Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Arithmetic on timestamps
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Arithmetic on timestamps Post 302298161 by vidyadhar85 on Monday 16th of March 2009 11:00:48 PM
Old 03-17-2009
i have written a script to take the time difference of two time stamp please modify it as you need
Code:
awk -v start_time=$1 -v end_time=$2 'BEGIN{
if ( start_time !~ /^[0-9]/ || end_time !~ /^[0-9]/ )
usage(start_time,end_time)
split(start_time,T2,":")
split(end_time,T1,":")
start_seconds=T1[1]*60*60+T1[2]*60+T1[3]
end_seconds=T2[1]*60*60+T2[2]*60+T2[3]
if ( start_seconds > 86401 || end_seconds > 86401)
usage("out_off_range","")
elapsed_seconds=start_seconds-end_seconds
if( elapsed_seconds < 0 )
{elapsed_seconds=elapsed_seconds*-1
calculate(end_time,start_time,elapsed_seconds)}
else
calculate(start_time,end_time,elapsed_seconds)}
function calculate(start_time,end_time,elapsed_seconds){
HH=elapsed_seconds / 3600
MM=(elapsed_seconds % 3600) / 60
SS=elapsed_seconds % 60
printf  "TIME DIFFERENCE BETWEEN "start_time"(START TIME)-"end_time"(END TIME)--> +%02d:%02d:%02d\n",HH,MM,SS }
function usage(start_time,end_time){
if( start_time=="out_off_range" )
printf "TIME OUT OFF RANGE\n"
else
printf "INVALID TIME FORMAT "start_time" "end_time"\n"
printf "USAGE : time_diff.sh <HH:MM[:SS]> <HH:MM[:SS]>\n"
exit}'

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Unix timestamps

Can someone help me with a Unix or perl script to convert the unix timestamps to human readable format? Any help will be highly appreciated... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hamsasal
3 Replies

2. Solaris

Difference between two timestamps

I'm writting a script to find the difference between two timestamp. One field i get on delivery time of the file like 07:17 AM and other is my SLA time 06:30 AM I need to find the difference between these two time (time exceeded to meet SLA). Need some suggestions. (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: raman1605
8 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

merging multiple timestamps into one

Here is a problem that involves looping: - I have multiple files with same name but different timestamps: e.g test20080226144525.txt, test20080227144525.txt (can be more than two files). - I want to take the collection of these files (e.g test*) and append all its contents... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ChicagoBlues
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

timestamps

Hello! I have the following problem. I read a file using perl, each line of this file has the fllowing format. 14/4/2008 8:42:03 πμ|10800|306973223399|4917622951117|1||1259|1|126|492|433||19774859454$ Th first field is the timestamp and the second field is the offset in seconds. How can... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: chriss_58
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare Timestamps

Hi! Long time reader first time registered user and poster. I've picked up some times and tricks and I'm at a dead end... I've parsed a log file for duplicates and printed only the two fields I need (duplicate entry and time stamp). My question is, with this output, how would I script... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rexpokinghorn
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Compare 2 timestamps

Hi, i have current timestamp, lets say "12:02:45" in an variable (var1) and another timestamp "08:30:00" fetched from table in another variable2 (var2). How do i compare 2 timestamps in unix shell scripting. if var 1 > var 2 then echo message. Thanks in advance. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: prasannarajesh
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with touch and timestamps

Hello fellow Unix geeks, I have been given a very urgent assignment in my office on writing a particular Shell script but I'm very much new to it.I would appreciate any help from you on solving this problem--which might seem very trivial to you. The Unix flavour is a Sun Solaris one..(not... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Digjoy83
6 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grep 'error' between two timestamps

Hi, Need to grep for a error in a log file but between two timestamps / patterns example: in the below log file if the given timestamps are 14:00 to 15:00 and m greping for error only error3 should come in the output. pls note that apart from timestamps printed, the log file has no... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: amicableperson
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Comparing two timestamps

Hi all!!, I'm using Ksh and working on Linux. I want to compare two timestamps, timestamp1 and timestamp2. Until, timestamp1 is lesser than timestamp2, i want to do something, lets say print something. The code i have written is: a=`date +%H:%M:%S` b=`date +%H:%M:%S -d" 1... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Jayaraman
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Write with a look for timestamps

hello i'm using SOX to generate a spectrogram from a wave file with the command : #sox file.wav -n spectrogram is there a way to create a spectrogram using the same command but reading file timestamps instead of the namefile.wav , since name is changing every 4 hours? (it's saved with... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Board27
2 Replies
IPC::Run::Timer(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					IPC::Run::Timer(3)

