Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Find out the day in Bash Shell script Post 302401262 by satheesh4093 on Friday 5th of March 2010 10:05:01 AM
Old 03-05-2010
Thanks for your response.....

I have executed ur script its working fine.
I am new to shell scipt.
If the particular day(20100227) is saturday then how to add to 2 days.
I need to get (20100301) monday.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Write a shell script to find whether the first day of the month is a working day

Hi , I am relatively new to unix... Can u pls help me out to find out if the first day of the month is a working day ie from (Monday to Friday)...using Date and If clause in Korn shell.. This is very urgent. Thanks for ur help... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: phani
7 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script to find previous month last day minus one day timestamp

Hi All, I need to find the previous month last day minus one day, using shell script. Can you guys help me to do this. My Requirment is as below: Input for me will be 2000909(YYYYMM) I need the previous months last day minus 1 day timestamp. That is i need 2000908 months last day minus ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: girish.raos
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

script to find filenames with latest version and for all seq. numbers in a day

Hi, We have a requirement to find the set of filenames from the group of files in a specified folder based on (i) version number (ii) sequence number such that, for any given sequence number in a day only the latest version filenames have to indentified. Below is the format of... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Deepakbabu
4 Replies

4. Fedora

Script to find out first day of our calender

I try to find the first day of our calender. So I used this script ... echo -n "The week of the date 01jan0001 : " echo -n `date -d 00010101 +%A` echo But its shows error bash-3.1$ sh first_day.shThe week of the date 01jan0001 : date: invalid date `00010101' (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: krishnampkkm
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to send email once a day at certain time in unix shell script

hi, i have to send an email once a day at ceratin time say 22. i have tried with date commad, but not working.:( HOUROFTHEDAY=`date +'%H'` if ; then mailx -s "Info" emailid@org.com < $ProcessStatisticsFile fi Please help me... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreelu
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find associated strings in a bash shell script

Hi together, unfortunately I am not a shell script guru - the following might touch the depths of awk, substr, split, regexps, where I am still fighting with - but as always the boss needs a fast solution :-( So: I have the following USER/PASSWORD-installation-config-file, from where I want to... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sofie
10 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to find the date of previous day in shell script?

Hi Experts, i am using the below code get the date of previous day. #!/usr/bin/ksh datestamp=`date '+%Y%m%d'` yest=$((datestamp -1)) echo $yest When i execute the code i am getting output as: 20130715 What i am trying here is, based on the date passed i am fetching previus day's... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: learner24
0 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell script issue on date and day

Hi friends, I wanna check if any given date is Friday, as an example I have written a simple script as shown below #!/bin/ksh v_date=20140325 if ; then echo 'HELLO' else echo 'BYE' fi But when I am executing its throwing an error as shown below, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Aditya_001
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to check day name is it saturday in bash shell script?

How to check the day name,is it saturday in bash shell script. If dayname = saturday then run the full load else run just the incremental loads end if Thank you very much for the helpful information. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cplusplus1
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

In Bash shell - the ps -ef shows only the /bin/bash but the script name is not displayed

In Bash shell - the ps -ef shows only the /bin/bash but the script name is not displayed ? Is there any way to get the script names for the process command ? --- Post updated at 08:39 AM --- in KSH (Korn Shell), my command output shows the script names but when run in the Bash Shell... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: i4ismail
3 Replies
PICK(1)                                                              [nmh-1.5]                                                             PICK(1)

