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Full Discussion: Difference in date output
Operating Systems Solaris Difference in date output Post 302369787 by psiva_arul on Monday 9th of November 2009 02:54:33 PM
Old 11-09-2009
Hi,
You have check the env file what is the type of local and server time they have set.

use the below command for check the data format in env file

env | grep -i date
 

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sigsetjmp(3)						     Library Functions Manual						      sigsetjmp(3)

Name
       sigsetjmp, siglongjmp - nonlocal goto

Syntax
       #include <setjmp.h>

       sigsetjmp(env, savemask)
       sigjmp_buf env;

       void siglongjmp(env, val)
       sigjmp_buf env;

Description
       These routines deal with errors and interrupts encountered in a low-level subroutine of a program.

       The  subroutine	saves its stack environment in env for later use by It returns a value of 0.  If the value of the savemask argument is not
       zero, the subroutine also saves the process' current signal mask as part of the calling environment.

       The subroutine restores the environment saved by the last call of with the supplied env buffer.	If the env argument was initialized  by  a
       call to the subroutine with a nonzero savemask argument, the subroutine restores the saved signal mask.	It then returns in such a way that
       execution continues as if the call of had just returned the value val to the subroutine that invoked which must not itself have returned in
       the  interim.   However, cannot cause to return the value 0. If is invoked with a val of 0, returns a value of 1.  All accessible data have
       values as of the time was called.

Restrictions
       The subroutine does not save the current notion of whether the process is executing on the signal stack.  When you invoke  the  subroutine,
       the signal stack is left in an incorrect state.

See Also
       sigstack(2), sigvec(2), signal(3), sigprocmask(3)

																      sigsetjmp(3)
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