can i run that script in windows? if yes can you give me the link to download perl for windows having DATE::Calc command please...
Yes, you can, as long as you have Perl and the Date::Calc module installed in your system.
Date::Calc is a Perl module and not a "command". Try ActiveState Perl; it's a popular Windows port of Perl.
Use PPM (Perl Package Manager) that ships with their Perl port to install Date::Calc from CPAN.
Quote:
...and also while googling i found out that i just need to run something to install Date::calc in unix. is that true? if yes then can u give me that file which i need to run, if you have it with you?
It's not a "file". You can install Perl modules in many different ways in Linux (not sure about Unix). Have a look at perlmodinstall.
Is there anyway to get the start time and end time / status of a crontab job which was just completed? Of course, we know the start time of the crontab job since we are scheduling. But I would like to know process start and time recorded somewhere or can be fetched from a command like 'ps'. ... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Please help me in calculating the time difference between below mentioned timestamps.
a=07/17/2007 02:20:00 AM MST
b=07/17/2007 02:07:46 AM MST
Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I've written a script which reads all the systems backup information and saves it in a log file.
ssh -l ora${sid} ${primaryhost} "tail -2 /oracle/$ORACLE_SID/sapbackup/back$ORACLE_SID.log" |head -1 | awk '{print echo "PREVIOUS:-- Start Date&Time: " $3,$4,echo "|| End Date&Time:... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I've written a script which reads all the systems backup information and saves it in a log file.
ssh -l ora${sid} ${primaryhost} "tail -1 /oracle/$ORACLE_SID/sapbackup/back$ORACLE_SID.log" | awk '{print $3,$4,$5,$6}' >> ${RESULTFILE}
The output comes as below:
2008-09-30 06.00.01... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone help me how can I get the line that between the start time and end time.
file1.txt
15/03/2009 20:45:03 Request: - Data of this line
15/03/2009 20:45:12 Response: - Data of this line
15/03/2009 22:10:40 Request: - Data of this line
15/03/2009 22:10:42 Response: - Data of... (1 Reply)
Process start time is not showing the correct time:
I had started a process on Jun 17th at 23:30:00.
Next day morning when I run the command "ps -ef | grep mq", the process is showing the start date of Jun 17th but the start time is 00:16:41
Day/Date is setup correctly on the server.
It... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I'm trying to create a shell script (#!/bin/sh) which should tell me the age of a file in minutes...
I have a process, which delivers me all 15 minutes a new file and I want to have a monitoring script, which sends me an email, if the present file is older than 20 minutes.
To do... (10 Replies)
I have time in a file in HH:MM:SS format as it contents(its not the file creation time). i need this to be converted to epoch time or time since 1970. The time is written into that file by a script, which i cannot modify. Im using AIX machine
$ cat abc.txt
10:29:34 (2 Replies)
i grepped the time stamp in a file as given below
now i need to calculate time difference
file data:
18:29:10
22:15:50 (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: vivekn
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
color::calc::www
Color::Calc::WWW(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Color::Calc::WWW(3pm)NAME
Color::Calc::WWW - Simple calculations with colors for the WWW.
SYNOPSIS
use Color::Calc::WWW;
my $background = 'green';
print 'background: ', color($background),';';
print 'border-top: solid 1px ', color_light($background),';';
print 'border-bottom: solid 1px ', color_dark($background),';';
print 'color: ', color_contrast_bw($background),';';
DESCRIPTION
The "Color::Calc::WWW" module implements simple calculations with RGB colors for the World Wide Web. This can be used to create a full
color scheme from a few colors.
This module is nearly identical to using the following:
use Color::Calc('ColorScheme' => 'WWW', 'OutputFormat' => 'html');
However, this module also makes the functions available when not imported:
use Color::Calc::WWW(); # don't import
Color::Calc::WWW::color('F00');
USAGE
By default, all functions are imported.
All functions recognize all HTML color keywords (through Graphics::ColorNames::WWW) and output the results in WWW-compatible formats, i.e.
as one of the 16 basic HTML keywords (see Graphics::ColorNames::WWW) or as #RRGGBB.
color, color_mix, ...
See L<Color::Calc> for a list of available calculation functions.
NOTE AUTHOR
Claus Faerber <CFAERBER@cpan.org>
LICENSE
Copyright 2004-2010 Claus Faerber.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-06-30 Color::Calc::WWW(3pm)