NAME
pick - search for messages by content SYNOPSIS
pick [+folder] [msgs] [-and ...] [-or ...] [-not ...] [-lbrace ... -rbrace] [--component pattern] [-cc pattern] [-date pattern] [-from pattern] [-search pattern] [-subject pattern] [-to pattern] [-after date] [-before date] [-datefield field] [-sequence name ...] [-public | -nopublic] [-zero | -nozero] [-list | -nolist] [-version] [-help] typical usage: scan `pick -from jones` pick -to holloway -sequence select show `pick -before friday` DESCRIPTION
Pick searches within a folder for messages with the specified contents, and then identifies those messages. Two types of search primitives are available: pattern matching and date constraint operations. A modified grep(1) is used to perform the matching, so the full regular expression (see ed(1)) facility is available within pattern. With -search, pattern is used directly, and with the others, the grep pattern constructed is: `component[ ]*:.*pattern' This means that the pattern specified for a -search will be found everywhere in the message, including the header and the body, while the other pattern matching requests are limited to the single specified component. The expression `--component pattern' is a shorthand for specifying `-search "component[ ]*:.*pattern" ' It is used to pick a component which is not one of "To:", "cc:", "Date:", "From:", or "Subject:". An example is "pick --reply-to pooh". Pattern matching is performed on a per-line basis. Within the header of the message, each component is treated as one long line, but in the body, each line is separate. Lower-case letters in the search pattern will match either lower or upper case in the message, while upper case will match only upper case. Note that since the -date switch is a pattern matching operation (as described above), to find messages sent on a certain date the pattern string must match the text of the "Date:" field of the message. Independent of any pattern matching operations requested, the switches -after date or -before date may also be used to introduce date/time constraints on all of the messages. By default, the "Date:" field is consulted, but if another date yielding field (such as "BB-Posted:" or "Delivery-Date:") should be used, the -datefield field switch may be used. With -before and -after, pick will actually parse the date fields in each of the messages specified in `msgs' and compare them to the date/time specified. If -after is given, then only those messages whose "Date:" field value is chronologically after the date specified will be considered. The -before switch specifies the complimentary action. Both the -after and -before switches take legal 822-style date specifications as arguments. Pick will default certain missing fields so that the entire date need not be specified. These fields are (in order of defaulting): timezone, time and timezone, date, date and time- zone. All defaults are taken from the current date, time, and timezone. In addition to 822-style dates, pick will also recognize any of the days of the week ("sunday", "monday", and so on), and the special dates "today", "yesterday" (24 hours ago), and "tomorrow" (24 hours from now). All days of the week are judged to refer to a day in the past (e.g., telling pick "saturday" on a "tuesday" means "last saturday" not "this saturday"). Finally, in addition to these special specifications, pick will also honor a specification of the form "-dd", which means "dd days ago". Pick supports complex boolean operations on the searching primitives with the -and, -or, -not, and -lbrace ... -rbrace switches. For example, pick -after yesterday -and -lbrace -from freida -or -from fear -rbrace identifies messages recently sent by "frieda" or "fear". The matching primitives take precedence over the -not switch, which in turn takes precedence over -and which in turn takes precedence over -or. To override the default precedence, the -lbrace and -rbrace switches are provided, which act just like opening and closing parenthe- ses in logical expressions. If no search criteria are given, all the messages specified on the command line are selected (this defaults to "all"). Once the search has been performed, if the -list switch is given, the message numbers of the selected messages are written to the standard output separated by newlines. This is extremely useful for quickly generating arguments for other nmh programs by using the "backquoting" syntax of the shell. For example, the command scan `pick +todo -after "31 Mar 83 0123 PST"` says to scan those messages in the indicated folder which meet the appropriate criterion. Note that since pick's context changes are writ- ten out prior to scan's invocation, you need not give the folder argument to scan as well. The -sequence name switch may be given once for each sequence the user wishes to define. For each sequence named, that sequence will be defined to mean exactly those messages selected by pick. For example, pick -from frated -seq fred defines a new message sequence for the current folder called "fred" which contains exactly those messages that were selected. By default, pick will zero the sequence before adding it. This action can be disabled with the -nozero switch, which means that the mes- sages selected by pick will be added to the sequence, if it already exists, and any messages already a part of that sequence will remain so. The -public and -nopublic switches are used by pick in the same way mark uses them. FILES
$HOME/.mh_profile The user profile PROFILE COMPONENTS
Path: To determine the user's nmh directory Current-Folder: To find the default current folder SEE ALSO
mark(1) DEFAULTS
`+folder' defaults to the current folder `msgs' defaults to all `-datefield date' `-zero' `-list' is the default if no `-sequence', `-nolist' otherwise CONTEXT
If a folder is given, it will become the current folder. HISTORY
In previous versions of MH, the pick command would show, scan, or refile the selected messages. This was rather "inverted logic" from the UNIX point of view, so pick was changed to define sequences and output those sequences. Hence, pick can be used to generate the arguments for all other MH commands, instead of giving pick endless switches for invoking those commands itself. Also, previous versions of pick balked if you didn't specify a search string or a date/time constraint. The current version does not, and merely matches the messages you specify. This lets you type something like: show `pick last:20 -seq fear` instead of typing mark -add -nozero -seq fear last:20 show fear Finally, timezones used to be ignored when comparing dates: they aren't any more. HELPFUL HINTS
Use "pick sequence -list" to enumerate the messages in a sequence (such as for use by a shell script). BUGS
The argument to the -after and -before switches must be interpreted as a single token by the shell that invokes pick. Therefore, one must usually place the argument to this switch inside quotes. Furthermore, any occurrence of -datefield must occur prior to the -after or -before switch it applies to. If pick is used in a back-quoted operation, such as scan `pick -from jones` and pick selects no messages (e.g., no messages are from "jones"), then the shell will still run the outer command (e.g., scan). Since no messages were matched, pick produced no output, and the argument given to the outer command as a result of backquoting pick is empty. In the case of nmh programs, the outer command now acts as if the default `msg' or `msgs' should be used (e.g., "all" in the case of scan). To prevent this unexpected behavior, if -list was given, and if its standard output is not a tty, then pick outputs the illegal message number "0" when it fails. This lets the outer command fail gracefully as well. The pattern syntax "[l-r]" is not supported; each letter to be matched must be included within the square brackets. MH.6.8 11 June 2012 PICK(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:26 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy