorial Day
7/4 Indep. Day
9/5 Labor Day
11/24 Thanksgiving Day
11/25 day after Thanksgiving
12/25 Christmas
12/26 day after Christmas
SEE ALSO
acct(1M)
SunOS 5.10 28 Mar 1991 holidays(4)