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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Date within a timeframe 2 days ago Post 302421086 by methyl on Thursday 13th of May 2010 11:12:25 AM
Old 05-13-2010
Quote:
let foo=`date "+(1%H-106)*60+1%M-100"` bar=foo+1440
find . -mmin +$foo -mmin -$bar | tr -s '/','-' '^' | cut -f2,3 -d"^" | tr -s '^' ' ' |
Further to your previous posts it is slowly becoming clearer what you are trying to do. I don't think that the "let" line produces the values you expect.

The "find" syntax is definitely wrong.
The "tr" syntax is definitely wrong.
Please provide some sample filenames (or are they directory names?) showing what the filenames (or directory names?) will look like before and after processing.

I think that you mean that the day starts at 06:00:00 and ends at 05:59:59 the following calendar day.
Please give examples of what values you expect in $foo and $bar at say 05:58 and 06:02 on particular calendar days so as to clearly define "today" "yesterday" and "2 days ago".


An obvious idea would be to run the script from cron at 06:00 daily.

Another idea (having just read recent post). If your "find" has -mmin it must have -daystart. The whole process can be done in a single "find" with suitable constants for $foo and $bar regardless of what time it is. The only decision based on the time of day would be which pair of constants to use.

Last edited by methyl; 05-13-2010 at 12:21 PM..
 

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calendar(1)						      General Commands Manual						       calendar(1)

Name
       calendar - calendar reminder service

Syntax
       calendar [-]

Description
       The  command  consults the file `calendar' in the current directory and prints out lines that contain today's or tomorrow's date.  The com-
       mand recognizes most month-day dates, such as Dec. 7, december 7, 12/7, but it does not recognize dates formatted in the following ways:  7
       December  or  7/12.  If you give the month as * with a date, such as, * 1, that day in any month will do.  On weekends, specifying tomorrow
       extends through Monday.

       When an argument is present, the command searches through a user's calendar file in his login directory and sends him any positive  results
       by Normally this is done daily under control of

       The  calendar  file  is	first  run  through  the  C  preprocessor, to include any other calendar files specified with the #include syntax.
       Included calendars are shared by all users, and are maintained and documented by the local administration.

Options
       -    Functions for every user who has a calendar file in his login directory.

Restrictions
       The extended idea of tomorrow does not account for holidays.

Files
       calendar
       /usr/lib/calendar to figure out today's and tomorrow's dates
       /etc/passwd
       /tmp/cal*
       /lib/cpp, egrep, sed, mail as subprocesses

See Also
       at(1), cron(8), mail(1)

																       calendar(1)
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