NAME
IPC::Run::Timer -- Timer channels for IPC::Run. SYNOPSIS
use IPC::Run qw( run timer timeout ); ## or IPC::Run::Timer ( timer timeout ); ## or IPC::Run::Timer ( :all ); ## A non-fatal timer: $t = timer( 5 ); # or... $t = IO::Run::Timer->new( 5 ); run $t, ...; ## A timeout (which is a timer that dies on expiry): $t = timeout( 5 ); # or... $t = IO::Run::Timer->new( 5, exception => "harness timed out" ); DESCRIPTION
This class and module allows timers and timeouts to be created for use by IPC::Run. A timer simply expires when it's time is up. A timeout is a timer that throws an exception when it expires. Timeouts are usually a bit simpler to use than timers: they throw an exception on expiration so you don't need to check them: ## Give @cmd 10 seconds to get started, then 5 seconds to respond my $t = timeout( 10 ); $h = start( @cmd, $in, $out, $t, ); pump $h until $out =~ /prompt/; $in = "some stimulus"; $out = ''; $t->time( 5 ) pump $h until $out =~ /expected response/; You do need to check timers: ## Give @cmd 10 seconds to get started, then 5 seconds to respond my $t = timer( 10 ); $h = start( @cmd, $in, $out, $t, ); pump $h until $t->is_expired || $out =~ /prompt/; $in = "some stimulus"; $out = ''; $t->time( 5 ) pump $h until $out =~ /expected response/ || $t->is_expired; Timers and timeouts that are reset get started by start() and pump(). Timers change state only in pump(). Since run() and finish() both call pump(), they act like pump() with repect to timers. Timers and timeouts have three states: reset, running, and expired. Setting the timeout value resets the timer, as does calling the reset() method. The start() method starts (or restarts) a timer with the most recently set time value, no matter what state it's in. Time values All time values are in seconds. Times may be specified as integer or floating point seconds, optionally preceded by puncuation-separated days, hours, and minutes. Examples: 1 1 second 1.1 1.1 seconds 60 60 seconds 1:0 1 minute 1:1 1 minute, 1 second 1:90 2 minutes, 30 seconds 1:2:3:4.5 1 day, 2 hours, 3 minutes, 4.5 seconds Absolute date/time strings are *not* accepted: year, month and day-of-month parsing is not available (patches welcome :-). Interval fudging When calculating an end time from a start time and an interval, IPC::Run::Timer instances add a little fudge factor. This is to ensure that no time will expire before the interval is up. First a little background. Time is sampled in discrete increments. We'll call the exact moment that the reported time increments from one interval to the next a tick, and the interval between ticks as the time period. Here's a diagram of three ticks and the periods between them: -0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-2-... ^ ^ ^ |<--- period 0 ---->|<--- period 1 ---->| | | | tick 0 tick 1 tick 2 To see why the fudge factor is necessary, consider what would happen when a timer with an interval of 1 second is started right at the end of period 0: -0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-2-... ^ ^ ^ ^ | | | | | | | | tick 0 |tick 1 tick 2 | start $t Assuming that check() is called many times per period, then the timer is likely to expire just after tick 1, since the time reported will have lept from the value '0' to the value '1': -0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-2-... ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ | | | | | | | | | | tick 0 |tick 1| tick 2 | | start $t | | check $t Adding a fudge of '1' in this example means that the timer is guaranteed not to expire before tick 2. The fudge is not added to an interval of '0'. This means that intervals guarantee a minimum interval. Given that the process running perl may be suspended for some period of time, or that it gets busy doing something time-consuming, there are no other guarantees on how long it will take a timer to expire. SUBCLASSING
INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE: Due to the awkwardness introduced by ripping pseudohashes out of Perl, this class no longer uses the fields pragma. FUNCTIONS &; METHODS timer A constructor function (not method) of IPC::Run::Timer instances: $t = timer( 5 ); $t = timer( 5, name => 'stall timer', debug => 1 ); $t = timer; $t->interval( 5 ); run ..., $t; run ..., $t = timer( 5 ); This convenience function is a shortened spelling of IPC::Run::Timer->new( ... ); . It returns a timer in the reset state with a given interval. If an exception is provided, it will be thrown when the timer notices that it has expired (in check()). The name is for debugging usage, if you plan on having multiple timers around. If no name is provided, a name like "timer #1" will be provided. timeout