After retrieving you values from the file. You can compare the date values with something like this:
That will convert it to seconds. The highest value wins!
Hi,
I want to calculate the number of pipe delimiters in a file for all lines seperately.
For eg:i have a file Project.txt
Mohit|chawla|123|678
File1|File2|345|767|678
And my file contains many lines like this
it shd give me the output as
4
5
or give me the output for all the... (0 Replies)
I need to extract the date part from the file name (20080221 in this ex) and compare it with the current date and delete it, if it is a past date.
$file = exp_ABCD4_T-2584780_upto_20080221.dmp.Z
really appreciate any help.
thanks
mkneni (4 Replies)
How can I compare two integer values which is stored in char pointers?
suppose I have char *a and char *b having values 10 and 20. how can i find the shorter value? (1 Reply)
Daily one file will dropped into this directory.
Directory: /opt/app/jt/drop
File name: XXXX_<timestamp>.dat.gz
I need to write a script which checks whether the file is dropped daily or not.
Any idea in the script how can we compare timestamp of the file to today's date?? (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to compare today's date(DDMMYYYY) with yesterday(DDMMYYYY) from system date,if (today month = yesterday month) then execute alter query else do nothing.
The above requirement i want in Shell script(KSH)...
Can any one please help me?
Double post, continued here. (0 Replies)
hey, i have stored values of query like this
val_2=$( sqlplus -s rte/rted1@rel75d1 << EOF
set heading off
select source_id from cvt_istats where istat_id > $val_1;
exit
EOF
)
echo $val_2
now , val_2 has five values displayed like this
1
2
3
4
5
what i have to do is to check the... (1 Reply)
Hi gurus..
Am reading a file, counting number of lines and storing it in a variable. Then am passing that variable into If loop for comparision, if the number of lines are greater than 1000 it should split a file if not it should send the file name to archive folder.. but when i execute the... (4 Replies)
I need to develop a script where I will take two date arguments as parameter date1 and date2 which will in format YYYYMM.
Below is the input file say sample.txt.
sample.txt will have certain blocks starting with P1.
Each block will have a value 118,1:TIMESTAMP.
I need to compare the... (7 Replies)
I am not able to pass date stored in a variable as an argument to date command. I get current date value for from_date and to_date
#!/usr/bin/ksh
set -x
for s in server ; do
ssh -T $s <<-EOF
from_date="12-Jan-2015 12:02:09"
to_date="24-Jan-2015 13:02:09"
echo \$from_date
echo... (7 Replies)
Hi Forum.
I have the following challenge at work that I need to write a script for.
I have a file abc.txt with the following contents:
4560123456
4570987654
4580654321
I want to be able to search/replace in abc.txt - the first 4 characters anything starting with 4560 to 7777; 4570... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pchang
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
convdate
CONVDATE(1) InterNetNews Documentation CONVDATE(1)NAME
convdate - Convert to/from RFC 5322 dates and seconds since epoch
SYNOPSIS
convdate [-dhl] [-c | -n | -s] [date ...]
DESCRIPTION
convdate translates the date/time strings given on the command line, outputting the results one to a line. The input can either be a date
in RFC 5322 format (accepting the variations on that format that innd(8) is willing to accept), or the number of seconds since epoch (if -c
is given). The output is either ctime(3) results, the number of seconds since epoch, or a Usenet Date: header, depending on the options
given.
If date is not given, convdate outputs the current date.
OPTIONS -c Each argument is taken to be the number of seconds since epoch (a time_t) rather than a date.
-d Output a valid Usenet Date: header instead of the results of ctime(3) for each date given on the command line. This is useful for
testing the algorithm used to generate Date: headers for local posts. Normally, the date will be in UTC, but see the -l option.
-h Print usage information and exit.
-l Only makes sense in combination with -d. If given, Date: headers generated will use the local time zone instead of UTC.
-n Rather than outputting the results of ctime(3) or a Date: header, output each date given as the number of seconds since epoch (a
time_t). This option doesn't make sense in combination with -d.
-s Pass each given date to the RFC 5322 date parser and print the results of ctime(3) (or a Date: header if -d is given). This is the
default behavior.
EXAMPLES
Most of these examples are taken, with modifications from the original man page dating from 1991 and were run in the EST/EDT time zone.
% convdate '10 Feb 1991 10:00:00 -0500'
Sun Feb 10 10:00:00 1991
% convdate '13 Dec 91 12:00 EST' '04 May 1990 0:0:0'
Fri Dec 13 12:00:00 1991
Fri May 4 00:00:00 1990
% convdate -n '10 feb 1991 10:00' '4 May 90 12:00'
666198000
641880000
% convdate -c 666198000
Sun Feb 10 10:00:00 1991
ctime(3) results are in the local time zone. Compare to:
% convdate -dc 666198000
Sun, 10 Feb 1991 15:00:00 +0000 (UTC)
% env TZ=PST8PDT convdate -dlc 666198000
Sun, 10 Feb 1991 07:00:00 -0800 (PST)
% env TZ=EST5EDT convdate -dlc 666198000
Sun, 10 Feb 1991 10:00:00 -0500 (EST)
The system library functions generally use the environment variable TZ to determine (or at least override) the local time zone.
HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net>, rewritten and updated by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu> for the -d and -l flags.
$Id: convdate.pod 8894 2010-01-17 13:04:04Z iulius $
SEE ALSO active.times(5).
INN 2.5.2 2010-02-08 CONVDATE(1)