04-10-2007
Many Thanks sysgate !
This workaround did the trick.
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My program:
__________________________________
#!/bin/ksh
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H=`date +%H`
M=`date +%M`
day=`date +%m/%d/%y`
let h=$H-1
echo DAY $DAY
echo H $H
echo M $M
echo day $day
echo h $h
_____________________________________
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
io_wait
io_wait(3) Library Functions Manual io_wait(3)
NAME
io_wait - wait for events
SYNTAX
#include <io.h>
void io_wait();
DESCRIPTION
io_wait() checks the descriptors that the program is interested in to see whether any of them are ready. If none of them are ready,
io_wait() tries to pause until one of them is ready, so that it does not take time away from other programs running on the same computer.
io_wait pays attention to timeouts: if a descriptor reaches its timeout, and the program is interested in reading or writing that descrip-
tor, io_wait will return promptly.
Under some circumstances, io_wait will return even though no interesting descriptors are ready. Do not assume that a descriptor is ready
merely because io_wait has returned.
io_wait is not interrupted by the delivery of a signal. Programs that expect interruption are unreliable: they will block if the same sig-
nal is delivered a moment before io_wait. The correct way to handle signals is with the self-pipe trick.
SEE ALSO
io_waituntil(3), io_check(3), io_wantread(3), io_wantwrite(3), io_fd(3)
io_wait(3)