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Full Discussion: Date time issues on RHEL
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Date time issues on RHEL Post 302215206 by sumitb74 on Tuesday 15th of July 2008 09:44:28 PM
Old 07-15-2008
Date time issues on RHEL

Hi,

I am facing a weird problem with the 'Date'. If I check date multiple times in a short interval I see a different time altogether. Here is an example

[root@localhost home]$ date
Tue Jul 15 02:07:22 PDT 2008
[root@localhost home]$ date
Tue Jul 15 02:07:23 PDT 2008
[root@localhost home]$ date
Tue Jul 15 03:20:42 PDT 2008
[root@localhost home]$ date
Tue Jul 15 02:07:25 PDT 2008

I have tried sync-ing up the Date with hwclock and vice versa, but it
has not helped.

Any idea what could be the problem.

Thanks,
Sumit
 

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Email::Date(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					  Email::Date(3pm)

NAME
Email::Date - Find and Format Date Headers SYNOPSIS
use Email::Date; my $email = join '', <>; my $date = find_date($email); print $date->ymd; my $header = format_date($date->epoch); Email::Simple->create( header => [ Date => $header, ], body => '...', ); DESCRIPTION
RFC 2822 defines the "Date:" header. It declares the header a required part of an email message. The syntax for date headers is clearly laid out. Stil, even a perfectly planned world has storms. The truth is, many programs get it wrong. Very wrong. Or, they don't include a "Date:" header at all. This often forces you to look elsewhere for the date, and hoping to find something. For this reason, the tedious process of looking for a valid date has been encapsulated in this software. Further, the process of creating RFC compliant date strings is also found in this software. FUNCTIONS find_date my $time_piece = find_date $email; "find_date" accepts an email message in any format Email::Abstract can understand. It looks through the email message and finds a date, converting it to a Time::Piece object. If it can't find a date, it returns false. "find_date" is exported by default. format_date my $date = format_date; # now my $date = format_date( time - 60*60 ); # one hour ago "format_date" accepts an epoch value, such as the one returned by "time". It returns a string representing the date and time of the input, as specified in RFC 2822. If no input value is provided, the current value of "time" is used. "format_date" is exported by default. format_gmdate my $date = format_gmdate; "format_gmdate" is identical to "format_date", but it will return a string indicating the time in Greenwich Mean Time, rather than local time. "format_gmdate" is exported on demand, but not by default. PERL EMAIL PROJECT
This module is maintained by the Perl Email Project <http://emailproject.perl.org/wiki/Email::Date> SEE ALSO
Email::Abstract, Time::Piece, Date::Parse, perl. AUTHOR
Casey West, <casey@geeknest.com>. Ricardo SIGNES, <rjbs@cpan.org>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2004 Casey West. All rights reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2007-12-01 Email::Date(3pm)
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