Hi
i want to print the time of a process in hours only..(or) in minutes only.Is there anyway to print the process such like that
when i give the commnand like following
#ps -eo pid,time
PID TIME
412 01:49:32
481 00:03
it shows in HH:MM:SS format:
Could anyone... (1 Reply)
i have the time 20100421043335 in format (date +%Y%m%d%H%M%S),and i want to be able to get the previous time 2 minutes ago,which is
20100421043135 (9 Replies)
I have several logs with where the time stamp in the logs are "YYYYMMDDHHMM".
I would like to check the last line in each file to make sure the entry is less than 5 minutes old.
My timezone is EST5EDT so the following will work for 1 hour. But I need something easy for 5 minutes ago.... (5 Replies)
In Redhat it is easy....
date --date="60 minutes ago"
How do you do this in Solaris?
I got creative and got the epoch time but had problems..
EPOCHTIME=`truss date 2>&1 | grep "time()" | awk '{print $3 - 900}'`
echo $EPOCHTIME
TIME=`perl -e 'print scalar(localtime("$EPOCHTIME")),... (5 Replies)
Hello All
I know the general Logic behind it but do not know the shell programming so much.
For Example, The Time is stored in a given Variable
if the Time is 0800 then i need to extract the last digits of the number and Add it to the Remaining Digit of the Number which is multiplied by... (7 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I have a text file that has only time in the format HH:MM:SS like seen below.
21:36:17
23:52:08
I need to find the difference in minutes alone from this text file so the result would be 136.
Thanks
Jay (11 Replies)
Hello,
date --date '-60 min ago' +'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S,%3N'
Above command gives the date and time minus 60 minutes
but the problem i am facing is, i do not want to hardcode the value 60
it is stored in a variable var=60
now if i run below command , i get error
date --date '-$var min... (3 Replies)
Hello all,
Info:
System RedHat 7.5
I need to create a script that based on the creation time,
if the file is older then 5 minutes then execute some stuff, if not exit.
I thought to get the creation time and minutes like this.
CreationTime=$(stat -c %y /tmp/test.log | awk -F" " '{ print... (3 Replies)
A process xyz is running and creating file1, file2, file3, .... filen. how do i know if the process has stopped and createtime of the last file (filen) is older than 5 minutes?
OS is AIX (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: malaika
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
which-pkg-broke
which-pkg-broke(1) debian-goodies which-pkg-broke(1)NAME
which-pkg-broke - find which package might have broken another
SYNOPSIS
which-pkg-broke package
DESCRIPTION
The which-pkg-broke program will retrieve a list of the named package and all its dependencies sorted by the time they were installed on
the system (as determined from the mtime information of /var/lib/dpkg/info/*.list .
This tool makes it possible for a system admin to obtain information that might correlate installation of package dependencies with a pack-
age breakage in order to find which package update might be responsible for the breakage.
EXAMPLES
This tool can be useful determine which package dependencies were upgraded more recently and might be associated with the bug that is being
observed. For example, if aptitude stops working properly, an administrator can run:
$ which-pkg-broke aptitude
Package <libapt-pkg-libc6.3-5-3.3> has no install time info
libdb1-compat Fri Aug 8 03:02:11 2003
libsigc++-1.2-5c102 Fri Aug 8 05:15:58 2003
aptitude Sun Jan 11 17:38:06 2004
libncurses5 Sun Jan 18 08:11:05 2004
libc6 Thu Jan 22 07:55:10 2004
libgcc1 Tue Jan 27 07:37:22 2004
gcc-3.3-base Tue Jan 27 07:37:31 2004
libstdc++5 Tue Jan 27 07:37:32 2004
So depending on exactly when the misbehaviour started, there may be a reason to point the finger at a more-recently updated library like
libstdc++ or libncurses, which are more-recently installed than aptitude itself.
SEE ALSO rc-alert(1)AUTHOR
which-pkg-broke was written by Bill Gribble <grib AT billgribble.com>
This manual page was written by Javier Fernandez-Sanguino for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution.
debian-goodies July 24 2006 which-pkg-broke(1)