Hello,
I am trying to compare two dates which are in variables and i am not getting the correct result as expected.
$first_date = '07/19/2007'
$second_date='07/20/2007'
Can you please suggest how to i check whether they are equal or not.
if ($first_date -eq $second_date) condition is not... (3 Replies)
I am wriitng a shell script to compare a date in `date +%Y%m%d%H%M` to the output of `cat /var/adm/messages.0 | grep Temp |grep "CPU Fans" | cut -f1-4,19 -d' '` which looks like
Dec 2 11:30:57 79
Dec 2 11:37:58 79
Dec 2 11:44:58 79
Dec 2 11:50:59 79
Dec 2 11:58:00 79
Dec 2... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have thefollowing files in the directory inbox/sat
ras.sat.trn.20090103.001902.00004358
ras.sat.trn.20090612.001903.00005339
ras.sat.trn.20090723.001902.00004358
The above file contains the date of the file creation. We just need to write a ksh shell script to check the... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have written the following Pro*C program to get the difference between 2 dates.But when I am printing the value of the date difference,it is always showing 0.
#include<stdio.h>
#include<sqlca.h>
#include<oraca.h>
void main()
{
EXEC SQL BEGIN DECLARE SECTION;
int diff;
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am having difficulty to compare a string in a file against a date from a a table and print the latest date. Below are the values.
String in File : 2009-12-02 00:37:51
Value Table : 2010-01-10-02.00.49.294758
I have to compare both the values ( Ignore the Microsecond in the table... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I want to generate quarter dates using awk or anything, by giving a dates as input
for example :
start_date=2010-01-01
end_date=2010-05-31
output should be:
start_date end_date qtr
2010-01-01 2010-03-31 1
2010-04-01 2010-05-31 2
Example 2:... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I need to compare the string variable with input value which have more than one word which also should be case insensitive.
#!/bin/sh
echo "please choose your choice: "
read choice
if ` ]
then echo "correct"
else
echo "wrong"
fi
but i am getting the output for first word... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I would need your help to compare dates in my script.
Say if I have the dates in a file I need to comapre these dates with yesterday's date and the dates which are older than yesterday needs to be displayed.
Example:
03/22/2012
03/24/2012
03/20/2012
03/21/2012
03/12/2012... (1 Reply)
I have a script called " passwd_status " which gives the passwd-s status of my servers.
the script output is like below
password status for A:
abc ks 10/05/115 1 30 ps
password status for B:
abc ks 09/25/115 1 30 ps
password status for C:
abc ks 10/10/115 1 30 ps
Now , i want to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: charanarjun
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
date
date(1) General Commands Manual date(1)Name
date - print date and time
Syntax
date [-c | -u] [ +format ] [[yy[mm[dd]]]hhmm[.ss][-[-]tttt][z]]
Description
If no argument is given, or if the argument begins with +, the current date and time are printed. Otherwise, the current date is set. The
first mm is the month number; dd is the day number in the month; hh is the hour number (24 hour clock); the second mm is the minute number;
.ss the second; -[-]tttt is the minutes west of Greenwich; a positive number means your time zone is west of Greenwich (for example, North
and South America) and a negative number means it is east of Greenwich (for example Europe); z is a one letter code indicating the dst cor-
rection mode (n=none, u=usa, a=australian, w=western europe, m=middle europe, e=eastern europe); yy is the last 2 digits of the year number
and is optional. The following example sets the date to Oct 8, 12:45 AM:
date 10080045
The current year is the default if no year is mentioned. The system operates in GMT. The takes care of the conversion to and from local
standard and daylight time.
If the argument begins with +, the output of is under the control of the user. The format for the output is similar to that of the first
argument to All output fields are of fixed size (zero padded if necessary). Each field descriptor is preceded by % and is replaced in the
output by its corresponding value. A single % is encoded by %%. All other characters are copied to the output without change. The string
is always terminated with a new-line character.
Options-c Perform operations using Coordinated Universal Time (UCT) instead of the default local time. The UCT does not use leap seconds so
UCT is the same as GMT.
-u Perform operations using Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) instead of the default local time.
+ format
The following is a list of field Descriptors that can be used in the format (Note: date exits after processing format information) :
%a Locale's abbreviated weekday name
%A Locale's full weekday name
%b Locale's abbreviated month name
%B Locale's full month name
%c Locale's date and time representation
%d Day of month as a decimal number (01-31)
%D Date (%m/%d/%y)
%h Locale's abbreviated month name
%H Hour as a decimal number (00-23)
%I Hour as a decimal number (01-12)
%j Day of year (001-366)
%m Number of month (01-12)
%M Minute number (00-59)
%n Newline character
%p Locale's equivalent to AM or PM
%r Time in AM/PM notation
%S Second number (00-59)
%t Tab character
%T Time (%H/%M/%S)
%U Week number (00-53), Sunday as first day of week
%w Weekday number (0[Sunday]-6)
%W Week number (00-53), Monday as first day of week
%x Locale's date representation
%X Locale's time representation
%y Year without century (00-99)
%Y Year with century
%Z Timezone name, no characters if no timezone
%% %
Examples
The following command line
date +%m/%d/%y
generates the following output
04/02/89
The following command line
date +"DATE: %m/%d/%y%nTIME: %H:%M:%S"
generates the following output
DATE: 04/02/89
TIME: 14:45:05
The quotes (") are necessary because the format contains blank characters. Use single quotes (') to prevent interpretation by the shell.
Diagnostics
Failed to set date: Not owner
You are not the super-user and you tryed to change the date. Do not change the date while the system is running in multiuser mode.
Restrictions
An attempt to set a date to before 1/1/1970 will result in the date being set to 1/1/1970.
Files
/dev/kmem
date(1)