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Full Discussion: simple date problem
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting simple date problem Post 302160251 by ennstate on Monday 21st of January 2008 08:27:10 AM
Old 01-21-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by ali560045
thanks a lot for ur reply........
i have use ur command like this

TZ=`date +%Z`+24 ; a=`date +%Y-%m-%d`

echo $ a

--------------------------------------------------------------------

i m able to grep yesterday date...can u tell me how to grep 2 day ago and also 3 day ago and likewise in the same format in the above command
The point is we can achieve it by modifying the TZ variable.
If you need yesterday's date then we advance TZ by 24,similarly for 2 days ago advance TZ by 48 ...
For future dates,we ll reduce the TZ by the 24 for 1 day,48 for 2 days and so on..

Thanks
Nagarajan
 

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nqs2pbs(1B)								PBS							       nqs2pbs(1B)

NAME
nqs2pbs - convert NQS job scripts to PBS SYNOPSIS
nqs2pbs nqs_script [pbs_script] DESCRIPTION
This utility converts a existing NQS job script to work with PBS and NQS. The existing script is copied and PBS directives, #PBS , are inserted prior to each NQS directive #QSUB or #@$ , in the original script. Certain NQS date specification and options are not supported by PBS. A warning message will be displayed indicating the problem and the line of the script on which it occurred. If any unrecognizable NQS directives are encountered, an error message is displayed. The new PBS script will be deleted if any errors occur. OPERANDS
nqs_script Specifies the file name of the NQS script to convert. This file is not changed. pbs_script If specified, it is the name of the new PBS script. If not specified, the new file name is nqs_script.new . NOTES
Converting NQS date specifications to the PBS form may result in a warning message and an incompleted converted date. PBS does not support date specifications of "today", "tomorrow", or the name of the days of the week such as "Monday". If any of these are encountered in a script, the PBS specification will contain only the time portion of the NQS specification, i.e. #PBS -a hhmm[.ss]. It is suggested that you specify the execution time on the qsub command line rather than in the script. Note that PBS will interpret a time specification without a date in the following way: - If the time specified has not yet been reached, the job will become eligible to run at that time today. - If the specified time has already passed when the job is submitted, the job will become eligible to run at that time tomorrow. PBS does not support time zone identifiers. All times are taken as local time. SEE ALSO
qsub(1B) Local nqs2pbs(1B)
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