A constructor function (not method) of IPC::Run::Timer instances: $t = timeout( 5 ); $t = timeout( 5, exception => "kablooey" ); $t = timeout( 5, name => "stall", exception => "kablooey" ); $t = timeout; $t->interval( 5 ); run ..., $t; run ..., $t = timeout( 5 ); A This convenience function is a shortened spelling of IPC::Run::Timer->new( exception => "IPC::Run: timeout ...", ... ); . It returns a timer in the reset state that will throw an exception when it expires. Takes the same parameters as "timer", any exception passed in overrides the default exception. new IPC::Run::Timer->new() ; IPC::Run::Timer->new( 5 ) ; IPC::Run::Timer->new( 5, exception => 'kablooey' ) ; Constructor. See "timer" for details. check check $t; check $t, $now; $t->check; Checks to see if a timer has expired since the last check. Has no effect on non-running timers. This will throw an exception if one is defined. IPC::Run::pump() calls this routine for any timers in the harness. You may pass in a version of now, which is useful in case you have it lying around or you want to check several timers with a consistent concept of the current time. Returns the time left before end_time or 0 if end_time is no longer in the future or the timer is not running (unless, of course, check() expire()s the timer and this results in an exception being thrown). Returns undef if the timer is not running on entry, 0 if check() expires it, and the time left if it's left running. debug Sets/gets the current setting of the debugging flag for this timer. This has no effect if debugging is not enabled for the current harness. end_time $et = $t->end_time; $et = end_time $t; $t->end_time( time + 10 ); Returns the time when this timer will or did expire. Even if this time is in the past, the timer may not be expired, since check() may not have been called yet. Note that this end_time is not start_time($t) + interval($t), since some small extra amount of time is added to make sure that the timer does not expire before interval() elapses. If this were not so, then Changing end_time() while a timer is running will set the expiration time. Changing it while it is expired has no affect, since reset()ing a timer always clears the end_time(). exception $x = $t->exception; $t->exception( $x ); $t->exception( undef ); Sets/gets the exception to throw, if any. 'undef' means that no exception will be thrown. Exception does not need to be a scalar: you may ask that references be thrown. interval $i = interval $t; $i = $t->interval; $t->interval( $i ); Sets the interval. Sets the end time based on the start_time() and the interval (and a little fudge) if the timer is running. expire expire $t; $t->expire; Sets the state to expired (undef). Will throw an exception if one is defined and the timer was not already expired. You can expire a reset timer without starting it. is_running is_reset is_expired name Sets/gets this timer's name. The name is only used for debugging purposes so you can tell which freakin' timer is doing what. reset reset $t; $t->reset; Resets the timer to the non-running, non-expired state and clears the end_time(). start start $t; $t->start; start $t, $interval; start $t, $interval, $now; Starts or restarts a timer. This always sets the start_time. It sets the end_time based on the interval if the timer is running or if no end time has been set. You may pass an optional interval or current time value. Not passing a defined interval causes the previous interval setting to be re-used unless the timer is reset and an end_time has been set (an exception is thrown if no interval has been set). Not passing a defined current time value causes the current time to be used. Passing a current time value is useful if you happen to have a time value lying around or if you want to make sure that several timers are started with the same concept of start time. You might even need to lie to an IPC::Run::Timer, occasionally. start_time Sets/gets the start time, in seconds since the epoch. Setting this manually is a bad idea, it's better to call "start"() at the correct time. state $s = state $t; $t->state( $s ); Get/Set the current state. Only use this if you really need to transfer the state to/from some variable. Use "expire", "start", "reset", "is_expired", "is_running", "is_reset". Note: Setting the state to 'undef' to expire a timer will not throw an exception. TODO
use Time::HiRes; if it's present. Add detection and parsing of [[[HH:]MM:]SS formatted times and intervals. AUTHOR
Barrie Slaymaker <barries@slaysys.com> perl v5.12.1 2010-04-01 IPC::Run::Timer(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:26 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy